Looking Glass Sound (Ward)
Apr. 7th, 2024 08:11 amThis is a kind of amazing book. First of all, a novel's worth of twists and turns is crammed into the first third of the book! (Which is largely its own self-contained novella, though it of course also sets up the rest of the book.) Honestly, the first third would have been a perfectly good story all by itself for any other author, but then the rest of it is -- well, both rachel and I kept chatting each other with connections we'd noticed and of course we were trying to figure out what was going on the whole time, and as the book went on we started chatting things like, "This is BONKERS!" and "WTF is all this?!" And a few pages left to go I was still like, "...how is she going to make everything work?" And then we got to the end and started teasing apart the strands of, wait a second, that means this, and this makes sense of that part... it was a wild ride!
I don't know that this is my favorite Ward -- I think Little Eve is still my favorite because I loved Eve and Christopher Black and how they related to each other so much, whereas I didn't feel nearly as strongly about these characters or their relations with each other (and in fact almost all of the characters are rather unlikeable -- one of them ends up being likeable, actually, but because of the way the book is structured it sort of becomes clear very late in the game). But I think it is the Ward book that I am most impressed by, because pulling that whole thing off really just clearly took so much skill.
Spoilers: discussing the end
The implications of the very end are so fascinating. How does it work for them to be in the book? How does Wilder communicate via typewriter?? The communication clearly implies he has some sort of independent agency; he's not just a character, once he's in the book. Also, I felt so bad for Wilder: he was much nicer than Sky(e) thought he was, and I like to think that in the AU where he'd actually had his future (in the outside world) that it would have turned out much better than Skye had imagined. (And what happens if Pearl writes a book with that AU?)
Also, there is a completely gratuitous severed finger in this book, and I am convinced she put it in specifically for our bingo board :PP (Oh, I suppose I should do content notes. Umm, there's a serial murder/murderer involved, and some non-explicit descriptions of same, and a very creepy doll made out of hair. Also at least one death occurring on stage. I don't think there was actually much animal harm in this book, surprisingly!)
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Date: 2024-04-07 08:15 pm (UTC)My favorites are still Little Eve and The Girl From Rawblood, also due to being more attached to the characters, but in terms of plot and structure, this was an absolute masterpiece.
V'z cerggl fher gur raqvat vzcyvrf gung jr, gur ernqref, unir nyfb orra genccrq va n obbx!
Ubarfgyl gung jbhyq rkcynva n ybg.
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Date: 2024-04-08 03:49 am (UTC)Oh, yeah! I also loved The Girl From Rawblood more than Sound, for the same reason. Though Little Eve is my absolute favorite. But like you I am most blown away by the plot and structure of this one!
Re your ROT-13: WHAT. WTF. OMG that went RIGHT over my head!!
Guvf jubyr gvzr V gubhtug gung raqvat "cbrz" jnf gnyxvat nobhg Unecre! Naq lrg jura lbh fnl gung vg znxrf CRESRPG FRAFR -- vg qbirgnvyf cresrpgyl jvgu ubj Unecre xabjf va Gung Puncgre, naq bs pbhefr vg'f gur cresrpg raqvat gb senzr nabgure ynlre ba gbc bs nyy gur bgure ynlref.
And you're right, that would explain a lot :PPPPPPP
no subject
Date: 2024-04-08 03:59 am (UTC)Re: rot13 - Yes!