peachfiend wants to read Natural Beauty by Ling Ling Huang

Natural Beauty by Ling Ling Huang
Sly, surprising, and razor-sharp, Natural Beauty follows a young musician into an elite, beauty-obsessed world where perfection comes at a …
you'll find me reading (mostly, at the moment): #Horror, especially #CosmicHorror and #BodyHorror (ya know, #queer stuff), #SciFi, and #WeirdFiction.
haunting local bookshops and libraries in #Louisville #KY.
@peachfiend@mastodon.sdf.org
This link opens in a pop-up window

Sly, surprising, and razor-sharp, Natural Beauty follows a young musician into an elite, beauty-obsessed world where perfection comes at a …

Reveals the alt-right's project to claim science fiction and- by extension- the future. Fascists such as Richard Spencer interpret science …
i read this as part of a bingo card from my local bookshop. it was "book you hated or never finished in school," and it turns out i still hate it. it's not objectively bad, though i could make that case. rather, it's a coldplay album: it shines in some small moments, but is passed right through me. ultimately forgettable, and i didn't really need or want it. a story that didn't need telling.
i read this as part of a bingo card from my local bookshop. it was "book you hated or never finished in school," and it turns out i still hate it. it's not objectively bad, though i could make that case. rather, it's a coldplay album: it shines in some small moments, but is passed right through me. ultimately forgettable, and i didn't really need or want it. a story that didn't need telling.

Jeremy Shipp brings you The Atrocities, a haunting gothic fantasy of a young ghost's education
When Isabella died, her …

Spread Me is a darkly seductive tale of survival from Sarah Gailey, after a routine probe at a research station …

Arthur Machen: The white people and other weird stories (2011, Penguin Books)
"Machen's weird tales of the creepy and fantastic finally come to Penguin Classics. With an introduction from S.T. Joshi, editor …

An antimeme is an idea with self-censoring properties ; an idea which, by its intrinsic nature, discourages or prevents people …

Tales from Earthsea is a collection of fantasy stories and essays by American author Ursula K. Le Guin, published by …
Content warning lightly spoiled
this book's blending of lovecraftian cosmic horror, body horror, plague horror (zombie tropes), and feminist themes seem almost like it was custom crafted precisely for my tastes.
the story is presented as a triptych, tied together at the end rather deftly. one critique: overall pacing was an issue for me. namely, we spend too much time at the start focused on Erin and too little time in part three on Mareva. i'm gauging "too much" and "too little" here on each character's importance to the overall plot. because of how the story is structured, i only noticed the pacing issues until late in the book. if i recall correctly, part 1 is about 50% of the length of the book. that the ending feels abrupt was less of a problem for me. cosmic horror can just end: no happy ending or resolution required. that said, part 3 is about 75% silly, but i can appreciate how fine the distinctions between the grotesque and the absurd often are.
beyond that, the ideas on offer were highly enjoyable. i especially appreciated the way that Snyder injected the cosmic into the story, as a sci-fi reveal near the end of the book. when i learned in chapter 23 from whence the PVG virus originated, it came as a clever surprise to me. it does not have quite the reach of a Shyamalanesque twist, but that's good because it means the book's success does not hinge entirely on that twist. it was a pleasant little, "oh damn, that's cool," moment for me. and it managed to put a new spin on how "the old ones" might inflict their will upon the earth.

GOD IS DEAD, his corpse hidden in the catacombs beneath Mordew.
In the slums of the sea-battered city a …

A virus tears across the globe, transforming its victims in nightmarish ways. As the world collapses, dark forces pull a …