I am now in the middle of three books in hardcopy, and one or two on the kindle (the "or two" is an anthology, but I was in mid-story when the 88 bus came this evening).
Finished during my most recent trip to Montreal:
Ursula Le Guin, No Time to Lose: a collection of nonfiction, and a little bit of poetry, about her life, writing, politics, music, travel, her cat Pard, whatever caught her eye.
I also reread her collection The Birthday of the World: this time I was particularly pleased by "Coming of Age in Karhide," "Mountain Ways," and "Solitude." I borrowed the ebook from the library for travel; there are a few "extras" in the ebook edition, and I found a nice quote in there:
I also finished reading the Scintillation collection ebook, edited by Alter Reiss and Naomi Libicki; this was a kickstarter premium for backers of the con Jo Walton is running this fall, and may not be otherwise available. I had put it down a while ago; looking at what was on my kindle this afternoon, I noticed this, and was amused by the one bit I hadn't already read, Ada Palmer's "Library Advice" (which is not just what it says on the tin, and then reread
mrissa's time travel story "The Stuff We Don't Do."
Finished during my most recent trip to Montreal:
Ursula Le Guin, No Time to Lose: a collection of nonfiction, and a little bit of poetry, about her life, writing, politics, music, travel, her cat Pard, whatever caught her eye.
I also reread her collection The Birthday of the World: this time I was particularly pleased by "Coming of Age in Karhide," "Mountain Ways," and "Solitude." I borrowed the ebook from the library for travel; there are a few "extras" in the ebook edition, and I found a nice quote in there:
my husband never questioned my right to write. This is fairly rare, especially in husbands. My advice to young writers is, if you can't marry money, at least don't marry envy.
I also finished reading the Scintillation collection ebook, edited by Alter Reiss and Naomi Libicki; this was a kickstarter premium for backers of the con Jo Walton is running this fall, and may not be otherwise available. I had put it down a while ago; looking at what was on my kindle this afternoon, I noticed this, and was amused by the one bit I hadn't already read, Ada Palmer's "Library Advice" (which is not just what it says on the tin, and then reread
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