A fast paced, fun space opera romance. Great read for a Friday night after a stressful workweek when I just wanted to turn off my brain and go somewhere fun.
Reviews and Comments
I make food, prose, comics, 3D art, code, things with yarn, and (in what might better be described as a very ambitious WIP) a kid.
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katfeete finished reading Aurora Blazing by Jessie Mihalik (Consortium Rebellion, #2)
katfeete rated There's No Such Thing as an Easy Job: 5 stars

There's No Such Thing as an Easy Job by Kikuko Tsumura
A young woman walks into an employment agency and requests a job that has the following traits: it is close …
katfeete finished reading There's No Such Thing as an Easy Job by Kikuko Tsumura
A series of stories about the author’s various post-burnout short term jobs. Interesting read on its own but also after doing my Non-Linear Storytelling From Non Western Traditions class. This was linear, but distinctly less of a “forward progress”, climax-drive story than I’m used to even in western autobiographical writing, more of a circular, emphasis-by-repetition structure. A good read.
katfeete finished reading The Spare Man by Mary Robinette Kowal
katfeete finished reading Shards of Earth by Adrian Tchaikovsky
Fun read. Interesting to have read end on end with Accidental War; while this is on the surface a much darker book (Earth is destroyed! Billions die! Terrifying, mysterious attacks by near indestructible aliens!) it’s still the Williams tale of banal post-colonial greed that feels far uglier and more terrifying. But a good cast, a peppy, fast moving plot, and plenty of intriguing mysteries. It’s not a deeply chewy book but I had fun and will be grabbing the rest of the series.
katfeete finished reading Accidental War by Walter Jon Williams
katfeete rated A study in death: 5 stars

A study in death by Anna Lee Huber (A Lady Darby mystery)
Seeking a respite from her pregnant sister's wedding plans in 19th-century Scotland, Lady Kiera Darby accepts a commission to paint …
katfeete finished reading A study in death by Anna Lee Huber (A Lady Darby mystery)
This is the fourth of the Lady Darcy books I’ve read, and I’ll be nabbing the fifth once the quite long library wait list wends its way to me. It’s interesting to have read this one after my run with the Lady’s Guide books. Superficially they’re similar: an aristocratic widow, fresh off an unhappy marriage, turns to solving mysteries with the help of a handsome, mysterious detective turned love interest. But while the Lady’s Guide books are lively, frivolous, and entirely earn their title of “cozy”, Lady Darcy’s stories have a sharper, darker edge… from the backstory (while both have my sympathies, the former husband thoughtless and careless enough to die in his lover’s bed sets a different tone than the former husband who threatened to break his wife’s fingers so she will never paint again) to the crimes and the way they’re presented, to the ladies themselves. I enjoyed …
This is the fourth of the Lady Darcy books I’ve read, and I’ll be nabbing the fifth once the quite long library wait list wends its way to me. It’s interesting to have read this one after my run with the Lady’s Guide books. Superficially they’re similar: an aristocratic widow, fresh off an unhappy marriage, turns to solving mysteries with the help of a handsome, mysterious detective turned love interest. But while the Lady’s Guide books are lively, frivolous, and entirely earn their title of “cozy”, Lady Darcy’s stories have a sharper, darker edge… from the backstory (while both have my sympathies, the former husband thoughtless and careless enough to die in his lover’s bed sets a different tone than the former husband who threatened to break his wife’s fingers so she will never paint again) to the crimes and the way they’re presented, to the ladies themselves. I enjoyed chewing through the Lady’s Guide books and they were a lot of fun, but Lady Darcy’s fierce intensity and cool, steel-coiled spine will forever win me over.
At any rate, I’m at an impasse with both right now because library waitlists, but “English Regency/Victorian murder mystery” is definitely a genre I’ve fallen hard for.
katfeete reviewed The Mask of Mirrors by M. A. Carrick (Rook & Rose, #1)
Swashbuckling fun
5 stars
Ren has been many things in her short life: a fortuneteller’s daughter. An orphan. A liar. A lady’s maid. A thief. A traitor. A murderess. The thing she doesn’t intend to be any longer? Poor. With her sister Tess, she’s come back to her home city with one goal in mind: to lie, betray, and steal her way into a fortune no one can take away.
But a good con needs more than an audacious lie. A good con doesn’t start caring for her victims and fighting their battles. A good con doesn’t get distracted by quests for justice. A good con uses stacks her mother’s cards; she doesn’t read the fate of the city in them, and set out to do something about it.
Ren is an unparalleled liar. But as a con, she may not be good enough….
I’m not sure words can express how …
Ren has been many things in her short life: a fortuneteller’s daughter. An orphan. A liar. A lady’s maid. A thief. A traitor. A murderess. The thing she doesn’t intend to be any longer? Poor. With her sister Tess, she’s come back to her home city with one goal in mind: to lie, betray, and steal her way into a fortune no one can take away.
But a good con needs more than an audacious lie. A good con doesn’t start caring for her victims and fighting their battles. A good con doesn’t get distracted by quests for justice. A good con uses stacks her mother’s cards; she doesn’t read the fate of the city in them, and set out to do something about it.
Ren is an unparalleled liar. But as a con, she may not be good enough….
I’m not sure words can express how much I adored this book — in part because I’m pretty sure a lot of why I adored it went beyond words. It hit me right in all my soft spots: skilled but unobtrusive worldbuilding, a heist story that dodged right in that sweet spot between “too unrealistic” and “too cruel”, and most of all a cast of characters I fell for hook, line, and sinker. Throw in stylish swordfights, an outrageously clever con artist, and a Robin Hood style vigilante, and y’all. It’s just TOO MUCH GOODNESS.
I am so far restraining myself from going straight out and buying the sequel — mostly because I know the third book won’t be out until fall, so I have to, you know. Nurse things along. Suffice to say if you grew up loving Robin Hood* and Zorro and the Three Musketeers but kind of wished they had better women characters and a plot as tight as a heist film… this is your book.
*The Errol Flynn version, obviously. Sir Walter Scott and Disney versions also acceptable. No other Robin Hoods exist.
katfeete finished reading The Mask of Mirrors by M. A. Carrick (Rook & Rose, #1)
Full review probably tomorrow, but dang, this one really hooked me. Trying to convince myself that a person with a 100+ TBR pile who's already discovered she cannot really read during the workweek does not need to run right out and grab the next book but AUGH I want to...
Full review probably tomorrow, but dang, this one really hooked me. Trying to convince myself that a person with a 100+ TBR pile who's already discovered she cannot really read during the workweek does not need to run right out and grab the next book but AUGH I want to...
katfeete rated Murder by the book: 5 stars
katfeete finished reading Murder by the book by Rex Stout
I enjoy all the Nero Wolfe books, they are like candy, but I did find this one notable because Wolfe was legitimately befuddled for most of the story. A lot of the time Stout cheats a bit by keeping important clues from Archie (the narrator) but that didn’t really get pulled this time, apart from a fiddly bit about alibis. Very solid mystery and as usual filled with snark and dry wit (and some misogyny, but eh, written in the fifties.)
I enjoy all the Nero Wolfe books, they are like candy, but I did find this one notable because Wolfe was legitimately befuddled for most of the story. A lot of the time Stout cheats a bit by keeping important clues from Archie (the narrator) but that didn’t really get pulled this time, apart from a fiddly bit about alibis. Very solid mystery and as usual filled with snark and dry wit (and some misogyny, but eh, written in the fifties.)
katfeete reviewed Uncanny Times by Laura Anne Gilman
The Hunt Begins
5 stars
Rosemary and Aaron Harker are Huntsmen. A knock on the door in the winter of 1913, a summons to some unusual, uncomfortable death? That's normal. The uncanny and the human don't often mix, but when they do, it ends badly for the human.
But this hunt isn't going right. The uncanny beast killing folk in a little New England town doesn't match anything the brother and sister have ever fought or heard of. The locals think they're union agitators, the police want them out of town, and Rosemary and Aaron might be facing, not the uncanny they're trained for, but the thing that did in their own Huntsmen parents.
Magic.
-- I am a long-time Laura Anne Gilman fan and this delivers: a fun (if prickly) set of protagonists, an intriguing historic mystery, and just the right touch with the paranormal that binds it to the story …
Rosemary and Aaron Harker are Huntsmen. A knock on the door in the winter of 1913, a summons to some unusual, uncomfortable death? That's normal. The uncanny and the human don't often mix, but when they do, it ends badly for the human.
But this hunt isn't going right. The uncanny beast killing folk in a little New England town doesn't match anything the brother and sister have ever fought or heard of. The locals think they're union agitators, the police want them out of town, and Rosemary and Aaron might be facing, not the uncanny they're trained for, but the thing that did in their own Huntsmen parents.
Magic.
-- I am a long-time Laura Anne Gilman fan and this delivers: a fun (if prickly) set of protagonists, an intriguing historic mystery, and just the right touch with the paranormal that binds it to the story without rendering it mundane. The time period isn't one I've read a lot about but Gilman does an excellent job rendering small details and large about the US before the First World War, just on the cusp of what we think of as modernity. That interacts really well with the tension in the story itself -- the Harkers are in many ways people of their times and concerned with normal people questions (like "why can't women bloody well wear trousers"), but they have fae blood and concerns outside the ken -- and for that matter, the desire to ken -- of their peers, concerns that date back to an older and wilder time that we never actually left behind.
Also: there is a dog, and I love him.
A really lovely, fun read for a dreary and rainy start to the new year.
katfeete finished reading A lady's guide to etiquette and murder by Dianne Freeman (A Countess of Harleigh mystery)
This was a cute cozy murder set in the early part of the 20th century against the backdrop of a rapidly failing British aristocracy. Frances, an American heiress wooed and won for her commoner's fortune, is mostly relieved when her handsome but feckless husband dies- even if he has the bad taste to do so in his mistress's bed. But was it really a heart condition - and might his newly freed bride be the next target?
I was looking for fluffy and this delivered - if anything too well: at times I found myself wishing for more substance or at least a more convincing romance. Still, the writing was clever, the banter witty, and the plot held together. A fun way to wile away a cold winter’s night.
This was a cute cozy murder set in the early part of the 20th century against the backdrop of a rapidly failing British aristocracy. Frances, an American heiress wooed and won for her commoner's fortune, is mostly relieved when her handsome but feckless husband dies- even if he has the bad taste to do so in his mistress's bed. But was it really a heart condition - and might his newly freed bride be the next target?
I was looking for fluffy and this delivered - if anything too well: at times I found myself wishing for more substance or at least a more convincing romance. Still, the writing was clever, the banter witty, and the plot held together. A fun way to wile away a cold winter’s night.








