claireskies's reviews
3 reviews

Where Angels Fear to Tread by E.M. Forster

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emotional hopeful inspiring reflective sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern

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adventurous reflective fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

5.0

Starless sea review 

This book changed me. It changed my perception of narrative structure, of fantasy, of everything. 

For how well thought out and dense the lore of this book is, its a really easy read. Morgenstern's style threw me off a bit at first, and I was stubborn it not liking it as it reads like a mixture of a play and a minimalist poem, but damn. It works so well. She is so secure in her narrative voice and it is a pleasure to read. The way her narration shifts with each character and story is so subtle but so effective. 

I think a lot of writers are terrified of having 'purple prose', but Morgenstern's work is a great example of mixing poetry and prose without compromising on either aesthetic or plot. 

This book is for gamers. Seriously, the main character is a media student studying video games so there are a bunch of loving nods towards classics. Also, the structure really follows that of a video game.
SpoilerThere were moments where I thought 'definietly a cutscene' i.e when Dorian falls into the sea, when Zachary dances with Mirabel, or when Mirabel and the Keeper meet in his office. The wine, acting as health potions in a way was such a great touch.
When i say this book is an easy read, i mean that in how the author will point out when she is being clever, without making a massive show of it. I definietly imagined this book in a TellTale Games style. 

This book made me cry, because somehow the author managed to put down the abstract feeling of falling into the depths of a book into a story.
SpoilerTheres a moment when Dorian thinks about how it feels to love a book, and I just burst out crying.


Also, i love Kat so much shes the best.
The Call of Cthulhu and Other Weird Stories by H.P. Lovecraft

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challenging dark reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.0

I feel bad for giving such a famous and influential author such an average rating, but i must say I was disappointed. 

Firstly to address the elephant in the room: it is hard to read Lovecraft and avoid his racist ideologies. While we can all sit and say "oh it was a different time then," it doesn't erase how harmful and influential his words are. In describing the whiteness of Herbet West, I believe, he describes him as of a superior race; caucasian, blue eyes, blonde hair. Frankly, many of Lovecraft's stories are ruined by his unecessary insertion of racist comments. For example, in the Rats in the Walls, it adds nothing for the narrator's favourite cat to be named a slur. One can easily discuss the folklore of native americans without calling them savages. Lovecraft also has a strange obsession with Congo and "white apes" which I believe are a reference to black people with albinism. 

However in this anthology, S. T. Joshi is not hesitant to point out Lovecraft's flaws, and my dislike of Lovecraft is in no way tied to the work of Joshi. I thoroughly enjoyed reading his explanatory notes at rhe end of the collection. I don't enjoy nonfiction, so I don't always read these notes, but I was very impressed and enraptured by the editor's. 

In some praise of Lovecraft, he really is an amazing writer. Bad person, but a good writer. His ability to string together a beautiful array of words to evoke somewhat abstract yet atmospheric, concrete settings is outstanding. His descriptions are unsettling and eerie, but magical. 

And back to crticism... now I do enjoy reading older works, and this is something I find in perhaps all of them. They are anticlimatic. Which sounds wrong to say considering that we experience the rise and fall of Cthulu in this collection. (Though that story did have one of the stronger climaxes). Authors of this period focus too much on exposition, and it feels as though the ending is rushed. In a longer story, the narrator flees right as things get really interesting. It feels as though we are touring through a beautiful mansion only to be rushed out without ever being shown upstairs. 

SpoilerWhile I appreciate each story being linked, I wish Lovecraft made the connections stronger. It almost feels like a cop out when Lovecraft has invented this new, cosmic being only to turn around and say "oh yeah blah blah this guy is in Necromoniom lol." As someone who also likes to do this, it just wasn't as effective enough. Perhaps it was because the only thing linking these stories is one book. It would have been far more powerful if perhaps instead of the author seeing that book on someone's shelf, they spotted a bizarre metal cylindar.


"Shadow over Innsmouth" evades these downfalls and is by far my favourite story in this collection.
SpoilerIt starts off a little slow, but by the end I was flipping through the pages frantically: both in trying to see where the story gets next, and also to escape the fantastic horros of Innsmouth. Cosmic and eldritch horror don't tend to scare me, but as the narrator attemps his escape from the town, my heart was in my mouth. I felt this story had the most action in it compared to the rest, and that scene where the narrator attempts to flee the hotel by breaking through room after room was frightening.
 

Overall, I say Lovecraft, and this collection of stories, is worth a read. It's average rating is a result of racist and xenophobic ideals that made some stories difficult to read, as well as the lacking climaxes of certain stories. 

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