Book Review

Jul. 3rd, 2026 08:03 pm
kenjari: (illuminated border)
[personal profile] kenjari
The Jasmine Throne
by Tasha Suri

This fantasy novel is set in a world reminiscent of ancient India. The action largely takes place in Ahiranya, a land subjugated by the Parijatdvipa empire and whose language and religion have been suppressed. Priya is a maidservant in the regent's household, serving Bhumika, the regent's Ahiranyi wife. Both of them are former temple children of the Hirana, survivors of a conflagration that killed elders and children alike. Bhumika and Priya each try to help their people survive under Parijatdvipa rule. Then Malini, sister to the Emperor, is imprisoned in the deserted Hirana temple. Priya is then assigned to be Malini's servant and the two of them find themselves on new paths towards freedom and power (and a bit of vengeance).
The Jasmine Throne was really good. I loved the world-building, and the way things about the magic and the history were revealed through Priya and Malini's experiences and memories. Suri takes her time with both the world-building and character development. It can feel a little slow, but is well worth it. Priya, Malini, and Bhumika are all complicated, and often morally ambiguous, women with different ideas about how to change the world so that it serves them better. I especially liked the growing relationship between Priya and Malini, full of longing despite their being on different sides of the political conflict. Suri explores the different ways people can find and use power, and the ways women's power is both feared and underestimated.

Book Review

Jun. 28th, 2026 09:21 am
kenjari: (Default)
[personal profile] kenjari
Ocean Light
by Nalini Singh

This is the 17th Psy-Changeling paranormal romance, and the series is still going strong. Bowen Knight, leader of the Human Alliance (one of the arms of the still-fragile Trinity Accord between humans, psy, and changelings) is recuperating from an assassination attempt while facing another grave problem - the experimental chip in his head designed to shield against telepathic attacks is deteriorating. Bowen is receiving an equally experimental treatment at the BlackSea changeling underwater station Ryujin. There he meets Kaia, head chef for the station. They share an immediate connection and ultimately fall deeply in love, while facing the risks to both Bowen from the chip and the sea changelings from an unknown enemy.
I enjoyed this one quite a bit. I loved Kaia - she's warm and caring but also a good example of how those qualities can make someone as fierce and strong as combat and political power can. Bowen is also great - he's utterly devoted to Kaia and determined to protect both their people's. Their relationship is very mutually supportive. I really liked the action and intrigue subplot - it was exciting and illuminated several aspects of the growing alliance between humans, psy, and changelings. Most of all, I loved seeing more of the sea changelings and their city as they have been very mysterious in their previous appearances in the series.

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Jun. 25th, 2026 11:36 pm
denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)
[staff profile] denise posting in [site community profile] dw_maintenance
Folks may have noticed that the site has been slow for logged-out users over the last while. This is partly because we separate traffic by logged-in, "logged out but have visited the site before", and "logged out, never visited the site before" and assign the fewest resources to the last category (because we're pretty confident the overwhelming majority of it is bot and scraper traffic, even if it's often impossible to say for sure). The flood of garbage traffic is a plague and a scourge the entire internet is dealing with, and it's hitting small sites the hardest as operators get better and better at cloaking their requests to look like real, authentic use. We long ago hit the point where adding more resources is a possible solution (because they just eat them up as soon as we do), and splitting traffic lets us keep the site usable for our actual users without wasting too much server power on garbage.

We've now, lucky us, reached the point where the "logged out, have never visited the site before" path is just flooded all the time, and the "logged out but have visited the site before" path is suffering some of the overflow. We've made some changes to the routing to try to improve things for logged out users who have visited the site before and keep it at "it may be a little bit slow, but at least it works" instead of "it keeps timing out", and we've seen some improvements, but if you're accustomed to browsing the site while logged out, I'm really sorry but it may continue to be a little miserable.

You will get the fastest page loads and the best performance by browsing the site logged in. If you are having trouble loading the front page to log in, bookmark the direct login page. We can't route the front page to the "more power" server pool, because it's a common target for garbage traffic, but we've switched /login over to "more power" and we'll try to keep it there as long as we can unless it starts getting slammed, too.

Book Review

Jun. 24th, 2026 08:29 pm
kenjari: (Eowyn)
[personal profile] kenjari
The Stars My Destination
by Alfred Bester

This 1956 sci-fi novel is set in a far future where humans have mastered interplanetary travel and have developed the ability to teleport themselves distances of up to 1000 miles. The story concerns Gully Foyle, a former mechanic on the spaceship Nomad. When the Nomad is attacked, Gully is the only survivor, trying despearately to survive on a catastrophically damaged ship. Another ship, the Vorga, passes by and knowingly abandons Foyle to his grim fate. He somehow survives and dedicates himself to discovering the person responsible for giving the order to ignore him and then exact revenge on that person. Foyle's quest brings him to a strange cult living on an asteroid augmented with the wreckage of spaceships, an underground prison, and the mansions of the wealthy. Along the way he transforms from an ignorant brute into a clever and cultured man. The final result of Foyle's quest is the unlocking of a incredibly destructive power and an equally productive power.
I quite liked this book, despite its old-fashioned aspects. Foyle undergoes a lot of change, starting out cruel and ruthless, and ending up more humanistic, self-aware, and forward-thinking, if still not necessarily a truly good person. I don't think there was much redemption there as in his transformation. Bester's vision of the future was fascinating, especially the ways teleportation changed society and the ways in which scientific advances weren't necessarily equalizing or conducive to social progress. The ending was a real tour de force with its space and time defying action and its really cool depiction of synaesthesia.

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