Saturday, July 12, 2014

Sermon: Won't You Come Out To Play?

Anyone who's known me for more than, like, fifteen minutes knows that I've had frequent struggles with depression. I can't say for sure whether it's officially depression; I've never been diagnosed or anything...but I've spent a lot of time being varying degrees of miserable.

A few years ago, a good friend suggested a tactic that might help--writing a list of things that made me happy. ("And you can't say 'nothing,'" she said. She was always pretty good about seeing through my bullshit.)

I never did this, of course, because I was in one of my moods and being sad is easy. But I feel like I'm about ready now. With that in mind, here's the beginning of the list. (Not the most important, mind you, but it's a good place to start.)



Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Book List: June 2014

14. Fiddlehead by Cherie Priest

This is the (probably) final book of Priest's Clockwork Century series, which are all about steampunk and zombies. Zombies aren't really my scene, but I have on occasion held a passing interest in steampunk, which is what got me into the series. I found the first book of the series, Boneshaker, at a small bookstore in Manzanita, Oregon, and was unable to put it down. (This was also the place where I kicked the Pacific Ocean. It was a good day.) I've been keeping up with the series ever since.

The series in a nutshell: a mysterious gas flooded Seattle that turns people into zombies. Enterprising criminals found a way to turn it into a drug (which also zombifies, but at a slower pace.) This has had ramifications on the Civil War, which is still going on in the 1880s (because of course it is.) Also, there's airships and airship pirates (because goddamn right there are.)

In Fiddlehead, a scientist has invented the world's first "thinking engine," which tells him that both sides are going to lose the Civil War because of the undead menace. Also, a Confederate businesswoman switches sides with an offer of a new superweapon that will help them win the war. There's intrigue and action and returning characters and airship battles and an assault on the home of Paralyzed Former President Lincoln (with defense lead by Freshly Sober Current President Grant.) Good times.

The pacing gets weird at times, in part because it switches between two action sequences (which only slows down both of them.) Overall, though, it's still pretty fun. It's a solid effort that falls in line with the trends of the series--the books based in Seattle (Boneshaker, The Inexplicables) are vastly superior to the ones that don't (Dreadnought, Ganymede, Fiddlehead.)