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What Makes This Book So Great
What Makes This Book So Great | Jo Walton
As any reader of Jo Walton's Among Others might guess, Walton is both an inveterate reader of SF and fantasy, and a chronic re-reader of books. In 2008, then-new science-fiction mega-site Tor.com asked Walton to blog regularly about her re-readingabout all kinds of older fantasy and SF, ranging from acknowledged classics, to guilty pleasures, to forgotten oddities and gems. These posts have consistently been among the most popular features of Tor.com. Now this volumes presents a selection of the best of them, ranging from short essays to long reassessments of some of the field's most ambitious series.Among Walton's many subjects here are the Zones of Thought novels of Vernor Vinge; the question of what genre readers mean by "mainstream"; the underappreciated SF adventures of C. J. Cherryh; the field's many approaches to time travel; the masterful science fiction of Samuel R. Delany; Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children; the early Hainish novels of Ursula K. Le Guin; and a Robert A. Heinlein novel you have most certainly never read. Over 130 essays in all, What Makes This Book So Great is an immensely readable, engaging collection of provocative, opinionated thoughts about past and present-day fantasy and science fiction, from one of our best writers.
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xicanti
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I‘ve finally caught up with Jo Walton on Dragaera, so the other night I went back and reread all her relevant essays (which‘re the reason I read the series to begin with). Now I‘m all happy about Vlad, and kinda vindicated because Walton also disliked TECKLA at first, and eager to get to TIASSA good and soon. Maybe in July?

Anyways, I highly recommend reading Jo Walton‘s perspective on a series you‘ve enjoyed, if she‘s also read it.

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rabbitprincess
Pickpick

I'm not a big SFF reader but I thoroughly enjoyed reading Jo Walton's thoughts on the books she was re-reading, and her thoughts on reading practices and habits in general. May have to check out some of the books she discussed!

shanaqui I still have a whole LIST from this book. (And even more from being friends with her -- it's deadly! 😁) 5y
rabbitprincess @shanaqui I have to borrow it again because I forgot to make a list while I was reading 😅 5y
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rabbitprincess
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On Heinlein's The Door Into Summer, published in 1957 and set in 1970 and 2000: "Cloth diapers put on a baby by a robot worked by vacuum tubes and transistors is an image that sums up the kind of ways SF gets things wrong even better than a flying car." ?

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rabbitprincess
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Yay, someone else has read In the Wet! It was certainly an interesting concept, but wow does the main character have the worst nickname ever.

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toofondofbooks
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TK-421 I love this! 5y
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SW-T
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Pickpick

Jo Walton discusses the joy of rereading books and why she rereads so many books. The books she mentioned were interesting, and it was nice to read her thoughts on the ones I‘d read myself. Added new books to my TBR list and was inspired to reread old favorites. #reread #rereading #rereadbooks #scifi #fantasy

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NotCool
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After reading this book I went back and read series that I‘d always avoided as too long, or old, or not my thing. So well worth it.

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xicanti
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Jo Walton dislikes reading nonlinear series in publication order (as opposed to chronological order) for the exact reason I LOVE reading them in publication order. Brains are funny.

Alas, I couldn't read the JHEREG essay after all because it contains spoilers for the other books, too. I'll come back to all her Vlad Taltos pieces once I'm further into the series (in publication order, of course).

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xicanti
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Now I've finally read JHEREG, I can go back and properly read Jo Walton's essay on it. Hurray!

Walton and I differ in our approach to nonlinear series, though. I love to tackle them in publication order because I get a real kick out of seeing familiar characters from another angle and watching for clues to plot points that've been lurking in the corner for ages, influential but unspoken. She's into internal chronological.

Leniverse Publication order here! Except if the author explicitly states that a different order will work better. (Sometimes the book they wanted to do first isn't the one the publisher wanted, for instance.) 6y
TobeyTheScavengerMonk @Leniverse Yep, publication order for me too! 6y
xicanti @Leniverse @TobeyTheScavengerMonk I always feel vaguely betrayed when I learn an author favours IC after I've read a whole bunch. Like, I devoured the Vorkosigan Saga in publication order and LOVED the progression that way, only to learn in the second-to-last book's author's note that Bujold thinks IC is the only way to go. 6y
Leniverse Whaa? Ok, for the Vorkosigan series I have only one strong opinion about reading order: Read Shards of Honor and Barrayar before reading the Miles books. Cordelia is awesome, and Miles never knows it because she's just his mother and he's too busy living up to his father. And so the readers only suspect it unless they've read her story. 6y
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TaraBlack
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"There's a definition of tragedy as a story where you know the end".

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TaraBlack
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Cordelia could mean

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Keryntalia
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A fun diversion between novels - 130 bite-sized reflections on SFF books, literary criticism and the reading life by the ever-insightful Jo Walton.

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xicanti

There's a disadvantage of rereading as much as I do in that there are series where the books I don't like become, in time, the ones I like best because they're the ones that retain freshness after I have the ones I like memorised.

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RealLifeReading
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Pickpick

I love dipping into this collection of short pieces from Jo Walton who writes about the SF/fantasy books she's reading (originally posted at Tor.com). I always come away from it wanting to read more. It's great for reading slumps!

WesleyHoffmann Love Jo Walton! 8y
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RealLifeReading
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Happy Pi Day from page 314 of this great book

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