A Long Way for Cozy Sci-fi

Fleeing her old life, Rosemary Harper joins the multi-species crew of the Wayfarer as a file clerk, and joins them on missions throughout the galaxy. Looking forward to a simpler life, she soon discovers it’s not what she was expecting; everyone has secrets, and there’s more than enough to keep her busy.

The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers
Published 2014 via Kickstarter
Bingo Category – Space Opera (Hard Mode)

This comfy, cosy, Firefly-esque space opera hits the spot in terms of an easy going, character focused novel. The plot is good, the writing is good, the characters are fully fleshed out and feel real, and plot arcs get resolved. It’s all very satisfying. I enjoyed it, but it almost felt too cosy. The stakes were relatively small, everyone was polite and nice and friendly and mostly everything was resolved in a nice, polite, friendly way. I know there is loads of love for Becky Chambers and I’m not surprised, because what she writes is great, but this book and most likely the rest of the series, is just not for me.

Dream a little Dream

In a mysterious town hidden in our collective subconcious, theres a department store that sells dreams…

What a wonderful idea! The concept caught my interest straight away and I would have given this book a go even if it didn’t fit my book bingo 2024 list, but it happens to do that quite well in the category of Author of Colour, and it fits for hard mode, which is another bonus. Interestingly, the book was published as a debut in 2020 and funded entirely through a crowd-funding service in Korea – and became a bestseller! How awesome is that! It’s also my local Waterstones pick of the month for August 2024, and there’s a book club meet about it at the store in September, so I’ll be going to that!

This endearing and whimsical tale follows Penny as she becomes the newest employee in Dallergut’s, supplying dreams to customers with various requirements. It’s reminiscent of Mr Magorium’s Wonder Emporium in parts but is most definitely something that is unique: and I wanted so desperately to love it, to get swept away in the deliciousness of the concept, but it really didn’t hit home for me.

It’s not the concept – that’s fabulous. It’s not the characters, although I felt they could have been more fleshed out. The translation wasn’t even much of an issue, although I do feel that it simplified the narration somewhat and it may have been more effective as a whole if read in the original language. DDDS (Dallergut Dream Department Store) is a very good book: it’s a feel-good, cosy, slice-of-life tale but it could have achieved so much more. I don’t want to spoil anything, but the Tale of the Three Disciples is just one example that could have been expanded to become something even more wonderful. I know it’s part of a duology, and that in the next book, there is the possibility that it could become something amazing. I also know that it might not be the author’s intent for it to become something other than what it is, which is cosy, slice-of-life as I’ve said, but there is so much potential in the concept that wasn’t executed and it’s such a shame.

I liked DDDS, the characters were quirky, and the idea of dream-making and selling was intriguing and compelling. I loved the messages that were in the book – the themes of friendship, love, grief, loss, loneliness, stress, perseverance, acceptance, identity and more were all covered in this little novelette and were covered well. It is a magical, lovely little tale.

I was just expecting something else, and I can see so much more that could come from it. I’ll still be picking up the sequel so I can find out what happens to Penny, Weather, Dallergut, Maxim, Assam, Babynap Rockabye, Animora Bancho and even Vigo!!

If you enjoy slice-of-life, cosy fantasy, you’ll love DDDS, and even if cosy fantasy isn’t normally your go-to, try this one. You might find you enjoy it more than you think you will.

Hauntingly Evocative

Welcome to Area X. An Edenic wilderness, an environmental disaster zone, a mystery for thirty years.

The Southern Reach, a secretive government agency, has sent eleven expeditions to investigate Area X. One has ended in mass suicide, another in a hail of gunfire, the eleventh in a fatal cancer epidemic.

Now four women embark on the twelfth expedition into the unknown…

Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer
Southern Reach #1
Published 2014
Book Bingo: Eldritch Creatures (Hard Mode)

This is a ridiculously difficult book to review.

I picked this book up as part of the Bingo 2024 challenge for the Eldritch Creatures category. I’m a little ashamed to say, especially given that I read a lot of horror, that I didn’t realise these odd entities/creatures had a categeory of their own. Anyway, Emily, another lovely member of staff at my local Waterstones, assured me that I would love this book and that it definitely fitted what I was looking for.

Told from the point of view of “the biologist” although the tale includes others, including her own husband’s experiences, her perspective leads us beautifully through this unique, eerie tale of an exploration team (the 12th expedition according to the text) in a place called “Area X.”

The imagery in this deceptively small-looking novel is just beautiful, although not technically traditional. It lulls and lures the reader into a lyrical dance that undulates in the bizarre, and it stays with you. It’s incredibly immersive, and so odd that it’s difficult to define just how effective it is, because I can see how devisive it could be – the interpretation is completely up to the reader, and the content reflects this in the interpretation given by “the biologist” – there are no correct answers, just mystery.

There are plenty of secrets in this book and as the answers are slowly revealed, the story draws you in to its surreal and distorted and disconcerting sense of reality. You are left stranded in the in-between, a kind of limbo, yet there is a feeling of fulfillment. Still there is a sense of needing to dig deeper, to eke out the mystery, to find the reasoning. You know there is more, just not where to find it.

Atmospheric is an almost perfect descriptor, ominous is another.

Personally, I like hauntingly evocative.

“It was as if I travelled through the landscape with the sound of an expressive and intense aria playing in my ears. Everything was imbued with emotion, awash with it, and I was no longer a biologist but somehow the crest of a wave building and building but never crashing to the shore.”

4/5 stars

Avoid Sunken Ships

It Might Just Save Your Life

Years ago during a routine voyage, the SS Arcadia vanished without a trace. Sixty years later, it’s wreck has finally been discovered more than three hundred miles from its intended course… a silent graveyard deep beneath the ocean’s surface, eagerly waiting for the first sign of life.

Cove and her dive team have been granted permission to explore the Arcadia’s rusting hull, but something dak and hungry watches from below. With limited oxygen and the ship slowly closing in around them, Cove and her team will have to fight their way free of the unspeakable horror desperate to claim them.

Because once they’re trapped beneath the ocean’s waves, there’s no going back.

From Below by Darcy Coates
Published 2022
Bingo Category – Under the Surface (Hard Mode)

This review contains SPOILERS

From Below follows a group of people hired to investigate the ruins of a sunken ship that was once considered lost and has recently been re-discovered. The SS Arcadia disappeared without a trace and with no explanation as to why, rumours abounded – from mutiny to ghost stories, Cove and her diving crew aim to find the truth about the mysterious liner, but it turns out to be much more than they bargained for.

What Worked

This book is intriguing pretty much all the way through. The knocking/tapping in the walls – the deaths – the sense of fear is palpable with the original story of the ship and the diving crew in the present. This is edge of your seat stuff. It always feels like there’s an explanation – a real one – just beneath the surface; and while a perfectly reasonable and realistic explanation becomes apparent, the alternative is much more believable – the sentient beings on the ship were dormant – until Cove and her diving crew turn up.

What Didn’t Click for Me

That Roy sabotaged the ROV’s by removing the chips. 1) Surely Sean would have checked for that and 2) Why did he wait until the danger was so blatantly obvious, and seriously affecting him (Roy) before he admitted that he was the one who had done it? Roy knew that the events occurring were beyond explanation and freaking everyone out – making every extra dive more dangerous, so why didn’t he just take the hit and admit what he’d done. I mean, I know he didn’t because it moved the plot on, but it was the most stupid and reckless thing to do, and for a book where characters were mostly sensible, it just didn’t make sense for Roy to do it. Especially when the ROV’s could have got the footage that Cove was insistent that they needed to fulfil their quota.

The repetition about Cove’s previous “thrill-seeking” adventures along with her continued, escalated anxiousness with regards to diving was frustrating. Vanna being so removed from the group made some sense by the end, but even though she was a red-herring villain, she didn’t really do anything to warrant that status (aside from writing a few dodgy entries in her journal.) There was nothing that cemented her as actually dangerous, which in turn made Sean’s character arc mostly redundant until the last 10% of the book. Deveraux would have made a perfect villain, but in the end was under-utilised and ended up being a fairly average guy with a boat who was just interested in the history of the SS Arcadia.

Things I’d Like to Have Seen

Harland having a prominent position as one of the “other” entities – he was a major character in the flashbacks and was the body that was discovered in the dining room. One of the last of the original crew to succumb to the “madness,” it would have been great to have him become a sort of “hero” and save the diving crew from their fate – he tried so hard to do that while he was alive; lasted so long that the only place he had left to hide was a huge room. It was a shame he didn’t get more focus in the “present.”

Pace

Once it started to kick-off, it was honestly edge-of-your-seat stuff. the brief respites in between dives lifted a lot of the tension and it could have been ramped up even more if rather than hot chocolate and slippers, there were nightmares/noises/paranoia affecting the diving crew just as it had the original crew of the Arcadia.

Atmosphere

Tense, palpable in most of the diving scenes and especially in the flashbacks. Harland witnessing the passengers throwing themselves from the Crow’s Nest was harrowing and brutal.

The Ending

The end was much lighter than I expected it to be After the harrowing experience that the crew went through, I understood the reasoning for their decision to edit the footage and petition for the wreckage to become and official grave site etc. But the impact on the characters was lessend. perhaps it was intentional – people like to forget trauma (or the psyche does) and especially so if it’s unexplained or supernatural phenomenon. I just found it odd that everything went pretty much back to normal as quickly as it did. It was good resolution, but I’d have liked to have seen more physchological effects – if it was me, I think I’d have been messed up for a long, long while after all the shit they went through.

The Characters

They were believable. They felt “real.” I remember them all, mostly – Cove (which was a dodgy name in my opinion,) Vanna, Roy, Sean, Aidan, Hestie, Deveraux (there were a couple of extras too) and Harland and Fitz from the original timeline were particularly memorable.

Overall

I really enjoyed this. It doesn’t seem like it, from what I’ve said above, but I really, really did. It did its job and had me on tenterhooks wanting to find out what had happened and what was happening, and why. There was no clear resolution – whch worked. Was it the toxins in the fabric, or was it hibernating entities revived? That there was no explanation either way was really clever. The ending was satisfactory, but it could have been so much more. Nevertheless, it’s one I enjoyed and I’d recommmend it for anyone who likes a spooky read.

Characters: 8/10
Atmosphere: 9/10
Writing: 8/10
Plot: 7/10
Intrigue: 8/10
Logic: 6/10
Enjoyment: 8/10

7.7/10 – 3.85 stars equivalent