chocolatepot: Marian, riding a horse (Marian)
I have finally reached the end of this weighty tome! (Now I will finish The Rise of Female Kings in Europe, 1300-1800 and then read Netherford Hall.) Though TBH it was a faster read than I expected, especially in the small bites I typically read these days, which is a great point in its favor. Still, I had a lot of complex feelings while reading it.

Basic synopsis: A mistreated young man from the Isle of Mull travels south to join the Round Table, only to find that the grail quest plus a massive battle has already killed most of the knights and King Arthur himself. He (lmao I never finished this synopsis last night) joins the remnants and they take on a new quest to find Arthur's replacement.

spoilery, so I'll cut )
chocolatepot: Ed and Stede (Default)
My two favorite things about the Murderbot Diaries are:

a) the way Murderbot gets so pissed off at ART largely because ART does exactly the same kind of thing as it (prioritizes its humans above all else, uses its weapons and abilities to make a point when necessary, tells the truth bluntly) but to it, and because it's better at interacting with humans, or acts a bit more like a human, and

b) Murderbot is soooo traumatized and everyone cares about it soooo much and it hates that. I'm always like "๐Ÿฅบ๐Ÿฅบ๐Ÿฅบ you poor baby," when it has a panic attack or is so upset it can't make eye contact, and I know if it saw me doing that it would be furious. The ultimate woobie.

Actually, b) ties into a) because another part of the tension between ART and Murderbot is that ART isn't particularly traumatized. I think Murderbot is aware on some level (despite being in denial about its own trauma) that ART has a certain amount of self-confidence/self-esteem due to having been valued pretty highly, not being forced to kill and fight constantly for a company, not being continuously rented out to new people who treated it as expendable, etc. and as a result isn't carrying that weight or feeling that tension all the time.
chocolatepot: Ed and Stede (Default)
I made bulgar wheat with mushrooms and feta for lunch this week from the Ottolenghi Simple cookbook Mom gave me for Christmas. It turned out very well (with some bok choy on the side) and I'm pleased! Need to go through the book in more detail and pick out some more recipes!

Reading The Girls at the Kingfisher Club by Genevieve Valentine, and I generally like it! It's a retelling of the Twelve Dancing Princesses set in NYC in the 1920s. My main issue is that I can't quite get the timeline straight in my head - when did they start going out, how long have they been doing it? It feels like the implication is that they've been going to speakeasies since before Prohibition, but maybe I'm misunderstanding. The father's behavior also seems ... insanely awful but it feels like the intent is just "stuffy and old-fashionedly misogynistic".

Rewatching My Mother and Other Strangers lately and it makes me want to knit so many cardigans. Why are the cardigans on this show so perfect.

Did a tarot reading for the new year on the 31st and I got Death for January. ๐Ÿ‘€๐Ÿ‘€๐Ÿ‘€ I officially don't believe in tarot BUT that is exactly the card one would want if one had a big job interview coming up, yeah?

Executive function not great. I sat down and wrote a list of the exact steps needed to finish the wool skirt but I should have started with "bring a dress with good pockets downstairs" and "use pockets to make paper pocket pattern" at the beginning because I'm stuck there!
chocolatepot: A 1920s woman in a bathing suit standing in the sunlight (sunshine)
Shock and horror: I realized the other day that I somehow ended up scheduled for more shifts at the light show than nearly anyone else in our department ... I've had 5 shifts and a bunch of people have had 3-4, and also all but one of mine have been outdoors while nearly everyone else has been inside most of the time.

At first I was like, not cool, HR, but upon reflection I waited until the scheduling was done to take my vacation time around it while other, more selfish people may have simply taken the time they wanted and so if HR wasn't thinking long-term when scheduling each week individually she may have not taken that into account and given them more to do earlier. That being said, my two outdoors shifts this week were originally supposed to be indoors and I can't see any logical reason to have changed that.




I ordered the first Murderbot book from the library and liked it, but since it was so short I figured I should order all the rest at the same time so I don't have to keep up the executive function task of ordering them/wait so long between them. Of course, the fourth one's arrived first. Sigh.




Watched Lessons in Chemistry, and to my surprise, I liked it a lot! I'm always critical of historical pieces that center on sexist discrimination because it's typically dealt with badly on both historical and writing levels (IMO), but it was so much more nuanced and complex than I expected. Details under the cut.

loved the costuming too )
chocolatepot: Bodice of a woman from a painting by Ingres (Ingres)
I just about ate this book up! Lovely m/m romance set in 1885 (with flashbacks).

David Forester is the proprietor of the Curious Fox, a molly house, where he tries to do the best that he can for the club's patrons. His friend, Noah Clarke, is a high-end tailor who often dresses in drag at the Fox. The two met at boarding school when David defended Noah from a bully, and the two explored their sexualities together in adolescence. Then Noah went to Italy in order to learn his trade, while David tried to manage his family's failing fortunes (shitty dad who pisses away the money syndrome); David's father burned down their hotel and died in the fire, causing a massive scandal that saw the family scattered to the winds and David left to fend for himself in London. For a while, he was the plaything of Lord Belleville, a wicked aristocrat who eventually let him take over the Fox once they were no longer having an affair.

When the book picks up, Belleville is making noises about closing the Fox, which would leave its queer clientele with much less secure places to hang out and have sex and would leave David with no employment. Eventually, he intimates that he might be able to change his mind if David comes to the country with him and brings a fake wife for respectability. Noah persuades David to take his (Noah's) sister, but turns up at the train station in drag himself, and David finally decides to leave Belleville for good and make a new life for himself - which is good timing, because it turns out that Belleville was under investigation by the police. Happily Ever After in which David and Noah get each other and the Fox, and Noah also starts his own, more interesting, tailoring practice catering to the lesbian crowd.

ALL MY THOUGHTS )
chocolatepot: Ed and Stede (Our Flag Means Death)
It took me forever because I have so little time for reading, but I finished Ocean's Echo! It was just as good as Winter's Orbit, although I felt like the romance was backgrounded a little bit (I'd compare it to the difference between MDZS and TGCF for the danmei fans). Still, I loved the pairing of the dutiful soldier with the tricksy pain-in-the-ass, it's a good dynamic.

Started reading The Belle of Belgrave Square, an 1860s romance by Mimi Matthews. I picked it up because I read the first book in the series last year and found it pretty enjoyable - the love interest was a tailor/couturier with English and Indian ancestry, which is extremely unusual for historical romance (which is normally like "aristocratic/gentry white men ONLY"). Was a bit more hesitant this time because the love interest is apparently an older white military officer with a bad reputation for harshness (per the first book), but just in the first chapter the implications seem pretty clear that he's actually someone from the guy's unit who stole his identity and is now honorably taking care of the officer's illegitimate children. The heroines of these also have real problems - the first one had a sister who was "ruined" and this one has dickensian hypochondriac parents - so all in all they are satisfying stories with satisfying obstacles.

I mean, I'm only just into it and I already care even though they're an m/f couple, and I can't tell you how little I can be bothered for m/f couples in fiction these days. (It's really hitting me lately how little effort so many book and tv writers put into selling you on the couple.)

Speaking of the gays, I finished and posted another lesbian blackbonnet fic yesterday - A Perfect Pair. (I do not like the title but titles are hard and it's okay enough.) The process of writing it was really interesting because I had no real intention of it becoming sexy, events just ... happened that way as emotions carried things. I'm not generally a writer of sex scenes (I think this is only my third Explicit fic on AO3, out of 78 works? No, second, apparently the omegaverse Austen fic was M) and I nearly always have more interest in focusing on the romantic rather than the sexual, and no the two things are not inherently separate but I adore people staring into each other's eyes in the moonlight and generally have no interest in actually writing an escalation to sex - even writing kissing for me is like, eh. Not anymore, I guess!

(I have been learning a LOT about myself in the past year ... I went from "I'm bisexual in that I don't just admire women aesthetically, I think" to "oh, now I understand why some bi women call themselves lesbians," and I don't think this is unrelated to why I'm like finally discovering the appeal of sex at the same time I start getting more into f/f. Would have been useful to figure this out before 35, but oh well.)

There were multiple original writing projects I was going to try to do this month, but they just ... did not happen.

siiiiick

Dec. 31st, 2022 02:14 pm
chocolatepot: Edna St. Vincent Millay (Millay)
At last I have fallen to covid. :( On Wednesday afternoon I started feeling crappy, so I tested, and for the first time it was positive. Had a very bad evening and eventually had to take nyquil to get to sleep because I was so congested and had such aches in my back and shoulders. But I've been much better since then! Blowing my nose a lot and so on. At first I was very upset about the end of my vacation being covided, but I've come to realize that it's basically no different from how these days would have gone without covid except that I would have gone to the coffeeshop and/or Boba Yaga and spent more money, so.

I watched The Banshees of Inisherin and I decided early on that because it's a movie entirely about the relationship between two men, I should interpret the whole thing as about unspoken romantic love, and honestly? It makes more sense than anything else. spoilers )

Started reading Ocean's Echo by Everina Maxwell. (It's not a sequel to Winter's Orbit or even in the same universe, but it's the same genre/type - space opera with tropey gay romance.) Loving it. The deuteragonists are essentially Gen and Costis, but like a version of TT!Gen? Anyway, extremely cunning guy and extremely good-hearted guy, cunning guy coming up with plans to get around good guy and good guy being noble and trying to help cunning guy, neither of them being able to quite get the other. And they're being forced into an arranged soulbond. I'd love it if Maxwell would apply her trope genius to f/f at some point but this is still excellent.
chocolatepot: Edna St. Vincent Millay (Millay)
Despite my busy schedule of reading fanfic, writing fanfic, and thinking about what I should do next in the fanfic, I managed to finish reading a book! A Lady's Guide to Celestial Mechanics, by Olivia Waite. I think my final verdict is "it's okay, but it could have been a lot better."

Basic synopsis: Lucy Muchelney has been working as her astronomer father's scientific assistant and in fact doing much of the work. She meets Catherine, Countess of Moth, who is a new widow and former victim of spousal emotional abuse, and tries to make it as a scientist in her own name with her new patroness. The official, misogynistic scientific society is against her, but her pop-published translation of an important French work takes off, leading them to try to embarrass her in a debate with the original author - only to inadvertently champion the cause of minorities in science. A happy ending!

My thoughts )
chocolatepot: Bodice of a woman from a painting by Ingres (Ingres)
Just finished a book that was technically good but really, really bugged me.

Said book is Something Fabulous, a gay Regency romance by Alexis Hall. The basic setup is: Valentine, Duke of Malvern, proposes marriage to Arabella Tarleton because their parents had wanted it when they were children (most of said parents are now dead). She absolutely loses her shit because in her head he is tragically forcing her into it like a villain and sexual predator. He goes to bed and she runs away with her companion(/girlfriend); her twinky twin brother, Bonaventure, wakes Valentine up in the middle of the night to go after her so she doesn't get hurt etc. The whole book is their pursuit of the women, occasionally catching up until things happen that let Belle and Peggy get away again. And of course, Valentine realizes he's attracted to Bonny and the two of them get together. (Interestingly, I thought Valentine was going to be repressing his sexuality but he seems to be grey ace, never having felt attraction until Bonny.)

whinge whinge whinge )
chocolatepot: Marian, riding a horse (Marian)
OKAY

FINALLY

So King's Dragon, by Kate Elliott, is set in a world that is very, very heavily based in early medieval Europe. The map IS Europe, centered on the Holy Roman Empire about a century after Charlemagne's death; all of the countries/regions have counterparts here, sometimes only slightly renamed (Westfall, Austra, Gent). Once upon a time the land was united under the Dariyan (Roman) Empire, based out of Darre (Rome), where the skopos (papacy) now sits, and before that people don't really know what went on. Not!Europe is threatened by the Eika, who are not!Vikings that appear to be not human. There's some magic, but it's not part of everyday life, though everyone is aware of the existence of the Aoi (fae, fair folk, elves) in some other dimension and the seemingly more theoretical existence of daimones (demons); religion is much much much more present in everyday life. The religion is centered on the Lord and Lady, who together make up God, but there's also the Blessed Daisan who is basically Jesus plus an obscure gnostic I'd never heard of called Bardaisan - the orthodox tradition is that Daisan had a sort of vision and then ascended to heaven, but there's a heresy that he was actually tortured to death. The orthodoxy/heresy tension isn't very big in this book, but I strongly suspect that it becomes a more major part of later books. There are a lot of saints, mostly martyrs, and biscops (bishops), monasteries, etc. The book opens with a prologue in which a young nobleman named Henry chases down the Aoi mother of his baby son, only to lose her as she goes back to her people; eventually you realize that this Henry is now the not!HREmperor in the present of the novel, and the baby is now the grown up Prince Sanglant.

Our most main characters are Alain, the foster son of a merchant from the western edge of the empire, and Liath, who is hard to sum up ... she and her father traveled all over before settling in not!Denmark, and her father knew sorcery that had to be kept secret. Alain is destined to be given to the church, a plan that's scuppered when the local monastery is devastated by an Eika attack, and instead he's sent to the local count as part of an annual service levy. Liath's father dies, and to pay his debts there's an auction, which includes her as a slave to make up the difference. She is bought by the local priest, who wants her father's knowledge but also wants her as a possession and concubine.

The presence of religion in politics and everyday life is a major part of what makes this feel REALLY medieval, unlike a lot of fantasy. Time is kept by the religious services (nones, terce, etc. etc.) and the date by holidays (Mariansmass, Candlemass, St. Eusebe's Day, etc.). There are a lot of characters who are in the church in various positions and with various personalities, rather than the situation you often see where it's uniformly oppressive, misogynistic, and either zealous and persecuting True Believers or people just using the power of the institution to further their own ends. The characters, particularly Alain, also go to religious faith for comfort when frightened or sad, and both Alain and Liath see a saintly vision at one point (implying a certain amount of realness of the religion to the reader, and conforming with medieval primary sources as well).

Another big point of realism is how much power parents have in deciding their children's futures. "Young people are given more responsibility" is a common trope for "realistic" fantasy, but there should actually be this weird middle ground where teenagers are old enough to do all sorts of occupational stuff, but at the same time are completely under their parents' authority. You often see a sort of enforced childhood that they chafe under or parents wanting them to do something (usually get married) and the characters being shocked and rebellious. But it's the norm and most would accept it, as they do in the book. Alain would rather become a merchant, but he knows what he's supposed to do and is reluctantly willing to do it. Practically everyone in the church is there because their parents chose to put them there, and they're not resentful. Parents assign their children to their future careers with apprenticeships and such. It's just how it is. Duty and obligation.

At the same time, and very interestingly, Elliott vanishes sexism from her version of medieval Europe. The presence of Lord and Lady in the godhead allows for (or is allowed by?) men's and women's equality in life and marriage. A lot of inheritance is matrilineal, with women largely owning property and their husbands being given a role in running it - men marry out, while women keep the family property, with the eldest child of each typically doing that and the younger ones going into the church. The heir to the empire is decided by the reigning king sending out his children one by one as they come of age, and the one that gets pregnant or gets his wife pregnant first is seen as divinely chosen. Women do the same kinds of work as men, hold the same kind of positions in the church as men (if not better - all deacons are women, I'm not 100% on what deacons are but it's a position of authority) and sometimes fight as soldiers. There is not even rape culture: men do not think they have the right to a woman's body, women do not fear being raped if they're in dangerous situations. (Liath and Frater Hugh are a sort of special situation: he's violent toward her, but as she's a slave that's expected, he doesn't force her sexually (though there is certainly coercion involved), and I think most of the townsfolk think that he's just sort of offering her a position as his bedfellow, they don't really perceive that he's trying to Own Her.)

okay, onto the spoilers )

Also, the shamelessly over-the-top ca. 2000 fantasy covers ... I have a couple of Mercedes Lackey paperbacks in the same vein.
chocolatepot: The bodice of a woman, from a painting by Caravaggio (Caravaggio)
I've been mostly avoiding Twitter lately; mainly I'm keeping up with the situation in Ukraine via Slack, where there are a bunch of people who have a lot of background knowledge that informs their takes (history of the region, interest in the military, etc.). I have these conflicting feelings about the stuff coming out re: Snake Island, Ukrainians being asked to make molotov cocktails to resist, and the like - it's heroically stirring, but then a lot of responses to it seem like ... it's badassery from a movie, and it's not?

I'm having Feels, and then internal conflict over being an American spectator, and so on. But at least I'm not one of those let's just say "wrong people" who blames this on NATO allowing countries near Russia who want protection from it to join.

---

I may make some more edits, but my Kickstarter is basically ready, so I pre-launched it! People can sign up to be notified when it goes live. I'm so terrified that my math won't add up so I'll end up in a hole, and that people will not care. So there's 60 days of that kind of anxiety to look forward to. Fun.

I'm very close to the end of King's Dragon, first book in the Crown of Stars series, and I am *so* looking forward to writing a review of it, because for once I love what I'm reading. The author is not a historian but she's clearly done her homework - it's extraordinarily realistic. At the same time, she's worldbuilt it to be a medieval Europe without sexism. I am loving it!
chocolatepot: Nibs (fountain pens)
I finished A Marvellous Light by Freya Marske the other night. It was so good! The basic premise is that magic exists but is secret, and a non-magician in Edwardian England (probably sometime between 1908 and 1914) accidentally gets appointed to the government office that's meant for someone part of that world; he's immediately plunged into a deadly conflict he knows nothing about, with only his prickly magical liaison for help.

here be spoilers )

---

Emboldened by my success at getting permission from other museums, I'm considering opening up the question at home. Basically, I was asked for my thoughts on points for the next strategic plan, and most of what I sent over were points about photographing the collections and getting them online. This seems like a good opening to discuss putting patterns online as well, scale ones, I mean. But I feel like then I have to go all the way to talking about doing the full thing otherwise it could seem like I'm trying to inch us closer to what's beneficial for me without being upfront about why/how - issues of conflict of interest in museums can be kind of arcane and extensive, and doing basically anything pattern-wise could theoretically benefit my pattern business by raising my profile, which could potentially be a problem. Everything I tried to write today came out really twisty and elaborate, and I'm thinking of just saying tomorrow, "I have a pattern company, what if I do my thing and we put the resulting graded and scaled patterns on the website for free?" Without my branding on them or anything of course.
chocolatepot: The bodice of a woman, from a painting by Caravaggio (Caravaggio)
I have some weird kind of thing going on where I feel like I have a sinus infection because of the smell (ever present!) and post-nasal drip, but there's no other symptoms. It's really obnoxious, esp when I'm wearing a mask.

Had a lovely Christmas, although it's definitely been too warm. I suppose that's just the way things are now; white Christmases are going to be standouts going forward.

Just finished Faraway Wanderers today, a little bit of a letdown - I really loved all the fan stuff I saw for it/WOH on Tumblr so I thought I would love it, but it didn't do it for me. However, it is still my best work so far in binding! Partly because I have not bound anything in weeks due to a) writing Yuletide fics and b) my new printer has proved to be unaligned. I am having margin problems and the Xerox support people are making me incandescent with rage at their uselessness. I'm pretty sure that I need to return it and get a new one but I don't have the packing materials anymore.

I DO have a second NYR and that is to get back into writing about historical fashion. Nobody asks questions about it on AskHistorians anymore or they do but it's really tedious old questions I can link old answers to. I have dozens of photos from my exhibition (which is coming down in a couple of weeks T_T) and I want to do an in-depth post on each garment, or at least each women's garment - one is mostly written already. And after that, I'd like to get back into my little ambitious research projects. I would love to actually sew - if I could just! finish! a corset! I could do more interesting stuff afterward - but I try not to beat myself up too much about that given my lack of access to events nearer than Saratoga, which is a 2hr drive.

The other day I realized that we are suddenly getting a lot of great books with queer romances - not the subgenre of romance novels, but just books that feature a queer love story exactly the same way they might feature a het one. And then I realized that all these books are coming from Tor. Like Winter's Orbit and Gideon the Ninth. I ended up spending the Amazon gift card I got from my boss on two new ones, one of which Amazon offered me a little Kindle sample of for while I wait (I virtuously chose the long standard shipping so no warehouse worker would be forced to pack it on Christmas), and I was finally checking it out today. Anyway, this leads up to the point I was getting to, which is: Harry/Draco vibes tend to be quite common in mainstream published lit with m/m romances (like A Marvellous Light, the one I'm reading a sample of), so I wonder how many people who are now writing these love stories professionally got started in H/D fanfiction?

---

Got to share the fics I received for Yuletide!

Find some new way (The Secret Garden; Mary, Colin, and Dickon)

The person leaving the person staying, Lily whispered, donโ€™t always want the same thing.

Philosophical Differences (Ghosts (BBC); Thomas and The Captain)

Thomas and the Captain talk under the stars. Well, clouds. But the stars are still up there somewhere.

Write, burn, bury, abandon (Ghosts (BBC); Thomas and The Captain)

Thomas is (unsurprisingly) unlucky in love and the Captain tries to help. It might or might not lead to a small falling out.

I was very kindly treated with two extra fics this year, which was very nice as I ended up writing two pinch hits - so three for three!
chocolatepot: Marian, riding a horse (Marian)
Last week I read Sarah J. Maas's Throne of Glass while I waited for A Court of Thorns and Roses to come in from ILL. Each is the first book of a YA series, unrelated to each other although, expectedly, given the titles, they're similar in that they're fantasy with a focus on rulers, so well within my interests.

I guess I should cut for spoilers although both of these series are pretty old )

Last night I was very excited to use my little kerosene lamp to read by, because it gives off warmth so I didn't want to use it all summer. But there was dust and cat hair in it and now the room is basically covered in little sooty smuts? FFS. I cleaned some of them up last night when I realized, but I'm only now seeing the full extent of it.

~craft~

Sep. 7th, 2021 07:12 pm
chocolatepot: Nibs (fountain pens)
Read the sequel to The False Prince - The Runaway King. Sadly, not quite as good; I was hoping that the author would take more cues from MWT and it would be similar to Queen of Attolia, but it was in some ways a retread of the first book.

Still, it was interesting to read as a foil to QOA and to see exactly what was so great about what MWT did. I was always sad that we didn't get any more first person perspective from Eugenides after the first book, but it was absolutely the right choice: Nielsen sticks to the 1pp, but there's not much interesting to do with it after having that magnificent lying-to-the-reader-without-lying twist. That MWT takes us out of Eugenides's head and generally shows him through other perspectives lets the reader be tricked in new ways at some points (eg the cannons), and have the entertainment of watching him be misunderstood at others (eg Costis). That also makes it possible to get a radically different view of various characters, countries, and political situations. It's so smart and so good, craft-wise!
chocolatepot: The bodice of a woman, from a painting by Caravaggio (Caravaggio)
Just devoured this book that's been in my Kindle library for ages - The False Prince, by Jennifer A. Nielsen. I don't read much if any YA anymore, but you know that I LOVE a story about royal succession, so I had to.

I don't know if this counts as a spoiler, but I guessed the major plot twist from the summary of the book, and then when I started reading it, if I hadn't already I definitely would have, because Nielsen is clearly very influenced by Megan Whalen Turner. To the point where I almost have to call the book an homage to The Thief?

okay I'll put the spoilers under a cut )

Still, I am psyched to read the sequels, particularly to find out what will happen to Imogen, pls make Imogen become the queen pls Jennifer.
chocolatepot: Ed and Stede (Default)
I do think about things other than real estate/house restoration!

The Goldfinch )

Mount Allegro )
chocolatepot: The bodice of a woman, from a painting by Caravaggio (Caravaggio)
I try to take fiction breaks between non-fiction book, or every couple of non-fiction books, and this time I picked up The Ring and the Crown by Melissa de la Cruz, a YA novel set in a world where magic is real, Merlin is borderline immortal and helped England win the Hundred Years War, and in 1900 the heir to the Anglo-French Empire is being married off to the Prussian prince to end a serious war. Very interesting concept, but in the end it's YA, and so I wasn't very surprised when it turned out to be more like Gossip Girl or Elite or some other show about rich teenagers having relationship drama. Then in the last chapter or two it suddenly went WHOOOOSH and a ton of plot landed. Apparently there was supposed to be a sequel but the sales weren't good enough, which ... the author has all my sympathies because I sure know how that feels, but I can also understand why the sales were bad, because it's not a great book.

More details ... )

Working from home allows me to put on mindless television, which has led me to watch Married at First Sight, a reality show where people submit themselves to be paired up with someone to marry, and they literally first meet at the altar. The show sends them on a honeymoon and makes them move in with each other, and if they decide they can't take each other they have to go through the divorce process. It's terrible but I want to know how the couples turn out (one broke up during/immediately after the honeymoon). Also interesting to watch around the same time as Unorthodox, a drama about a woman fleeing the Orthodox community in Brooklyn.

In more earnest entertainment, I've been watching The Princess Weiyoung, a Chinese historical drama on Netflix. With no knowledge of any Chinese history beyond the broadest possible strokes, I can never get hung up on inaccuracies, the costuming and most of the actors are gorgeous, and the story is full of delightful DRAMA. It's similar to Magnificent Century or Empresses in the Palace in that it's what I call a "harem drama" - lots of "she is hurting our position, we need to get her out of the way while appearing polite and kind, let us make her trip and spill tea on the most high-ranking woman, then she will be banished" kind of stuff, which I love for whatever reason. The basic story is: a prince from the Northern Wei kingdom kills the royal family of the Northern Liang kingdom except for the princess; she gets away and is helped by the illegitimate daughter (technically not illegitimate, but the daughter of one of his concubines - they just always use "illegitimate" in the subtitles) of the Northern Wei prime minister, who was sent years ago into the country and who gets killed by an assassin on the orders of the prime minister's official wife. She poses as the daughter and moves into the family home, falls in love with the brother of the prince who killed her family, etc. I'm trying not to binge it because the episodes are similar enough that it gets boring when you watch them back-to-back.

Done!

Jan. 31st, 2020 06:38 am
chocolatepot: Edna St. Vincent Millay (Millay)
Finished Sorcerer to the Crown, time to update my analysis! (Very spoilery.)

Definitely liking it more than I was halfway through )

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chocolatepot: Ed and Stede (Default)
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