Here are my nominees for Best SFF Book I Read This Year Not Published in 2011:
#5: The Forever War by Joe Haldeman

#4: Heroes Die by Matthew Woodring Stover

#3: The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi

I criticize it as a novel for two reasons. One, I didn't really click with any of the characters which is a personal problem and may not be an issue with Bacigalupi's work. Two, there's something about the way the novel reads that's a little disjointed. Not the prose so much as the way it all comes together... I never could put my finger on what it was. Sometimes a style just doesn't totally work for me, and I guess that was the case here. Still, it's a very good novel and a must read from a cultural perspective.
#2: The Magicians by Lev Grossman

#1: Best SFF Book I Read This Year Not Published in 2011 is...
The Folding Knife
by K.J. Parker

In the prologue Parker hits the reader with the WHO, WHAT, WHERE, and WHEN as her protagonist Basso leaves Vesani in poverty on the top of a wagon. What it holds back is the why. Parker relishes filling in that blank with a brilliant tragedy in the tradition of Shakespeare and Euripides.
Finance is the device that Parker uses to move the plot from Basso's role as head of the Charity and Social Justice Bank. I couldn't help observing a parallel between the Vesani (read: Basso) economy and America's. Leveraged, always betting on future profits, never cutting back. On a more personal side, namely the human story of Basso beginning with the murder of his wife and brother-in-law, Parker sets up scenes of loss and heartbreak that resonate time after time.
For all that Folding Knife is an epic fantasy - just not traditionally so. It follows a man through thirty years of his life describing his rise and fall from power through war and peace in 400 some odd pages. Why is there any list of the best fantasy novels out there without The Folding Knife right near the top? I can't explain it. It's one of the five best books I read this year and cemented K.J. Parker as one of my buy on sight authors.
If you missed my Thanksgiving post, I explained that I'm doing a series of awards. I'm going to call them the Juice Boxes. See if you can keep up here... so there are the Hugos. My name is Justin. Put those two words together and you get Jugos. Jugo in Spanish means Juice. The Juice Awards sounds like something O.J. Simpson would bestow on someone, so I added the box. After all, who doesn't like Juice Boxes?
I'll be doing a separate post for each category with a goal of having them all done before Christmas (we'll see). My award categories are as follows:
Best SFF Press for eBooks
SFF Editor of the Year
SFF Cover of the Year
Most Disappointing SFF Book (2011)
Best SFF Book I Read This Year Not Published in 2011
SFF Debut of the Year (2011)
SFF Book of the Year (2011)
For all that Folding Knife is an epic fantasy - just not traditionally so. It follows a man through thirty years of his life describing his rise and fall from power through war and peace in 400 some odd pages. Why is there any list of the best fantasy novels out there without The Folding Knife right near the top? I can't explain it. It's one of the five best books I read this year and cemented K.J. Parker as one of my buy on sight authors.
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If you missed my Thanksgiving post, I explained that I'm doing a series of awards. I'm going to call them the Juice Boxes. See if you can keep up here... so there are the Hugos. My name is Justin. Put those two words together and you get Jugos. Jugo in Spanish means Juice. The Juice Awards sounds like something O.J. Simpson would bestow on someone, so I added the box. After all, who doesn't like Juice Boxes?
I'll be doing a separate post for each category with a goal of having them all done before Christmas (we'll see). My award categories are as follows:
Best SFF Press for eBooks
SFF Editor of the Year
SFF Cover of the Year
Most Disappointing SFF Book (2011)
Best SFF Book I Read This Year Not Published in 2011
SFF Debut of the Year (2011)
SFF Book of the Year (2011)
Really want to read THE FOLDING KNIFE, THE MAGICIANS and THE WINDUP GIRL. I have no idea why I haven't read them, yet...
ReplyDeleteGlad you put the Folding Knife as your #1. I knew there was a reason I liked you. (Your addition of The Magicians makes it a bit suspect though.....)
ReplyDeleteThis is quite a good idea. I may have to think about doing something similar on my own blog. Of the books here I've only read The Magicians and I wasn't impressed by it, but to each their own.
ReplyDeleteIf you read my review on amazon.ca you'll see that I basically agree with you re: The Windup Girl. I really enjoyed Purple and Black by KJ parker but never read anything else by him/her.
ReplyDeleteThank you for highlighting books you enjoyed that are a little older. It's fun and all to talk about new stuff, but books that are a few years old are just as good, sometimes better!
ReplyDeleteI also have to agree with you about the The Windup Girl. I thought it was an excellent work of social commentary and a pretty good book overall. However, the vision of the future was disturbingly plausible to me, it made the ecologist and humanitarian inside me want to curl up in a corner and weep. So, while I think it achieved its goal in providing food for thought I couldn't really enjoy reading it. It might be my no.1 thought provoking recent read though.
ReplyDelete