Learning to Hate Yourself as a Self-Defense Mechanism is an easily digestible and enjoyable collection of SFF and speculative fiction. Andrea Kriz does well tackling topics like AI, identity, art, xenophobia, and fascism without coming across as preachy or overbearing. The stories themselves vary in theme and structure, which gave a nice array of genres to engage in. Kriz's sci-fi seems to be her strongest amongst this collection, with her stories "Learning to Hate Yourself as a Self-Defense Mechanism", "There Are No Hot Topics on Whukai", and "Demonstration of a novel Draconification Protocol in a Human Subject" as some of my favorites. Her more fantastical works were enjoyable, but not as strong. The final few stories were more focused on time travel and its relation to the French Resistance of WW2. Though these were not as strong, I did enjoy "The Last Caricature of Jean Moulin" and its meditation on history, art, and legacy.
Overall this was a nice getaway of a short story collection to engage in for a Sunday afternoon. Kriz has some strong skills in world-building, especially within the confines of shorter fiction, yet gets caught in the weeds of trying to explain complex sci-fi or fantastical elements, taking the reader away from the story. A strong 3.5/5 stars from me.
Thank you to Netgalley and Interstellar Flight Press for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
The usual Murakami weirdness and out-of-pocket sexual comments were still present in this illustrated story collection, but it didn't detract from the stories too much. The artistic style was jarring and sometimes to the the stories' detriment, but overall added to the surrealist minimalism Murakami is known for. 3.75/5.
The Cautious Traveller's Guide to the Wastelands by Sarah Brooks was an incredible debut novel that I could very much see myself returning to due to its vast richness. The story takes us through the travails and travels of the Trans-Siberian Railway, traversing between Beijing and Moscow at the end of the 19th century. Along this railway is a landscape called the Wastelands, filled with imagined horrors the traveller is encouraged to not attend to for fear of devolving into insanity.
Each section is offset by portions of the eponymous guide written by a trip advisor years earlier. Within each of these portions are chapters written from the perspective of a diverse ensemble of characters. Though I enjoy this type of story, it did take some effort to recall which character was which, but this didn't detract from the bulk of the story.
This book didn't hurt for thematic content. Critiques of globalization, colonialism, capitalism, and xenophobia abound. Yet themes of searching for identity through twin pursuits of individuality & community, ecological stewardship, and what it means to be human are sprinkled throughout just as liberally.
Brooks deftly combines the best elements of Jeff Vandermeer, Ursula K. Leguin, Susanna Clarke, and Josiah Bancroft in this wonderful book. It hit all my magical realist needs in a wonderfully diverse historical fiction setting. All in all a 4.25/5 star read. Thanks to NetGalley and Flatiron Books for this ARC edition in exchange for an honest opinion.
The pacing was slow, the character development was slim, and I couldn’t get past how it felt the author was talking down to the reader. Whenever she included a Chinese or Japanese word, she would proceed to give a definition from the character’s point of view. This caused it to feel more like a bad attempt at young adult fiction than a well developed adult novel.