• 2025 Hugo Awards Homework - The Novellas

    From Robert Woodward@3:633/280.2 to All on Sun Jun 1 14:58:37 2025
    First was ³Navigation Entanglements² by Aliette de Bodard (James
    Nicoll¹s review can found at https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/you-and-me-together). I have doubts
    that the plotters¹s plot would had worked even if the unexpected event
    hadn¹t happened.

    The second title read was ³The Brides of High Hill² by Nghi Vo (James
    Nicoll¹s review can be found at https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/wedding-bells). Several chapters in,
    I decided that the story was a Bluebeard variant, but the final twist
    was entirely unexpected, though in retrospect, there were hints that
    things were not as they seemed.

    The third title read was ³The Butcher of the Forest² by Premee Mohamed
    (James Nicoll¹s review can be found at https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/quiet-solitude). A villager is sent
    on a mission under pain of death (she succeeds or all of her relatives
    and neighbors will be killed). The problem is that the forest in
    question is a borderland for Faerie (not that it is called that in the
    story) which operates under its own rules.

    The fourth title read was ³The Practice, the Horizon, and the Chain² by
    Sara Samatar. This story is set on a generation ship (but is it actually
    going somewhere?) that is part of a fleet with severe social
    stratification. I have referred to stories that sang to me or didn¹t
    sing. IMHO, this one was badly out of tune. I have read claims that this
    story had lyrical prose; I see woo-woo and violations of conservation
    laws (energy and momentum).

    The fifth title read was ³The Tusks of Extinction² by Ray Nayler.
    Russian scientists in (I think) the 22nd century are trying to recreate
    the Pleistocene Arctic Biome in a large tract in Siberia. They started
    with recreating the Wooly Mammoth, but ran into problems. They solve the problem by downloading the recorded mind of a 21st century Russian
    scientist who had studied elephants thoroughly (before poachers had
    killed all of them in the wild) into a female mammoth who would then
    train the rest of the herd of youngsters on how to be mammoths. What
    could go wrong? If nothing had, there wouldn¹t be a story.

    The sixth title read was ³What Feasts at Night² by T. Kingfisher. This
    is the 2nd Sworn Soldier story (the third will be published later this
    year). Lieutenant (retired) Alex Easton (and friend) arrives at the
    family hunting lodge to discover that the care keeper had died several
    weeks earlier. Efforts to repair neglect are complicated by the
    potentially fatal attentions of a ghost of sorts. Fortunately, the
    original care keeper was the only fatality.

    --
    "We have advanced to new and surprising levels of bafflement."
    Imperial Auditor Miles Vorkosigan describes progress in _Komarr_. ‹-----------------------------------------------------
    Robert Woodward robertaw@drizzle.com

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  • From Titus G@3:633/280.2 to All on Tue Jun 3 15:44:19 2025
    On 1/06/25 16:58, Robert Woodward wrote:
    snip

    Thank you for those outlines.
    The only one that I have read is The Tusks of Extinction by Ray Nayler
    which I enjoyed awarding it three stars.
    It would be useful if you gave your opinion on each read or rated it.

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