The Sword and Laser discussion

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All the Birds in the Sky
2016 Reads
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ATBITS: I hate it, but I love it. I'm so confused!
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I'm still torn on how I feel about it. I liked the second half a lot more than the first half, but hard pressed to pin down a rating.

I should write all that up...


The weird thing is I can't put my finger on why my opinion shifted so drastically. My best guess is that when I thought it was a young adult novel, I found it surprising and delightful. Then, when it abruptly shifted into a different kind of story, I was left hanging. Plus, it kept ramping up the "oncoming apocalypse" plot, which just left me feeling worried and anxious. But that's just a guess; I don't really know.

There was loads that I did like. I thought the writing was clever with the whimsical, childlike opening and the story telling maturing as the characters did. There were certainly more than enough inventive elements for one book.
What ruined it for me was the characterisation. The people in the story just didn't act like real people. I found it impossible to identify with or sympathise with either Laurence or Patricia, despite the hard lives that they suffered through, because they in turn made the people around them suffer unnecessarily.

Kids are dumb. Good people are flawed. Characters grow up.









I've spent about the same amount of time in both Boston and San Francisco. I've eaten at the very Au Bon Pain next to MIT she describes. The thing that struck me about the descriptions of each city is that Boston felt like CJA was describing a photograph while San Francisco felt like she was describing the neighborhood she lives in.

Screenwriter Charles Randolph (The Big Short, The Life of David Gale) says he thinks drama writers want people to respect them while comedy writers want people to love them.
I think this is part of what we're seeing in this book, these two competing desires warring for supremacy within Anders, which is why there's a somewhat uncomfortable pairing of the silly and serious. A lot of this stuff feels one step away from autobiographical, both of Charlie Jane and her significant other, Annalee Newitz. As a result, it's almost as if she's afraid to plumb those depths, because every time we start getting dark, she pulls up and delivers a joke or some bit of distracting shininess or a deus ex machina to get a character out of a jam.
"Here I am, all of my faults on display, and I've gleaned a bit of wisdom from my tribulations, but you know the worst part about being alone? Playing Frisbee."


I'm frankly not sure the assassin guild exists as much more than a figment of the imagination of the assassin character, who I suspect is merely a cracked wizard. All of the signs he talks about sounds like total overactive pattern recognition stuff.
That's an interesting theory. We just had our local meetup discussion yesterday and were talking about how that subplot just felt abandoned.

I'd go back and look for supporting evidence, but I didn't actually like that character at all. But yeah, by the end of the book I had the idea that he had been a magician of not a lot of talent, had broken his brain somehow, dreamed up the super secret guild which gives him secret messages in the litter on the street. He had a vision which frankly almost came true. Or maybe the vision was the brain-breaking incident.
Only, somewhere, somehow, I fell in love. with the writing, the tone, with Patricia and Laurence with a U.
If this book doesn't have a happy ending I'll throw it at a wall. Then cry, because I'm reading it on my phone and I need that.
Tell me I'm not the only one who feels this way?