July 17, 2010

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The second Jig the Goblin book by userinfojimhines does what any good second book of a fantasy trilogy ought to do: it shows you what’s happened to your protagonist as a result of Book 1′s events, and upped the stakes this time around to get him in even more trouble. In this particular installment’s case, it does an excellent job as well of taking traditional fantasy tropes and subverting them.

Now that Jig’s become “Jig Dragonslayer”, if anything, he’s almost more miserable than he was before. It is nifty that he’s gotten the ability to heal his fellow goblins of their injuries, but oi, the singing they’re doing about him! Not to mention how he’s coming perilously close to being chosen as chief. One goblin, though, is convinced that Jig’s not all he’s cracked up to be: Veka, who’s adamant that SHE is far better hero material, and who is bound and determined to win the acclaim that ought to be hers. Jig would quite cheerfully let her do her thing–only their lair is threatened by a pixie invasion, and it becomes the job of Jig Dragonslayer to go do something about it. Even if he’d much rather run the other way.

All in all this was a lovely followup to Book 1. I very much liked the character of Veka, her almost-a-romance with the hobgoblin nicknamed “Slash”, her struggle to master magic–and ultimately, even though she’s not about to admit it, to live up to Jig’s example and become a true hero. She gets significant point-of-view time, making her plotline as important as Jig’s all throughout the book, and her character arc does not disappoint.

Other high points of the book are Jig’s developing relationship with his god Tymalous Shadowstar, and the “duh OF COURSE” giggle-worthy way Jig finally wins the day. Four stars.

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I got more ebooks. ;) Though in this particular case, aside from the previously promised new Temeraire novel, all of these are actually replacing print books I’d previously owned. So there’s not much actual gain on the To Read shelves–and the hiatus of buying brand new books is still kind of on. Anyhow, here’s the rundown:

  • In the Bleak Midwinter and A Fountain Filled With Blood, by Julia Spencer-Fleming. Mystery. Y’all may recall that I had previously acquired these as free PDFs, and I liked them well enough that I wanted to actually buy copies. So this is me officially adding them to my purchased library. I’ll swing back in a bit and get more of this series, since I want to know where it goes.
  • The Smoke Thief and The Dream Thief, by Shana Abe. Historical/paranormal romance.
  • Death is Forever, by Elizabeth Lowell. Romantic Suspense. One of the Lowells I like better than most.
  • And last and very, very definitely not least, Tongues of Serpents, by Naomi Novik! Fantasy, sixth in the Temeraire series, and I’m thinking this is what I’m going to read next now that I’m done with Jim Hines!

Thus the year’s total comes up to 195.

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