So if you’re like me, you start reading that book, and almost immediately need to read a bunch of other books, because the main character has read them and how can I understand without reading them? I think I can resist a lot of them, and there’s already a good amount of overlap but when she starts actually mentioning plot points from other books in ways that seem emotionally relevant is when I need to read them. So I can recommend the start of this book but am now reading Triton before I can get back to it.
If I were a very cruel person, I’d recommend Greer Gilman’s Moonwise—it surpasses the formal specifications (female author, main characters are two middle-aged women and two goddesses), but it’s extremely referential we’d probably never see you again, and honestly, it’s probably not particularly relevant to chaosmosis’ quest.
So if you’re like me, you start reading that book, and almost immediately need to read a bunch of other books, because the main character has read them and how can I understand without reading them? I think I can resist a lot of them, and there’s already a good amount of overlap but when she starts actually mentioning plot points from other books in ways that seem emotionally relevant is when I need to read them. So I can recommend the start of this book but am now reading Triton before I can get back to it.
If I were a very cruel person, I’d recommend Greer Gilman’s Moonwise—it surpasses the formal specifications (female author, main characters are two middle-aged women and two goddesses), but it’s extremely referential we’d probably never see you again, and honestly, it’s probably not particularly relevant to chaosmosis’ quest.
However, I’ve started a reading group about it.
My book queue is already functionally infinite so adding another infinite to it doesn’t really harm me :)