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Books read in 2023:

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134 books.
16 by men, 108 by women, 11 by non-binary authors.
93 white, 11 PoC (some I didn't know).
30 by writers I know are some flavour of queer, 2 by trans authors
9 by writers with disabilities that I am aware of.

Most-read genre was fantasy (78). 21 SF, 2 historical, 17 romance, 2 contemporary fiction, 6 mystery, 19 non-fiction.

72 novels, 23 novellas, 8 novelettes, 2 short story collections, 9 graphic novels.

Most read author by some way Victoria Goddard (21 books). Other people I read more than one book by: Tansy Rayner Roberts (8); Alexis Hall (5); Olivia Atwater, T Kingfisher and Seanan McGuire (3 each); Blue Delliquanti, Stephanie Burgis, Eric Newby, Juliet E McKenna, Mur Lafferty and Freya Marske (2 each).
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Amy-Jane Beer's The Flow is a book about rivers, and particularly the rivers of Great Britain. It's my favourite kind of nature writing, mixing personal memoir with history, science, ecology and culture, and I enjoyed it a great deal.

Less enjoyable was Empire of Light, which we went to see last night. From the trailers, I'd expected a nostalgic tribute to the power of cinema, possibly involving the restoration of a derelict building. I was not expecting a violent racist attack, and was definite not expecting a disturbing portrayal of severe mental illness leading to sectioning. I think it was a good film (and the cinematography was stunning) but it really wasn't much fun to watch.
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Till Human Voices Wake Us was Victoria Goddard's first published book. While it is set in the same universe as the later books which I'd already read, and mentions characters who appear in those, it has a quite different feel, and is also different in being set in a version of modern London (Ysthar, in Goddard's Nine Worlds, turns out to be Earth). The central character is Raphael, lord magus of Ysthar, who is coming to the end of a centuries-long magical competition for the role of lord magus when his long-lost brother reappears in his life. It's largely a story about processing and moving on from trauma, and about someone learning to let people in after years of shutting them out, and although it is hopeful and sometimes funny it does feel a bit sadder than the other books I've read. I enjoyed it a lot, though; it reminded me a bit of Fire and Hemlock (the title is taken from 'The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock' and Eliot pervades the novel in a similar way), and also quite a lot of Sandman.
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The Affair of the Mysterious Letter is the first Alexis Hall book I bought, though not the first I ended up reading by a long way. It's a kind of steampunk Lovecraftian reimagining of Sherlock Holmes, probably by way of BBC Sherlock, with a gender-flipped sorceress Holmes (Shaharazad Haas) and a buttoned-up Victorian (though gay and trans) Watson (Captain John Wyndham) trying to solve a case of attempted blackmail. I thought this was great fun.

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