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  • Apr. 22nd, 2008 at 9:04 AM
yes, 21, two riders were approaching, all in, of cabbages and kings, run lola run, You're not of the body, bee sea, magic shadows, i am not a number, seeing the world after april, Circe Invidiosa, Ayizan, gender, Test Card F, politics, fascism, brain thoughts, java, best pilot evah, why i love saturn, default, unless, haiti, i had an accident, open the bay doors HAL, politics and strange bedfellows, weather underground, being dead like me, Timey-Wimey Detector

I went out on the weekend and picked up a coupl'a books. I think my brain is full of non-fiction at the moment, so I went to Bakka and got a few sf books. Two were short story collections. I really really really enjoyed Neil Gaiman's "A Study in Emerald", and China Miéville's "Reports Of Certain Events In London." Regarding the latter, I think I'm a sucker for the "documents of the event" story structure; Timothy Findley's The Wars still stands out in my mind.

Comments

[info]lollo wrote:
Apr. 22nd, 2008 05:02 pm (UTC)
If you enjoy "documents of the event" story structure and I understand you correctly, you might enjoy Warday.
Warday is written as a collection of notes. The authors trek through post-war America five years post Warday (limited nuke war), their lives and the lives of everyone in America forever changed by that fateful day. It is a metabook, a book about writing a book but it doesn't bog down. It is a collection of notes and observations along their trip, interspersed with monologues from people encountered or transcripts of government documents. It is a good read. I love the structure of this book.

P.S.
The reaction of Canadians post Warday and their new place of power in the Northern Hemisphere is well thought out and logical.