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Search tags: Jody-Lynn-Nye
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review 2019-05-13 15:26
Review: Swords, Sorcery & Self-Rescuing Damsels
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THESE LADIES AREN'T WAITING.
 
Twenty bestselling and award-winning authors offer enchanting tales of women and girls forging paths through darkness and peril. Cleverness, curiosity, and determinations make worthy heroines in fantastical new worlds.
 
This line from Editor Lee French's notes says it all: that the term "damsels in distress" reduces women to poorly-dimensioned plot points "useful as nothing more than a prize for defeating the enemy." "This depiction sucks," Lee adds.   Yeah, it does.  Like all those sci-fi movies we used to watch as kids when the group is being chased by monsters the woman would always trip & fall over something, slowing everyone down.  Hell, even in the first Mortal Kombat movie they reduced Sonya Blade- Special Forces Team Leader who just killed Kano- to eye candy & fluff.
 
15159570676_8c33abc48b_b She was saving this outfit for just such an occasion...
 
Like all anthologies, it's hit and miss with the stories.  Some are pretty good, others seem to end just when you're getting caught up in them and some you don't know what the heck's even supposed to be happening.  Makes for an intriguing yet uneven mix.  The central theme, of course, is women of all stripes and ages taking their destinies into their own hands.  Not always exactly a HEA, but they're seizing control of their fates. Some of my favorites here were Ashna's Heart, She Remembered, Princess Last Picked, Falconer's Apprentice, Alive, Thorn Girl, Calamity, Hope beyond Death & Balancing the Scales.
 
Only real complaint here is it seems like some stories were edited down to the point that choppiness & uneveness were the end result.  But other than that, a good solid read about women & girls who get the job done.
 
3.5/5 stars  

 

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review 2016-09-23 21:36
Gaslight & Grimm
Gaslight & Grimm: Steampunk Faerie Tales - Jody Lynn Nye,Gail Z. Martin,Danielle Ackley-McPhail

[I got a copy through NetGalley, in exchange for an honest review.]

 

I found this anthology quite inspiring in general, and it left me with a better impression than anthologies generally do. I appreciated that most stories, while building upon the foundations of original tales, didn't hesitate to stray from them at some point, instead of being "mere" retellings almost identical to their inspirations. For instance, the one inspired by "Rapunzel".

 

The ones I liked best:

 

- "When Pigs Fly" (original story: The Three Little Pigs): airship and their badass captains, on a backdrop of Alliance vs. Rogues conflict. I was bound to like this one.

 

- "From the Horse's Mouth" (The Goose Girl): a gritty retelling, that doesn't shy away from the grim realities of a country at war.

 

- "The Giant Killer" (Jack the Giant Killer): with Jack being more of a Jane, with interesting devices and a tendency to get into trouble... but always with a certain style.

 

Remarks on a couple of other stories:

 

- "The (Steamy) Tale of Cinderella (Cinderella, obviously): set in a fleet gathered around the princely ship, where the fated ball is to be held. But the Prince isn't just some charming vapid man, Cinderella is more interested in machines than in snagging a man, and there's a nice LGBT dimension. I do regret, though, that the latter was presented a little abruptly, out of nowhere—there could have been so much more, instead of the (at first) traditional approach of shaming same-sex relationships. Fortunately Cinderella's and the Prince's decision is an interesting one.

 

- "The Hair Ladder": I liked the different relationship dynamis between "Rapunzel" and "the witch". I wasn't convinced by the mother, however, as she was much too selfish and vain, and felt like a cardboard villain.

 

But overall, these stories were more 3 to 4 stars each than anything really bad. "The Walking House" (Baba Yaga) is probably my least favourite.

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review 2015-01-02 20:42
Space Opera anthology edited by Anne McCaffrey
Space Opera - Anne McCaffrey,Elizabeth Ann Scarborough,Jody Lynn Nye,Jim Burns,Charles de Lint,Suzette Haden Elgin,Steven Brust,Elisabeth Waters,Robin Wayne Bailey,Marion Zimmer Bradley,Gene Wolfe,Leslie Fish,Warren Norwood,Margaret Ball,Lyn McConchie,Peter S. Beagle,

Now I picked up this book way back when it came out in 1996 , but I recently decided I needed to re-read my older books.

 

This lovely anthology is a collection of tales with the theme of music. Everything from fantasy, horror, science fiction, post apocalyptic and more. Some of the greatest voices in fiction from the 90s and before are in this book.

 

From Space Station Annie by the late great Cynthia McQuillian to Scarborough Fair by Elizabeth Anne Scarborough to Calling Them Home by Jody Lynn Nye it is easy to find a tale that lifts up your heart by the power of the mixture of words and music.

 

While these tales might seem a bit dated to a lot of modern readers, they are fine examples of masters of the craft writing on a theme. We need more anthologies like this and I know I will be looking for them.

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review 2013-10-06 18:08
Death of Sleep - Anne McCaffrey,Jody Lynn Nye

Will Lunzie ever catch a break?! If it's not one thing, it's another. And whenever she finds a little bit of happiness, the rug gets pulled out from under her. This books ends with a major cliffhanger.

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review 2013-07-21 20:58
Mythology Abroad
Mythology Abroad - Jody Lynn Nye Keith Doyle and his pal Holl are visiting Scotland and Ireland. Looking for the truth behind some of the myths. Getting involved in magic and trying not to involve themselves too much without too much obviousness. Very much the second book in a series I'm pretty sure I missed bits and pieces.
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