Linda Nagata: the blog at Hahví.net


Read any good books lately?

Tuesday, September 8th, 2020

Here’s a roundup of three titles I recently recommended in my newsletter:

I almost never read horror. It’s just not my thing. But Stephen Graham Jones’s new novel The Only Good Indians received such excellent reviews that I couldn’t resist, and preordered it. It’s the story of four Blackfeet friends who grew up together and now find themselves paying in a shocking way for an incident that took place in their youth. It’s an engrossing story, with excellent characterizations.
Find it at Amazon (affiliate link) or at your favorite bookstore.

I also recommend Recursion, by Blake Crouch — a time-travel story with a unique-to-me twist. When someone goes back in time and changes the future, the original future is not lost, but continues to exist as “dead memories” in the minds of those affected by the change –memories that are less than real but not forgotten. Recursion starts off feeling like a standard thriller, but along the way it evolves into a complex, thoughtful, and fascinating read.
Find it at Amazon (affiliate link) or at your favorite bookstore.

And for audiobook fans…
Back in April I recommended the audiobook edition of River of Darkness by Buddy Levy, the story of conquistador Francisco Orellana’s voyage from the headwaters of the Amazon River, to the sea. Last month, I listened to Labyrinth of Ice, the story of the Greeley Polar Expedition of 1881 to 1884. It wasn’t until I was nearly done that I realized Buddy Levy had also authored this book. It’s another excellent story of exploration, endurance, and survival. Highly recommended.
Find it at Amazon (affiliate link) or at your favorite bookstore.

Recommended Audiobook:
River of Darkness

Sunday, March 29th, 2020

River of Darkness: Francisco Orellana’s Legendary Voyage of Death and Discovery Down the Amazon by Buddy Levy

I think I picked up this audiobook as part of a 2-for-1 credit sale at Audible. Audible has these sales every now and then, and even though I’ve accumulated a lot of credits and don’t really need the extra books, I find the sales irresistible. And they’ve led me to some fantastic listens I wouldn’t have discovered on my own — like this one.

River of Darkness is exactly what the subtitle says: it’s a detailed history of conquistador Francisco Orellana’s voyage from the headwaters of the Amazon river, to the sea, and from there to a Spanish colony. As I’ve mentioned before, I love adventure stories and tales of exploration. This one was made more poignant by having read Charles C. Mann’s 1491 and knowing that those civilizations described in the notes kept by Friar Gaspar de Carvajal would soon be gone. The pandemic we’re experiencing now, for all its ravages and the speed of its transmission, is nothing compared to the apocalypse that struck the new world in those days of early contact. But in the time of Orellana’s voyage, the civilizations of the Amazon were still strong and intact.

The story that Buddy Levy tells in River of Darkness goes well beyond a description of the river journey. It also follows the misadventures and eventual rebellion of Gonzalo Pizarro, the original captain of the mission, and it dips into both Spanish and colonial politics.

Though I found the opening chapter or two to be a bit slow, once the introductory material was past, the story was riveting.

By chance, just before I started listening to River of Darkness I read the opening chapters of a novel called What the Wind Brings, by Matthew Hughes. It’s set in the same era, in South America, and I look forward to returning to it as soon as time permits. I suspect it will make an interesting pairing with River of Darkness.