I can’t believe it’s mid-November already. Time is speeding by.
And I just stared blankly out the window for a solid three minutes. Do I seriously have nothing more to say than that? This blogging every day thing does pose its own challenges.
How about a book review? Last week, I saw that the hardcover edition of The Turning Season could be had for a penny (plus $3.99 shipping and handling, and sorry, Catsongea, I bet you can’t get the same deal), so I took the plunge. I hadn’t read any of Shinn’s Shifting Circle books because I’d hit my uncertain purchase spot with her right before she started releasing them and they didn’t sound… well, I hadn’t bought them. They sounded bleak, I guess, and I’m not much of a fan of bleak.
So The Turning Season is the story of a shape-shifter, struggling to get by in a world — our world — that is not so friendly to those who are different. But she’s got friends, an ex-lover, clients — enough of a community of people who are either shifters or friendly to shifters that when she changes (randomly, not under her control), people show up to take over her responsibilities. The crux of the story is a gentle love story: she meets a guy, she likes him, he likes her, slowly she lets him into her world, things happen — some bad, some sad — but by the end, they are living happily ever after. Or, more realistically, happily until her early and untimely death, because in this series, shape-shifters die young because of the strain of the shifting on their bodies.
There are parts of the book that didn’t work so well for me. The fact that all shape-shifters are terrified that anyone will find out about their abilities and automatically hide from any chance of discovery is a cliche and not one that I think makes a lot of sense. The fear of the evil government locking up people who are different feels very 1950s to me, the Cold War mentality in action, and I really think that if there were shape-shifters in the world, at least a few of them would head to Hollywood. In the real modern world, if shape-shifters existed, they’d be on Jimmy Fallon and Ellen and all over social media. I think it would have been more plausible that all shape-shifters were terrified of discovery if the world had been a little farther away from this one, if there had been events in history that shaped their ideas of discovery. As it is, they’re all terrified of discovery but every time a new normal character learns about them, the reaction is basically, “Okay, cool.”
In the same vein, all the characters respond in a very similar way to a key event at the end and it didn’t work for me. Without spoiling it… well, no way to explain without spoiling, so I won’t. But ironically, one of the reasons that Shinn stopped being an auto-buy purchase for me is that in one of her previous books (Royal Airs), an ostensibly good character did something I found horrifying — an incredible violation of someone else’s bodily integrity — but it was presented very nonchalantly and didn’t bother the other characters. In this case, a character did something that made a lot of sense to me and all the characters were horrified. Perhaps I’ve lived in Florida too long. Anyway, I can’t explain it without giving a ton away, but it definitely broke me out of the story.
Those things said, though — Sharon Shinn can really, really write. Her work is lovely and lyrical. The characters were a pleasure to spend time with, the world was beautiful. The book is bittersweet, but oh, so moving. And while the story is definitely entertainment — essentially a cozy paranormal romance — it has a message, too. In the words of her narrator “I will start celebrating the gifts life brings me, no matter how bitter, on some days, they seem. And I will never, inside the curse, stop searching for the blessing.”
Worth the read. But now I should get back to writing a book of my own!
Today’s goal — just to get out of this damn scene I’ve been stuck on. I need to quit being all angst-y and just get on with things. But fingers crossed, today will be the day!
catsongea said:
I have to agree with you Sarah, I loved the elemental blessings books and raced down to the library to get the Shifting circles books. I read the first one – it was ok, but the second one I put down after a few chapters – I think I will return them. For me the second book was almost the same as the first. It is almost as if she said to herself – I will make shifting like being a low functioning street person with psychotic episodes who is occasionally ok. It doesn’t work for me. I will try some of the others. I am coming to Florida in late April (Sanibel) for a couple of weeks with Dad. Hope it is swimming weather… Hope your writing goes well today.
sarahwynde said:
I read that one, too, but not the first one. I think the fact that fear drives the characters to so much suffering is really a fundamental flaw. It’s one thing to have a world where people with powers don’t reveal them but are living comfortable lives on their own (ie, Harry Potter) — another entirely where fear drives them to such desperate lives. And Sanibel is south and on the gulf coast, right? By late April it should definitely be swimming weather and at the beach, too! I think I’m jealous. 🙂
tehachap said:
Yes, finding something to write about each and every day when you don’t have a story line or plot to follow is a challenge. I had my own 3 minutes of looking out the window and thus decided to write about our new snowfall! For it not being winter yet, it sure is cold and I don’t think we’ve ever had snow this early before. Question — have you ever been turned off by a book to the point where you quit reading it? I get the feeling that you did just that with the Shinn book you just reviewed. Do you ever feel guilty about it and hang onto the book, telling yourself you’ll give it another chance some time in the future? Or do you just pass it along or donate it?
Judy, Judy, Judy said:
I’m reading this blogpost at the library. When I get off here, I am going to look for her. I could use a new voice to enjoy.