The Sword and Laser discussion

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The Mimicking of Known Successes
The Mimicking of Known Successes
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TMoKS: The writing style is perhaps more ornate and stilted than would be my ideal preference, she expostulated
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I do like prose though when it is well written. I think I mentioned elsewhere I was following an online substack by George Saunders on stories and it has a lot of examples of really good prose. Hemingway's "Cat in the Rain" was the first story he talks about and the first paragraph really stood out to me as a great example of conveying mood (https://biblioklept.org/2014/02/11/ca...)
And there are no big words! "The sea broke in a long line in the rain and slipped back down the beach to come up and break again in a long line in the rain."



You and Mrs. Trike. I am indifferent to Hemingway’s prose, personally.
Ruth wrote: "I was keen to read this book and I very much enjoyed the previous pick by this author, This is How You Lose the Time War (although admittedly she had a Co-writer for that one). Howe..."
Note: Older didn’t co-author This is How You Lose the Time War. That was Amal Al-Mohtar and Max Gladstone. Older wrote Infomocracy, which features a world where you can’t do anything without a Pinduoduo-type app. (Pinduoduo is a Chinese app that combines social media, e-shopping, bill paying, etc. in one convenient spot. It also spies on you for the government and is nearly impossible to delete.) Infomocracy is quite good and realistically terrifying.


Sorry, I’m getting Malka Ann Older mixed up with Amal El-Mohtar. Not the same person at all! A mixup worthy of the book I read recently, Doppelganger: A Trip into the Mirror World by Naomi Klein, all about how people keep getting her confused with Naomi Wolf

I gave it 3 stars more for the ideas than the prose, but I found the writing fine overall.

Infomocracy sounds interesting and frightening, kind of like what the buyer of a certain social media site is trying to do - I think I’ll read that next.

I have to say that if any paragraph read as horrifyingly as that first paragraph from that Hemmingway story I would have stopped reading after a page or so.

But I also didn't realize this was supposed to be a Sherlock Holmes Hommage, so what do I know ... 😉

I got about halfway through this one in ARC form (from a giveaway on this site). It was very easy to put down. I don't have the book anymore, but I remember feeling it lacked vivacity, and a failed attempt at aping late Victorian prose might have had something to do with that.

I suspected this because I listened to the prologue to gauge my interest and found nothing to dislike. I started the book in earnest a few days later and, like Ruth, I found Pleiti's narration - as she might put it - utterly insufferable beyond any reasonable explication, if I might expostulate so.
This can only mean that this writing style wasn't necessarily the author's style, or even the book's style, but just this character's! Which makes a lot of sense really, since she explains her obsession with all things Victorian English. Maybe the fact that the language use was so absurdly over-the-top was a statement about how people distantly removed from a culture that they're fascinated with inevitably parody it. Like if someone from Medieval times saw one of our Medieval festivals, they'd probably think we all look and sound ridiculous.
This begs the question: if the story was written in a normal voice, would it have been better or worse? Do you respect the author's editorial choice?
Perhaps listening to it made it harder for me to digest, but I could have done without it. I never thought I'd describe a 170 page book as too wordy, but there's a first time for everything.

Yes, I remember that the prologue was more normal, and in 3rd person. I kept waiting for the book to return to that perspective but it never did. I feel slightly cheated because I read the prologue before deciding to spend my hard-earned credits on the book, and the rest of the book didn’t match up with the prologue.
I like your theory about why Pleiti writes in that style, it makes sense and retrospectively makes the book a bit better.
Books mentioned in this topic
Doppelganger: A Trip into the Mirror World (other topics)This Is How You Lose the Time War (other topics)
Infomocracy (other topics)
This Is How You Lose the Time War (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Malka Ann Older (other topics)Malka Ann Older (other topics)
Amal El-Mohtar (other topics)
Naomi Klein (other topics)
Naomi Wolf (other topics)
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However, I’m now about halfway through and I have to admit it’s not really gelling for me. I like the setting but the writing style… isn’t working for me. I get that she’s going for a Holmesian vibe but it just feels forced, not at all natural and flowing. The moment that really threw me out of the story was at the beginning of Chapter 11 when Pleiti expostulated a line of dialogue, and I don’t think that was the first use of that word (I’m reading in hard copy, perhaps someone with the kindle version can do a search). I don’t know about anyone else, but I’ve never knowingly expostulated anything in my life, nor have I ever heard anyone else expostulate. I’m not even sure I know what it means. I’m also not sure that Malka Ann Older knows what it means, because when I looked it up the meaning I found (“express disagreement or disapproval”) didn’t seem to fit with the scene in the book.
I’m not one of those purists who thinks that the only acceptable way to tag dialogue is with “said”, and that adverbs are to be scrupulously avoided. I read classic novels and can enjoy flowery Victorian prose. However, this book feels like a clumsy pastiche of that style rather than anything more organic and tbh I’m a bit disappointed. I’ll finish reading it, because it’s so short, but if it was 400 pages I think I might have quit long before the end.
What do y’all think of the writing style? Do you enjoy elaborate prose or do you prefer it when the author keeps it simple?