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A carregar... Waters of Versaillespor Kelly Robson
Books Read in 2016 (1,486) A carregar...
Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se irá gostar deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. It's really amazing how many chicks you can pick up if you invent a magical toilet system in the 1740's. I mean, they fall ALL OVER YOU if you happen to be smart, Striving, and industrious about manipulating and enslaving poor water creatures. :) I think this is a perfectly delightful French escapade full of wit, liaisons, and fresh toiletries. (Champagne showers not included.) Honestly, though, I wanted to be more in the mood for this kind of tale. I had to want to like highly coiffed and highly sexed misters and matrons, in other words. Of course, if you ARE in the mood for it, however, then bon appetite! The rest of the story is rather good, too. :) She laughed and dove. The water bubbled like a soup pot, forcing the slush to congeal into wads the size of lily pads. As the turbulence increased the leaved tilted and stacked, climbing into columns of gleaming ice that stretched and branched overhead. Sylvain is a soldier and minor noble who spends his summers on military campaigns and the rest of the year at Louis XV's court at Versailles. His wealth and status come from engineering a system of cisterns and pipework to run water through the palace and setting up porcelain 'thrones' in the private quarters of king's mistress and other well-connected residents of the palace, although it takes magic to prevent leaks and keep the water flowing. I listened to this fantasy novella on the Podcastle podcast and really enjoyed it. According to his latest mistress Sylvain is a 'striver' which is very much not the done thing at court, and I found him quite arrogant, but I warmed to him as the story progressed and he showed his home-sickness for the Alps, and I liked the ending. sem críticas | adicionar uma crítica
Pertence à Série da EditoraEstá contido emPrémios
Finalist for the World Fantasy Award and Nebula Award, and winner of the Aurora Award Waters of Versailles is a historical fantasy about sex, magic, and plumbing. In 1738 France, soldier and courtier Sylvain de Guilherand enlists magical help to bring modern conveniences to the court of Louis XV. The innovation sparks a cold war in the hothouse palace environment as the nobles compete to outdo each other. Everyone wants what Sylvain has, but can he control the magical creature who makes it all possible? At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — A carregar... GénerosSistema Decimal de Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos EUA (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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Author Robson's 2015 novella isn't her first publication (her books are listed here); it's a very assured work, told well, thought through thoroughly, and of a length sufficient to set her scene, convey her tale, then leave us wishing for a bit more to enjoy. It feels *right* that Sylvain, her PoV character here, should be an arriviste at the Court. He, like Author Robson with her reader, has left even his own social cronies without the miracle of his plumbing and flush toilets! Saying "no" is dangerous, and denying someone who has your secrets what they ask for is even more foolish.
But logic dictates that even a magical creature have limits, and the nixie Sylvain has forced into his service isn't able to do everything. The more pressing question for him now is why does the nixie appear to be doing the *opposite* of what needs doing?
Never, in the history of human endeavor, has a system based on scarcity and uniqueness failed to fail. And here is Sylvain re-learning that lesson for the many-bazillionth time albeit his first. And, in the end, the world's delights are as ephemeral as we should all have learned that they are never not by now. What begins badly ends sadly. Again and again and again and again and again. ( )