sholio: (Books)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2013-11-17 03:26 pm

(no subject)

On AO3 I ran across this lovely little missing scene for the 5th book in the Ben January series (a scene I very much wanted to see, and was disappointed when the plot skipped right over it!) and now I'm rereading The Shirt On His Back, because SHAW. ♥

Of all the various obscure and semi-obscure books I like, I think perhaps this is the series that I most wish more people were reading -- I know there are a few people on my flist who are following it, but I wish that it had a bigger reader base, not just because it would be nice to be able to discuss it to the extent that I can Dresden Files or Discworld, but because it really is a very good series and, I think, terribly underrated; I know she had to switch to a small-press publisher because her sales weren't high enough for the bigger publisher to keep carrying her. And that makes me sad, because these books are amazing and I wish more people knew about them.

Admittedly it's not a period in history that has a great deal of cachet, in the way of, say, Ancient Rome or Edwardian England, but that's what I like about it, because I knew next to nothing about antebellum New Orleans before reading the series and I feel as if I've learned a lot about it. (Well, as much as you can learn from fiction, and I assume some liberties are certainly being taken, but the books do feel very well researched.) And I love how she deals with the everyday details of working people's lives; these books are not about the wealthy and the politicos, but rather about the seamstresses and laborers and musicians and schoolteachers, the people who are struggling to scrape by. Two factors that are present in every book are the endless struggle to make enough money to live, and a very acute awareness of the social inequalities the characters have to deal with. Which I guess is another reason why the books might not be high on most people's escapist-literature reading list, because they ARE fun and escapist and swashbuckling to a certain extent, but they also deal pretty heavily with the social/racial/gender barriers in the characters' lives.

But, oh, the characters. :)

In case anyone is curious, the books in order on Amazon (there are more than this, but apparently only eight were out when this list was made) and the characters (with scattered spoilers for some future relationship developments).
lizbee: A sketch of myself (Default)

[personal profile] lizbee 2013-11-18 08:05 am (UTC)(link)
I AGREE WITH THIS POST

I gave the first one to a friend who is very into social justice and representation, but she felt like there was too much swashbuckling and not enough, well, social justice. Which is a shame, because I felt like the series has a good balance in that respect, and when it fails (like the one with the slave uprising and the hurricane?) it does so in interesting ways. And Hambly is delightfully upfront when she learns she has been unintentionally inaccurate.
lizbee: (Books: Lydia)

[personal profile] lizbee 2013-11-18 08:29 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, that's how I feel about that book, too! And I was DELIGHTED when Good Man Friday brought Chloe back! And that her relationship with ... it's Henri, right? Dominique's lover? Anyway, it's lacking in sexual passion, but they're on a similar wavelength intellectually, albeit in different fields.
iamshadow: Picture of Owen holding up the phone book in Ghost Machine with the caption I do read, you know (Read)

[personal profile] iamshadow 2013-11-18 11:37 am (UTC)(link)
Just putting my hand up to say I love these. It's been many years since I read them, because I don't own them, I borrowed them from a library, and there are probably new ones I haven't read, etc, but they are awesome. And Barbara Hambly is one of the great omnivorous writers. There aren't many genres she hasn't at least dabbled in.
lastscorpion: Mrs. Lovett Yay!Pie (Yay!Pie)

[personal profile] lastscorpion 2013-11-19 08:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I love these! I love almost all Barbara Hambly, actually.

Have you gone to barbarahambly.com to buy pdfs of her short stories for $5? There were several Benjamin January ones -- "Libre" and "Time to Every Purpose" and "There Shall Your Heart Be".