Flights of Fantasy discussion

This topic is about
On a Red Station, Drifting
Archived Group Reads
>
April 2019 Mod's Choice BotM: On a Red Station, Drifting
date
newest »


I appreciate it while reading...but during reflection I'm always like... Hey! No happy ending??
I agree with the sense in Station. I haven't read The Citadel of Weeping Pearls but that is the reason I was thinking about it. I was reading the reviews and a lot of people mentioned (view spoiler)
Yes, lonely: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


Yeah. There is a bit of weirdness here. I think the entire culture suffers from too much dwelling. I mean, the mem-inplants?


Right! Which is why it seems there's no democracy or ability to really decent. And it seems difficult to rise above your "station" in life.

The question never comes up as to whether somebody can turn those AIs/ancestors off temporarily if they're using the toilet, bathing, having sex, etc. Innocent me hadn't even considered the subject or the obvious discomfort/weirdness that would be associated with it. :D
Maybe as disembodied souls, things of the flesh don't bother the ancestors, but that might not apply to the person who's carrying them around in their head. Maybe the culture is so attached to family duty* that their 24/7 presence is taken as a given.
*it would definitely explain why (view spoiler) was so outrageous to the rest of the family.

I mean, they can help you but they cannot grow. How much can you grow with them? How much can the empire grow with this rock around its neck?
There were a few scenes that show you can ignore them but they're constantly telling you what to do...

Quyen is unbearable and Linh is weirdly grating.
I'll keep reading, but geeze.


Honestly, this is one of the reasons I liked Linh more than the others (none are my faves): why is she expected to be downtrodden?? The biggest issue I noticed (view spoiler)

This caused some self-reflection and the result was that liking the characters wasn't crucial to me--in a longer work not liking anybody might cause issues, but for a short work like this, it's fine.
I could sympathize with Linh and Quyen (believe it or not), could understand them and what was causing their conflict, and that made them work for me as characters.
I don't think de Bodard nailed (view spoiler)

This caused some self-reflection and the result wa..."
I feel you. I would have had a harder time pushing through if this was a longer work.
I think that...I understood what was causing the conflict between Quyen and Lihn (mostly. still confused about (view spoiler) ) but I didn't understand them. I didn't get why it was such an affront. Or the knee jerk reactions (all things considered). (view spoiler)
But I 100% agree with you regarding the ending. It was too abrupt to mean anything for me.

And it seems like each station or planet has their own, but they all sit inside the overarching culture.

I thought this, too. But it's never explained. And its frustrating because the shorts I have read all show it being two cultures against each other without this need for all the testing and caste-like system, etc.
I guess I have to go back to the shorts to see when the Chinese/Xuya culture died out and this one started.

I finished this today and it was ok? I guess? Meh-ish?
I had no problem following the story I was just kinda bored with the idiocy of the characters. I mean, being an asshole just because is kinda shit motivation. And there was nothing that made me care for any of them.

I finished this today and it was ok? I guess? Meh-ish?
I had no problem following the story I was just kinda bored with the idiocy of ..."
lol
I love de Bodard's writing. It's very lyrical. But she gets a bit purple at times and doesn't explain things but also doesn't always bother to give context clues, either.

This caused some self-reflection and the result wa..."
I agree. The ending felt rushed and I would not have expected that / I did not think it believable in any way that the king and his guards had nothing better to do than to pick up Linh for punishment in a big ol war. That was stretching it to the max

I think I'm giving up on this. It's frustrating to read because the cultural nuances are lost on me. Just say what you mean and get on with it.

Agree 100%! It made no sense they grabbed Linh in the midst of the war. And the fact that they tracked her down, too. Silly.

Not that important. PLus the dang station was super far away. It was stupid.
All in all, I felt that the story is just what you said. I think I'm a little more invested in this world/universe so it was easier for me to push through. I've read a handful of the first shorts and a later short.
The later short had a lot of the AIs/thingamajigs and made it all fascinating. And there wasn't this culture clash that made everything so difficult to get into.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Citadel of Weeping Pearls (other topics)The Tea Master and the Detective (other topics)
The Tea Master and the Detective (other topics)
Stazione rossa (other topics)
The Lost Xuyan Bride (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Aliette de Bodard (other topics)Aliette de Bodard (other topics)
Aliette de Bodard (other topics)
singular and lonely... aww. :(