Showing posts with label forthegenuine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forthegenuine. Show all posts

Friday, November 15, 2013

Goodbye, Forthegenuine!


Hey fellow tributes,


Today we must sadly farewell Forthegenuine, who's leaving our fair district (don't worry, she hasn't been reaped!). We thank her for wonderful contributions to Nightlock recommending her fave alternate universe fics, and wish her all the best in her future real life and fandom endeavours! We love you and we'll miss you!


You can find most of Forthegenuine's recs by searching the 'AU' and 'forthegenuine' tags.

~ Little Miss Mionie

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Book Review: The Panem Companion by V. Arrow

From the same publisher that brought us The Girl on Fire, comes a new book by V. Arrow, The Panem Companion. You might know V. Arrow (aimmyarrowshigh from Tumblr and LiveJournal) from her gripping works of Hunger Games fanfiction and her contributions to various discussions about the trilogy. In her new book, she discusses a range of topics that are elemental and controversial, as well as topics you might not even have considered before.

The Panem Companion gives fresh insight into Suzanne Collins’ trilogy by looking at the world of the Hunger Games and the forces that kept its citizens divided since the First Rebellion. With a blend of academic insight and true fan passion, V. Arrow explores how Panem could have evolved from the America we know today and uses textual clues to piece together Panem’s beliefs about class, ethnicity, culture, gender, sexuality, and more. (From Smart Pop Books)

Aptly titled, V. takes us on a journey into Panem, as our knowledgeable, discerning, and pragmatic guide. She helps us navigate the world of Panem, and the characters that litter the books' pages. Panem and its customs are dissected, including the concept of the tesserae (with statistics), the impact of media television (exploitation), even the recurrence of music in the novels (likening them to spirituals). One significant talking point for me in this book is V. Arrow's discussion of race, ethnicity, and culture––something that I never really considered, deeply or at all, when I read the books. She makes an interesting argument about the underlying importance of race and ethnicity, when Suzanne Collins never directly mentions it in the text. V. also dedicates specific chapters to Districts 4 and 11. Again, V. delves into seemingly unimportant details about the districts, but ultimately enrich our understanding of the characters that hail from those regions. The various subjects that are covered in this book makes one realize just how many layers of complexity The Hunger Games actually contains. V. Arrow's appreciation for this complexity lends itself to her analysis of the many discussion points she wades through.

Two things that tickle me about this book: I enjoy the map that V. Arrow attempts to construct, based on geographical, sociological, and canonical evidence. In my personal reading of the novels, I've often wondered about the existence of Panem as leftovers of the former United States, both topographically and regionally. The map brings together a good understanding of the probable landscape of Panem. The other section of this book that I thoroughly enjoy is the Lexicon, which contains a pretty exhaustive list of the names of HG characters and their etymologies. Major characters are covered (like Katniss, Peeta, etc.), of course, but there are also extensive entries on minor characters (such as Delly, Portia, and Rooba). I've personally always been fascinated with name etymologies in literature because they are usually lend themselves to characterization or contradiction. More importantly, this information certainly enriches our understanding of the characters, and V. has done no less than breathe new and different lives to the characters she has extensively researched and written about. V. Arrow's passion for The Hunger Games is so evident throughout the book, and even more so in these pages.

Reading this book leaves me with a sense that I've uncovered the secret lives of the characters we've come to love. The Panem Companion, may be an unofficial guide to The Hunger Games, but the pages themselves read like they could come from Suzanne Collins's notes, and even further than what she conceived of. What this book does best is go beyond The Hunger Games as a mere YA trilogy. As an author, V. Arrow understands the HG phenomenon not just as a literary study, but like all great pieces of literature, it is a sociological study. She views the trilogy as a reflection of and into the 21st century human experience: with our concepts of media, race and ethnicity, gender, sexuality, culture, morality, and most importantly, a concept of ourselves. This book truly is meant for the passionate Hunger Games fan, and once you read it, you will fall in love with the series all over again.

Smart Pop Books | Amazon | Barnes and Noble | Indiebound

I'd like to thank H.B. from Smart Pop Books for the advance review copy, and LMM for letting me write this review on behalf of the blog. Also, to V. Arrow, for sharing her wonderful book with us.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Hurts So Good AU Fics




Seasons greetings, everyone! Since the holidays are upon us, I figure this would be the perfect time to bring you angsty fics. You know, something to balance out all that holiday cheer. I kid... But really, this month I bring you two pieces that actually stray from my usual Everlark (Katniss/Peeta) pairing, sort of. Both pieces involve Katniss in a pairing who is not Gale, and not always Peeta. This month's stories, a one-shot and a WIP, feature the "star-crossed lovers" motif that marks Katniss and Peeta's tragically beautiful relationship.

Title: "The Vow" (Katniss/Peeta, Katniss/Cato)
Author: Ro_Nordmann
Rating: M
Summary: After thirty years, now I am an old woman, with regrets of the mistakes I'd made in my life. More than anything for accepting that vow on Independence Day. It changed our lives forever, making us into heroes we were not; dooming us onto unstoppable damnation. 

Recommendation: Not to be mistaken for the Rachel McAdams film, "The Vow" is Ro_Nordmann's reinterpretation of the 2011 film, The Debt, starring the incomparable Helen Mirren. If you've seen the film, this story follows the plot pretty closely, but to me, this cross-over makes sense on so many levels. Both have elements of a rebellion driven by a dictator, and a complicated love triangle between broken people. You will also see some minor characters in unexpected roles. What I like most in this one-shot are the interactions between Katniss and Peeta. They are painfully poignant, even though (but perhaps made especially because) the plot and pairings of this story are far from canon-compliant. Though the ending is painful to read, you wish it wouldn't end.

Title: "The common thread that lies between you and me" (Katniss/Peeta, Katniss/Seneca Crane)
Author: angylinni
Rating: E
Summary: Katniss Everdeen has only loved one man in her life, but she's married to another. They can't stay apart and they can't be together.

Recommendation: This is one of my favorite WIPs of the moment. "The common thread" is a modern AU that jumps around through time to unravel the complicated relationship between Peeta and Katniss. Her characters are wonderfully flawed, which makes them oh so realistic in this story. My favorite is probably her Peeta, who can be very crass and sweet in the same paragraph. And do not be fooled by a chapter's steamy sexiness because I warn you that the author will swiftly pull that rug from underneath you, and leave you with a gut-wrenching zinger of a last line, every time. What gets me most about this ongoing story is how Angylinni slowly and deliciously peals back the layers of the Everlark relationship, and with each chapter, she manages to find a different cross-section of the bond they share. It is at once painful, heartfelt, snarky, mysterious, and heartbreaking, and you can't help but tell yourself to keep reading until the end, wherein (I hope) we will be treated to triumph... although, who knows, except the author herself?


This is it for now. Stay tuned for my review of V. Arrow's The Panem Companion. If you havne't done so, check out our Prompt Challenge, why don't you? Entries are due 16 December 2012. Cheers, everyone!

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Science vs. Romance AU Fics



Sorry for being AWOL last month. Life caught up to me, and I didn't have time to do my segment justice, so I thought I'd wait until this month to update. I've unintentionally been making recommendations based on common themes in the pieces I read, so I suppose I'll keep doing that. This month's theme is based on Rilo Kiley's "Science vs. Romance," one of my favorite songs. I love the dichotomy between science and romance, and one would immediately think that these two are mutually exclusive. Well, these two authors artfully combine the two; they open their stories by leading with science and ending in romance.


Title: "Elasticity" (Katniss/Peeta)
Author: TwoPisces
Rating: M
Summary: Elasticity in physics is the physical property of a material to return to its original shape after a period of stress. Sometimes, it can apply to people too. Modern day AU.

Recommendation: In this college-set AU, Katniss meets Peeta in her physics class, and a sweet, sweet romance blossoms. But that's not all we get. TwoPisces weaves a beautiful character backstory with Peeta, we are delighted to see the two characters dance around and toward their obvious attraction for each other. I am also tickled by the minor characters in the story, particularly Johanna, who is not just the brash, foul-mouthed hoyden we know and love, but is a brash, foul-mouthed big-sister type to Katniss. Chapter 8 was updated not too long ago, and it does not disappoint (fans self). Plus, major bonus points: this story mentions Mulder and Scully, who absolutely embody the co-existence, as opposed to the conflict, between science and romance.

Title: "Range of Motion" (Katniss/Peeta)
Author: fnurfnur
Rating: M
Summary: Range of motion is the distance that a movable object may normally travel while properly attached to another. Katniss Everdeen is sent to physical therapy to help her range of motion after a shoulder injury. She did not expect the therapy, or the friendly patient she meets there, to be the catalyst for making motion in her life.

Recommendation: The theme for this month's recommendations could very well be "Peeta being adorable," because fnurfnur's Peeta certainly is. I really like the dialogue: it's witty and humorous, and certainly 2012. I was hooked at the mention of zombies. I also enjoy the clever ways canon dialogue is incorporated into the story. It is subtle, and not forced the way some fanfiction AUs deliberately drop canon dialogue every which-a-way. I am amused by the Seneca Crane character here, who is the overbearing, under-qualified boss we've all had or currently have. In just the two chapters of the story so far, we can probably expect more adorableness from poor, injured Peeta, and I know I can't wait.


Finally, in the month I was absent, Prompts in Panem: AU Week came and went. I have two fics that deserve honorable mention... and not in the "honorable mention" that is the consolatory, thanks-for-playing way, but the I'm honored to mention these pieces because they are superb in every way kind. They come from two of my favorite authors. If you haven't read "Admirer" (by HGRomance) and "The Threshing Floor: A Rural Painting of the Dutch School" (by porchwood, née Mejhiren, who I've rec'd before), please do yourselves a favor and go do.

Happy reading!

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Waxing Nostalgic AU Fics


Howdy, folks! This month I bring you two stories that evoke nostalgia in wonderfully different ways.

Title: "When the Moon Fell in Love with the Sun" (Katniss/Peeta)
Author: Mejhiren
Rating: M
Summary: "It's something out of an old tale: a golden young man in a white bearskin, striking strange bargains with desperate souls on the cruelest night of winter." AU fic, based on the fairy tale "East of the Sun & West of the Moon." Peeta Mellark, winner of the 74th Hunger Games, returns from his Victory Tour to make the starving Everdeens an offer they can't refuse.

Recommendation: Mejhiren had me at "fairy tale" in her clever yet subtle universe where the Hunger Games exists, but with a folk-taley spin. The premise of the story assumes the Everdeens are never involved in the Games, but Peeta becomes the Victor and earns himself fame and fortune. The story follows the plotline of the fairy tale from which it draws inspiration from. I took Mejhiren's advice and read the original tale, and I found myself regretting not having discovered it sooner; it's a gem. I love the way the original fairy tale lends itself to such an unexpected mashup. Further, I also really like how the author keeps the first person narrative, allowing us to see how a conflicted Katniss sees the kind yet vulnerable Peeta. Mejhiren wraps her story around the fairy tale, lending mysticism to the Hunger Games universe while humanizing the stock characters that often populate fairy tales. What we are left with is a doubly comforting world of decidedly human characters––lovable with their achingly familiar conflicts––and an enchantingly intriguing storyline that is a sure read.


Title: "Violets in the Mountains" (Katniss/Peeta)
Author: PenelopeWeaving
Rating: T
Summary: "The violets in the mountains have broken the rocks." -Tennessee Williams. Katniss and Peeta in North Georgia.

Recommendation: I love AU fics that highlight how well The Hunger Games fits in Americana. PW's story, which alludes to playwright Tennessee Williams and is set in Georgia, does just that. The prologue alone was enough to reel me into the story, depicting the often reinterpreted scene where Peeta saves Katniss with burned bread. I really enjoy how PW has written our main protagonists as children: little Katniss is so stubbornly proud, it's interesting to watch young Peeta chip away at her pride with his altruism. I was so excited yesterday, to find the story updated and the time frame sped up a few years. It is so delightful to read this narrative from Peeta's perspective, and his efforts to win over Katniss with charm and sincerity. The characterization of the characters, both major and minor, are spot on. I really enjoy the parallels drawn to the book, especially how Peeta and Katniss find each other again unexpectedly after spending a number of years without contact. I'm looking forward to seeing where this story takes us, and how PW will take the characters through adolescence in the '90s... because, you know, some of us have been through it, too.


Happy reading!

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Present-Day AU Fics (Katniss/Peeta)


Hola, everyone! I come bearing a pair of recs by two fabulous authors who transport Hunger Games characters to modern times––very sexy modern times, I might add. What drew me about these two pieces in particular is the setting in each of them: one in San Francisco, and the other set in Manhattan.

Just a little soapbox moment for me. I've been a user on Fanfiction.net for over 10 years now. Yes, that probably dates me quite a bit. I've been reading fan fiction since I was in high school. Never did I anticipate there would come a day when "unleashing your imagination" would come with a caveat. The first rec in this entry (along with other stories) was forcibly removed from the site, despite being appropriately rated by the author herself. I'll spare you the tirade, but let me appeal to your continued support for all authors whose imaginations have been deemed too hot for FF.net to handle. "Fire is catching," and, well, you know the rest. /soapbox

Title: "Two Wrongs"
Author: JLaLa
Rating: M
Summary: "Katniss, you're my best friend and I love you but seriously––marry you?"

Recommendation: The plot of this story stems from the "Katniss and Peeta in an arranged marriage" situation attempted by a handful of fanfic writers. What makes JLaLa's story so wonderful is how realistic the circumstances faced by the characters are. JLaLa recycles familiar characters in believable roles, and I've been pleasantly surprised to find them parallel to their canon counterparts. Far from regurgitating the same storyline as the books, "Two Wrongs" stands on its own right, a roller-coaster of emotions that is light-hearted then heart-wrenching at times. Reading "Two Wrongs" makes me long to go back to the bay area, at least for a visit. JLaLa takes great care in including landmarks in her story, even providing useful footnotes about spots (and other pop culture references) mentioned in each chapter. 


Author: Falafel_Waffel
Rating: M
Summary: His whole life was a masquerade. It wasn't until he met the outspoken Katniss Everdeen that Peter "Peeta" Mellark really began living.

Recommendation: The fact that I enjoy this story probably means that I'm a fan of Fifty Shades of Grey who isn't reading Fifty Shades of Grey. Falafel mentions that "Beast" is "somewhat inspired" by the runaway bestseller, but with a Hunger Games twist. The story is mostly light and playful, the kind of guilty pleasure you'd want to read while eating a tub of ice cream. Expect to blush violently every time you read a chapter from this story. What strikes me most about Falafel's story is that her Katniss remains feisty, fierce, and headstrong. On the other hand, you will meet a new side to Peeta, who is at his most charming, multiplied by about a hundred, raised to the power of fame and fortune; this Peeta equals irresistible. I'm partial to stories with developed settings, and if my "I ♥ NY" mug is any indication, this New York-based story has all the elements of being a must-read.


Aaaand that's all, folks! See you next month.

Saturday, June 16, 2012

The Windup Girl (K/P) and She Flies with Her Own Wings (K/P)


Hey all! forthegenuine here, in my inaugural post. I want to thank the lovely staff here at Nightlock Recs for being such gracious hosts, and for the warm welcome I've received. I will be recommending Alternate Universe Fics here at NR about once a month.

I know that there are a ton of great AU fics out right now, but I want to spotlight a couple that are perhaps not as well-known. They are both works in progress, so hopefully with a little encouragement, these authors might be inspired to let us continue reading their works.


Authorotterpuke
Rating: M
Summary: I wondered briefly if I would suffer the same fate as Finnick. After all, the Girl on Fire would price a fair penny in the Capitol, and as I crossed the arena bare in shackles and filth, oh but did the lions roar as they placed their bidding.

Recommendation: "The Windup Girl" grabbed my attention from the get-go. Like any good epic, it starts in medias res (in the middle of things), and the reader is left to wonder what exactly transpired in this universe. The characterization of the characters is familiar... with the exception of Peeta. I think many of us are intrigued by "dark" Peeta stories because we're so used to seeing him gentle-like for the most part. Glimpses of his twisted, hijacked persona are deliciously portrayed in the threatening and fearful version of Peeta this author has reinterpreted. The story also incorporates canon events, although the deviations are not yet fully explained. I love the narrative style in this piece because it is very reminiscent of Collins's voice. I'm anxious to discover where this story came from, and where it's headed next. The story is dark, though, so be forewarned.


Title: She Flies with Her Own Wings
Author: RainyDaysAnyways
Rating: M
Summary: When her father moved the family from the Seam to the forests of Oregon, Katniss thought she would never again see the Boy with the Bread. Now 18, the tough logger's daughter has arranged to take over as schoolteacher at Camp 7. Her plans are thwarted when college boy Peeta Mellark, fresh off the train, gets the job instead.

Recommendation: I love how The Hunger Games's characters and plot can be translated into period pieces. This one is set in 1916, and the author reveals that it is inspired by the Anne of Green Gables series. Having never read the series myself, I don't have anything to compare this fic to, but it draws you in immediately with the earnest characterization of an early-Twentieth Century and twenty-year-old Peeta. We've yet to meet this universe's Katniss, but the author has hinted that we will have that pleasure very shortly. While the plot has yet to be developed fully, you can appreciate that the story hints of an Oregon that is at once idyllic and progressive, contains a rich family drama, is peppered with humor, and yes, quite sexy at times. This is definitely a piece that I am on the lookout for.


That's all for now, folks! I hope you enjoy reading. Cheers!