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Into the Drowning Deep by Mira Grant
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it was amazing
bookshelves: from-publisher-or-author, october-is-spooky

There were appetites to be sated, no matter how cold the water became, no matter how strange the sea turned. As long as there were bellies, they would need to be fed. As long as there was life in the sea, there would be teeth.



i read Rolling in the Deep a couple of years back, when it was presented as a one-off novella, and it blew my mind. it was all the things i loved about mira grant's writing from her newsflesh and parasitology series in style and atmosphere, but it also featured killer mermaids, which everyone knows is a surefire way to make a book more awesome.

moby dick with killer mermaids? SO MUCH BETTER



when i heard she was planning to return to these creatures with a full-length novel, i was overjoyed. and it totally delivers - it's everything that was fresh and original about the novella, only on a much grander scale. <—�- that is not a fish pun. unless you like that sort of thing. it’s just � more across the board. this book is about three times the size of the novella, the boat in this book is much larger than the novella’s atargatis (b/c jaws meme is troof), and it is carrying twice as many passengers as the mere 200 lost in that first mermaid-finding mission. and the boat itself, well, as the beleaguered captain phrases it:

”…we are on the maiden voyage of an untested research ship built to the specifications of an entertainment corporation.�

what could go wrong on such a vessel??

one of the things i praised over in my review for Rolling in the Deep was the number of different scientific disciplines featured in that story, and how grant spent time expounding the slant of each scientist's contribution to the enterprise in tasty little science nuggets. here, there’s even more of that; a noah’s ark of any and all possibly relevant hard and social scientists, plus big game hunters and media types. add to this mira grant’s “representation bingo" approach to featuring diverse characters, and you have a broad variety of perspectives and storylines and experiential variation across the personal and professional spectrum mermaid food.

because mermaids don't care about your educational background or if you're deaf or bisexual or japanese-australian or in chronic pain or are a dolphin.

The Atargatis had found the mermaids because the people on the ship were made of meat, and the mermaids had empty stomachs that they wanted to fill. That was how you found things, in the sea. Be delicious. That was all you ever had to do.




there's just something about her writing i find comforting, despite the guarantee that at least one character i like will not live through any given story. the fact that i can count on someone i like being killed off is an ironic testament to the dependability of her work, with its checklist of constants that doesn't feel like her revisiting the well, but more like how your best friend knows what will make you laugh.

i love that each section of her books opens with her signature two-pages of character quotes, usually “excerpted� from interviews or lectures or books/research they’ve written, where terrifying facts are delivered in very dry tones:

Do I think they found mermaids?

Yes. Of course I do.

And I think the mermaids ate them all.


i love that we can always count on at least one character to carry on the angry righteous tradition of newsflesh’s georgia mason:

Luis looked at her worriedly as he unlocked the car. “You’re making the scary face again.�

“Which one?�

“The one that says you’re going to burn down the world if that’s what it takes to get what you want.�


i love the resigned fatalism:

They were still miles from home, adrift on an uncaring sea, and the worst was yet to come. The worst was always yet to come.


and i love that she always manages to carry a torch of humor through all the monster-filled gloom. there are plenty of funny moments here, most notably a perfectly-timed deadpan delivery of a t.s. eliot quote that was so unexpected, i literally barked with laughter.

tl;dr - it’s perfect mira grant - smart and funny and scary and dangerous and surprising. watch your butts.



*

spoiler alert - this book is awesome.

review to come.

wait, did this always say #1 in the title? the prospect of getting to read even more mira grant-penned killer mermaid novels makes me giddy.

*

oh my god, i am so freaking happy right now. this book is my reward for another crummy week.

*
ohhh, a COVER! this makes me want it even MORE!

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Reading Progress

March 18, 2017 – Shelved
October 14, 2017 – Started Reading
October 17, 2017 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-43 of 43 (43 new)

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Bradley I just got it, too! Beautiful, no? When are you starting it?


message 2: by karen (last edited Oct 14, 2017 07:46AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

karen last night!

but i'm not far into it. i have work-stuff to do. BOOOOOO! but if you start it today, we can be bookreading twinsies!


Bradley I really want to, but I'm overbooked with horror this month! :) Now, if you said November, I'd be all, "Wow, that's great!" *pout* :) :) Still. Very tempted to start it up and push all those Stephen Kings aside.


karen hahah yeah, unfortunately november is where i have pushed all those books i promised to read that weren't horror and they're pretty much already taking up the whole month. plus, mira grant is one of the small handful of authors i cannot let sit around unread. but i will think of you while i am reading this!


Bradley LOL I get it. I'm also always devouring McGuire/Grant every chance I get, too. :) Sooooooo tempted. And I just finished reading the Weird West one, too!


karen oh! i will go check out your review - i wasn't sure what to make of that one, in terms of "is it for me?"


Bradley It's McGuire/Grant. Should you have any doubt? It's Wendigos. :) Lots of nom nom cannibalism in the wild west. What's not to love?


Miranda Squee! I got this too. I started it last night. I can't wait for your review.


Fiona Knight Eep, you got it! So hanging out for this :)


Trashed Panda Brew Co Argh it's not out here till mid November:(


karen don't worry - you're not alone - it's not out anywhere until then. i just grabbed an early copy because i'm a bossy monster.


Trashed Panda Brew Co karen wrote: "don't worry - you're not alone - it's not out anywhere until then. i just grabbed an early copy because i'm a bossy monster."

Phew ... had almost consoled myself that All the pretty little horses had been released the other day then read the description and realised it was a part of Rise which i read a few months back :( i really do need to revisit newflesh though ... lol


karen considering she has something like 8 books out this year, you only need to wait a day or two and then - poof - something new is out! she is the anti-george martin


Jenbebookish NEED THIS ONE IMMEDIATELY!!!!


Bradley I'm doing it too! Now! :) And yeah, it's so fun! BR is on!


karen and iiiiiiii bought that deadlands book last night! i won't get to read it for a while, but i have taken the first step towards it, thanks to you!


Bradley We're sick little fans. :) I'm really liking the deaf sister's stories. :)


karen yeah, there are a lot of great characters in this one - "her" kind of characters, you know?


message 19: by Helen (new)

Helen It is boringggggggggggggggggvggggg


Fiona Knight I really love how reliably good her writing is, and you're right - she never feels repetitive, only familiar. But she also publishes through Tor, who never approve my sad little NZ-based ARC requests :(
Therefore I am hanging out like a hungry mermaid for this one still...


message 21: by Bradley (last edited Oct 29, 2017 01:39PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Bradley Aww... ; ;


Fiona Knight Haha I appreciate the sympathy :D Only...15 days to go!


Chelsea Humphrey I loved this one too! I was worried this one would just feel like a more wordy but carbon copy version of the prequel but it totally delivered.


Miranda This book was fantastic. Your review
Was fantastic. We need people to buy this book because she’s mentioned that there could be a sequel if it sells well. Squeee!!!


karen i will do my best on the bookstore side! i want more!




Jessica T. I just joined net galley and they approved me for this!!! EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!


Jessica T. (had to share my excitement!!)


karen oh, that is a wonderful first netgalley! congratulations!


Jessica T. yasss!! :) thank you.... you were the one who got me into Mira Grant.


Taylor where was the ts eliot reference? I missed it!! D:


karen Jessica wrote: "yasss!! :) thank you.... you were the one who got me into Mira Grant."

oh, wow! i'm so glad to have given you such a gift!


karen Taylor wrote: "where was the ts eliot reference? I missed it!! D:"

shit - greg has my copy, so i can't quote exact, but it's just a tiny little scene between victoria and luis, and she's having difficulty with isolating the mermaid noises, and he responds with "i do not think they will sing to you," but i'm ruining it. it's funnier and more obviously a reference to prufrock in the book. humorfail


message 33: by Meagan (new) - added it

Meagan Great review!


karen thanks!! i love her so much!


Trashed Panda Brew Co Karen, Im just wondering, have you read any of the Seanan McGuire books ??

The release dates of the Mira books are too far apart and im looking for something to tide me over, ive not really given modern fantasy a go before. Is the style very disimilar? (Assuming you have of course)


karen i haven't read any of her long-running urban fantasy series, although i have promised myself that someday i will give them a shot, but i've read all three of the wayward children books (Every Heart a Doorway, Down Among the Sticks and Bones, Beneath the Sugar Sky) which are excellent, and also the standalone Dusk or Dark or Dawn or Day, which i wasn't crazy about, and then a handful of free stories, which i can give you the links to:

midway relics and dying breeds:

fiber -

changing meanings -

persephone -

the wayward children books are fantastic, and there are similarities to her-as-grant in the way she writes her characters and her particular brand of dialogue/banter/humor carries over, but although it's dark fantasy, it's somewhat less dire than this book for sure, and the newsflesh/chimera world. someday i will try the urban fantasy, but i just haven't had much luck getting into that genre in the past, so i'm hesitant...but it's probably worth the risk. if you take the plunge first, lemme know!


Trashed Panda Brew Co I know exactly what you mean!!

Wayward children keeps popping up so i may well start with that when i get a chance :)

Thanks for the links ill be sure to check those out too !! :)


Corinne Would you recommend I start with this one, or the prequel? Would it matter? Just stumbled across this book and am hoping it will make the wait for the next wayward children book a bit better haha


message 39: by Elise (new) - added it

Elise Alright...I'm sold. Do you recommend reading the short story first??


karen i think it will enhance your appreciation of the novel, but it's not gonna confuse you if you don't.


message 41: by . (new)

. OMG karen yass


Janene Just started this. Soooo excited. Saturday vacuuming, be damned! Not doing it.


Christie Loving this book.was incredible. I am on my 2nd or 3rd reread and wish I could find more books like this..

I have read all of the meg stories by steve alten but done with sharks. Anyone have ideas for me?


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