Today I realized that @derinthescarletpescatarian's Child of a Wandering Star fits into the fantasy genre of "girl nearing the cusp of adulthood, with some kind of Destiny, who has complicated feelings about both the prospect of adulthood and the Destiny, goes on a Big Quest that will inevitably further complicate her understanding of the world as a whole (and also keeps making Worldbuilding Observations about her fantasy world and fantasy society)", while also being about a big bug alien seeing a human for the first time and having no idea what she's looking at*.
*(she actually does have an idea of what she's looking at. it's just the wrong idea, and she's doing her best.)
I haven't caught up yet, but I am ALSO suspicious that it will have a bit of Fern Gully, i.e. learning that this outsider you have befriended has come with a group intending to start Disastrous Resource Extraction in your home. Because even if the newcomers as a whole respect locals enough to not disrupt things RIGHT next to their communities, setting up extractive colonies in the sleeplands would also be disastrous in the long run.
If Anne McCaffrey gets to do Pern, I get to send an alien Chosen One on a god-destined coming-of-age quest with an astronaut 🤷♀️
i just caught up this morning and im SO impatient to see what happens next. i love how practical everyone is being about what they know and don't know about the star baby(?) and how even though they're trying not to make wild assumptions they've still started from an extremely local reference point! and i love that everyone keeps trying to helpfully cut this poor astronaut's clothes off.
EDIT: i also really really love the council's extremely reasonable concern about how they don't know what age a baby star catches on fire, and what if she hits that point close to the hive. like that's an incredibly practical safety concern. here's a larval star, she seems very nice so far, but seriously at what point does she start burning? you'd really hope that's sometime after she gets into the sky somehow but do you want to bet your village on it? nope!!
#i LOVE how the narrative frames coaws as a YA coming of age fantasy but its really scifi#coaws
If sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, then surely the difference between a divine magical adventure and a rational scientific one is somewhat dependent on what the protagonist's frame of reference is.
For anyone looking for a book that pulls this off really well, I'd recommend Hammerfall by CJ Cherryh. It's about a guy who lives on a desert planet with vaguely iron-age-level tech, as the descendant of settlers who were created via genetic engineering and nanite tech. There's an interstellar genetic war being mopped up aqnd the immortal godlike creators/nanite techs are all fighting over the fate of the planet and he doesn't give a shit about any of that, he's trying to get a bunch of refugees across the desert alive.
#I didn't know Derin had any female protagonists#I need to get into that Derin To Read Pile
This is hilarious to me because I am always uncomfortably aware that Kayden is my only prominent male protagonist. Almost all of my protagonists are female and the remainder are nonbinary. Every time I go to write I'm like "is it weird that I hardly ever write about men?"




















