I just wrapped up
Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen by Lois Bujold, which by my count is the seventeenth novel in the Vorkosigan Saga. Unsurprisingly, I thoroughly enjoyed it. I dunno how useful it is to describe the book - either you're a fan of the series and are all in on a new installment or you're new to the series and shouldn't read this until you have another, oh, fourteen books or so under your belt - but the short, intentionally vague version is that it's about Cordelia several years after the epilogue from Cryoburn and, as Bujold describes it, is a book about grown ups, which is to say that it's about characters in late middle age making major life decisions. It's short on action and long on thoughtful, in-depth characterization and while the stakes are high they're largely personal, so this isn't the book you want to read if you're looking for the sort of military SF adventure that dominated the earlier installments of the series. I thought the book was great and, if it turns out to be the final Vorkosigan novel, will act as a wonderful epilogue to the entire saga.
I also recently read
The Secrets of Drearcliff Grange School by Kim Newman and found it to be completely delightful. Set in a sort of Edward Gorey rendition of the late 20s, it's about a girl who, having started to float inconveniently at home, is shipped off to a boarding school that's not so much Hogwarts as St. Trinian's, and quickly goes
. And, this being Kim Newman, it's densely packed with cultural references from the era of the sort that might be best enjoyed with ready access to Wikipedia; at one point I found myself going several articles deep when looking up the authoritarian names being denounced in graffiti by the school anarchist. The bit from the book I've been using to plug it to friends involves one of our heroine's roommates (or cell-mates, as they're invariably referred to): Kali, a young Indian woman who plans to murder her bandit-king father and seize his territory for her own and who learned to speak English from American gangster films and is forever referring to things like Chicago typewriters and giving people neckties. It's that sort of book. If you're looking for an offbeat riff on the whole magic school thing, or if you're a fan of either Newman's earlier work (such as Anno Dracula or his Diogenes Club stories) or, say, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, you'll get a kick out of this.
FnordChan