Nicky Drayden is a Systems Analyst who dabbles in prose when she’s not buried in code. She resides in Austin, Texas where being weird is highly encouraged, if not required.
My first Nicky Drayden and I quite liked it for the super sweet sapphic love-story that it was. I... don't really have much else to say? It's story about love, but it's also story about math. Therefore, not quite for me. Although I did enjoy it and am definitely looking forward to reading Escaping Exodus even more now! 3,5⭐ rounded up.
Via Levar Burton Reads. Touching story about the relationship between two college students, a human, Mariah, and an alien, Kwalla that starts with working on math together. It says so much about the connection we have with others, acceptance, and our role in the universe.
This is a beautiful story about math. I listened to this as part of Levar Burton's podcast and honestly I need to review more of what I listen to him read. This was beautifully done.
Very sweet, with a heartfelt afterward from LeVar.
I love that he’s so considerate. He’s worried that he would not be able to pull off a love story between two women and he wanted to do the story justice as he views reading the story as love letter of sorts to his daughter.
A gorgeous short story. Weaves in so many relevant cultural themes - forbidden love, interacting with the “other” in our lives and learning we’re not so different. It made me wonder in new ways - loved the idea of math as a first language and the idea of how story is important to any language.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Part of a book challenge I'm doing this year called Run along the Shelves. One of the challenges is to read 28 short stories in February. I'm starting early because it is convenient. Interesting love story revolving around a human female who claims to hate math and her female classmate from another planet where math is their first language. Nice, happy, story. I didn't fully understand about fractals telling stories but that's ok. I got the gist of it and would like to read more by this author.
As an accounting student, I felt Mariah's plight with mathematics probably more deeply than most. It was thrilling to listen (since I came across this story via LeVar Burton's podcast) as the protagonist fell back in love with mathematics, as her alien classmate exposed her to the stories that the individual equations conveyed. The descriptions were spellbinding, and I will definitely be picking up more books by this author!
A beautiful short story of love and math as a language to express that love. I listened to it on LeVar Burton Reads, you should definitely give it a listen.
Listened to as part of the LeVar Burton Reads podcast series.
The middle part with the descriptions of math as a way of telling stories and expressing emotions is pretty damn brilliant. But the end and the beginning seems tacked on like an afterthought and honestly it reminded me of the kind of high school AU fanfics which just sucks the magic out of any kind of stories, by placing the characters in a deeply mundane setting as if the original world building didn't matter at all. In this case, the story is supposed to take place in the twenty-second century in a setting with interstellar travel and aliens and yet we have a main character who is struggling through her math classes because she can't afford to change her major. Or actually it's her parents who can't afford it. This just made me roll my eyes so hard and think "Americans!" Look, I'm not saying that this needed to be a Star Trek utopia where everything is free, but just acknowledge that most countries that can afford it gives free college education and that the American model is broken and that there's no reason in Hell that it would still be used two hundred years into the future. And it's not even like all the talk about money adds anything to the story. There could have been a number of reasons why the main character won't quit a major she hates and almost every single one of those reasons could have been made more interesting than "I don't want to tell my parents I wasted their hard earned money". Okay rant over.
All in all an interesting concept that could have used some better world-building to support it.
Interesting tale of two math majors, one human and one not, coming together through a shared interest in math. The alien has an instrument that plays music and fractals based on equations, and the alien culture associates emotions with various equations, so that they effectively become stories. I can't quite buy into that as SF, but it's a fascinating idea, and well-executed.