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I’m listening to Pole Position a racing romance by Rebecca Carrey. It’s fine, I don’t know if it’s because I’m listening instead of reading it, but it’s dragging.
After this is done, I’ll probably listen to Ready Player One.
I just finished Platform Decay by Martha Wells, and am moving back to Dungeon Crawler Carl for book four The Gate of the Feral Gods By Matt Dinniman.
Listening to Ward by Wildbow (again). Just redid Worm, they're both so good.
Loving Worm. It's the perfect audiobook because it doesn't seem like it ever ends. is Ward the sequel?
It is indeed! Which audio production did you go with?
I finished two books this past week:
The Magician King by Lev Grossman (The Magicians book 2). I mostly enjoyed this one. I felt there was a lot of character growth in certain characters and a lot of exploration of mental health and healing. The ending soured me a bit, but I think I understand why the author went that route.
I also read Macbeth by William Shakespeare. I mostly knew the story already from pop culture, but it was nice reading the full thing. I think this is one of the more enjoyable and approachable plays of his that I've read.
I'm now on the last Magicians book, The Magician's Land. So far I'm liking it quite a bit, but we'll see how he sticks the landing.
Atomic Habits by James Clear It's got some helpful advice but it reads like a Ted Talk. It's like (axiom)(anecdote)(academic research)(broad over simplification or sweeping generalization)(summary conclusion).
There's good advice and I'm sure if you follow it you may get results, but I wish it were more academically rigorous.
I just devoured (pun intended) A Certain Hunger in about two days.
I’ve now borrowed The Salt Roads by Nalo Hopkinson
Just finished reading The Many by Sylvain Neuvel (Wrote Sleeping Giants series). It's going to get compared to Pluribus, but I found it different enough to enjoy. Interesting premise.
Now starting There are Rivers in the Sky, after a 5 star review from a friend. Completely out of my wheelhouse, it being neither Sci-fi or Horror, but I'm enjoying it so far and will see how it goes.
Currently reading Espirit de Corpse by Jonathan Shuerger, which is the sequel to Semper Die. These are books set in the same world as the Irregular Scout Team One series by JF Holmes. They are zombie apocalypse books, of which I have read many since the big zombie apocalypse media boom in the mid to late 2000s.
Have you read the News Flesh series? It’s a very time capsule take of what happens after the zombie apocalypse.
I have not. I'll check it out, thanks!
Nearly done with reading A Parade of Horribles, Matt Dinniman! It felt like it took a little while to get ramped up, but I'm enjoying the chaos as things continue to spiral. Unsure what I'll read after this.
For my audiobook, I'm about a third of the way through Isles of the Emberdark, Brandon Sanderson, which may be my favorite of his special novels so far. Very cool to see how things are all tying together in the broader cosmere. Well thought out strategy on how to expand a short story. Only quibble is Sanderson still doesn't seem to write natural dialog. It never feels like a something someone would actually say.
I’m rereading the entire 24-ish book Saga of Recluce series by L E Modesitt. His writing is definitely not everyone’s cup of tea but I like it a lot.
My library is doing summer reading, and they added a version of the challenge for adults. Their goal is to read 4 books over the summer, for bonus points one can be a non-fiction book about dinosaurs (their theme).
In the spirit of that, planning to read 4 library books. I've checked out Dragon's Teeth and Thunderstones: Quest for the Meaning of Fossils (McNamara) since it was out in the display and ostensibly about dinosaurs.
So far I am not loving it, lol. It's slow, spending a lot of time reiterating that ancient people made stuff out of rocks and sometimes those rocks were fossils and they thought those looked cool. And the author has repeated the phrase 'they looked for all the world like _' like 6 times. Distractly uncommon phrase to use so much. On top of that, it's not really about dinosaurs even, most of the fossils mentioned are sea urchins. /shrug At least it's short and has pictures to make pages go quick.
But alongside it I also checked out The Memory Police (Ogawa). In the opening pages it seems really interesting and well-written. The premise is a bit on-the-nose dystopian tho, so we'll see how well it's executed.
I also didn't realize the community was doing the bingo thing, that's kinda cool. Might try to get into that, and I can use the summer reading stuff as a jump start.
Henry David Thoreau - Walden
So far I only read the first chapter, Economics, and I’m not sure what to think of it. On one hand HDT clearly had a great capacity for identifying issues with society and capitalism, on the other hand his reaction to these feels like a capitulation, almost like a suicide. He diagnoses all those social issues, but instead of looking for a collective solution he takes the most individualistic course possible. He even states that this isn’t feasible for everyone and that wants others to go their own way. But if everyone lived his way there would be no human society possible. He states that cooperation isn’t really possible while at the same time taking advantage of cooperation (living on people’s land, help setting up the cabin, his mom washing his clothes, etc). The Indians who he praises so much were living under very cooperative social constructs, helping one another. Looking forward to seeing where this is going…
I read Mark Freestone's Making a Psychopath: My Journey into 7 Dangerous Minds. It's was a short and frankly somewhat shallow book, but I did think it was okay. My own interest in the subject matter probably carried the experience for me, but the seven cases were also genuinely interesting.
Right now I'm reading Andy Weir's Artemis, since I really liked The Martian, just like pretty much everyone else. Artemis, however, has not lived to The Martian so far. While I really, really love the moonbase setting, the main character and dialogue doesn't have the wit and charm of the previous book. It's still pretty good, just disappointing.
Speaking of moonbases, I wonder if there's any good sci-fi stories exploring the concept. I have read A.C. Clarke's Earthlight and I remember it was pretty good. If anyone has any recommendations, I'd welcome them!
This week I finished the Lee Harden series of books and thus finished all of The Remaining books by DJ Molles.
My reading order was definitely screwed up by the site that I used to get a reading order from and I feel I would have enjoyed some of the earlier books I read a hell of a lot more if they had been put in their proper places in between the Harden series of books. I know understand some things that went on a lot better but this didnt ruin my overall enjoyment of the series at all. It was great!
I'm now back to some Outlanders for a bit whilst I decide where to go next. I will probably check to see if some other series I am into have any new books released before then searching for some new things!
Awesome! I love the Remaining and Lee Harden books!
Starting the bra dragonlance chronicles. I feel its aged poorly.
Started on Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss. A lot of people say they like this one. Not far enough into it yet to say if I agree with them, but it looks like there's some detailed worldbuilding which is a good sign.
The bad sign is book three of the trilogy is likely to never exist.
Still working my way through Trauma and Recovery by Judith Herman.
I read Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky which I enjoyed. I now started Children of Ruin, also by him.
spoiler
It's cool, he made me root more for the spiders than the humans :) but it all turns out nice fortunately.
I am not that far into the second book, but I think it's interesting so far
Enjoy. I've recently finished the 4th one in the series and enjoyed them all
Currently just started reading "the regicide report" by Charles Stross. Heven't read much the last two weeks, our town had an anniversary so I was out a lot preparing, celebrating and cleaning up after.
Finally reading The Lord of the Rings.
Almost at the end of Fellowship, but I must say it has been a bit of a drag.
I will most definitely finish it, but from all the hype I did have slighty higher expectations.
It's also very likely that since I have already seen the movies and loved them, and already know what is going to happen, it has somewhat taken away from the book experience.
Although the whole Bombadil section was new, and I did not find it especially interesting.
Bear in mind that LOTR started out as a sequel to a children’s book, and changed into something else about halfway through FOTR. So you’re literally seeing the epic fantasy genre being born on the page in front of you.
While technically true, I feel that this is a bit of a misnomer. Even though LotR is usually considered the archetypal example of "epic/high fantasy", based on the other most popular works in the genre I think that LotR (and the rest of the non-Hobbit legendarium) is better described as "myth", and I think that fans of epic/high fantasy coming to Tolkien are often disappointed for this reason.
For me the disappointment went the other direction - I read LotR first, and then I went on a fantasy reading binge and was repeatedly let down because I couldn't understand why none of it felt like Tolkien.
Listening to Braiding Sweetgrass. A great antidote to corporate capitalism, beautiful writing and well read by the author. Observation of nature that reminds me of A Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, but with a grounding tradition and a vision of better culture.
Just finished Sourdough (and before that Moonbound), delightful wacky sci-fi. Science is well thought out but not central. Mostly it's an interesting world and characters that are enjoyable.
Finally Out - Letting Go Of Living Straight by Loren A. Olson, M.D. and
Before We Were Trans - A New History of Gender by Kit Heyam
They are the first two books I checked out at the library after coming out, if anyone has any other good recommendations by all means.
Woodworking by Emily St James is an amazing book. It's fiction about a trans woman in her 30s finally coming out, and a trans teenager who has already been out for a while.
Sounds perfect! Thanks so much for your recommendation :)
About a third of the way through Blood Meridian. Basically just feels like more of The Road but less gloomy and with more of the old ultraviolence.
Claims that this is the Great American Novel leave me mystified. I realize that this book as an "anti-western" isn't doing quite the same thing as the morally gray Spaghetti Westerns were, but I still can't help but think that they did it better.
Probably won't read any more McCarthy after this.
This one ended up on my DNF list. I heard the buzz about it and wanted to see what the fuss was all about. But I just didn't see it.
Finished the Babylon 5 PsyCorps trilogy
The first two were good, fleshing out the lore of the show and some characters.
The third was a bit meh
I finished Children of the Jedi just in time to get Dungeon Crawler Carl for my birthday, the entire series.
So I finished book 1 yesterday and am moving on to read Darksaber before going to Carl book 2. Tough decision haha.
Goddamnit Donut!
What did you think of Children of the Jedi? I have thoughts, but am interested to hear what you thought.
I… didn’t enjoy it, I don’t know if was the author, or just an issue with the publication era if that makes sense.
They introduced characters like you knew who they should be, I had just finished reading the Jedi Academy trilogy, so was super confused about Cray and Nico’s at first. I get introducing characters to flesh out later in other stories, but it just wasn’t well done.
What were your thoughts?
I completely agree with you. I wanted to know what you thought before I started crapping on it, but I think Hambly's books are the two in the EU that I enjoyed by far the least.
There are others in this era that are quite good, so I really do think it's the author/writing style/choices in this case. You've got some good stuff coming though (if you're reading in chronological order), so enjoy! :)
My brother whom I’m borrowing the books from has read a couple of the further sagas and is waiting for me to get to them.
I’ve loved reading from the beginning even before Banes rule of 2.
He’s just starting to get the comics, so I’ve missed the Emperor Risen arc, so I’ll have to go back to that one eventually. Also none of young adult books either. I’ve heard… mixed things about them.
I loved the Bane trilogy - they might even be my favorite books from the EU.
The Jedi Academy YA books are pretty good for what they are - I'd recommend at least trying them. The actual children's books not so much.
I'm about to start the New Jedi Order books, and I'm waiting for everything to go completely off the rails.
There just sounds like there’s such good lore in them, a lot of the old republic era is YA if I’m not mistaken. But it’s for ages 8-14(?) so the quality and content is all over the place.
My brother gave me his old Thrawn trilogy copies when I got back into reading, after those I read the two horror ones, death troopers and red harvest I think, and decided to go deep from the start. He had like 80% of the books found by then.
He buys them used while he travels.
After a bit of gap, I read a couple when on holiday for a couple of weeks and am now that I am back, am starting another:
- Domination by Alice Roberts - looking at the rise of the Christian church over the first few centuries as an extension of the Roman empire - just doing empire stuff by other means. Solidly written and well evidenced.
- Smuggling Under Sail In The Red Sea by Henry de Montfreid - A fascinating account of the author's hash smuggling expedition in the 1920s. I would put it broadly under travel writing, since he clearly loves being away from the 'civilised' world and writes best in those sections. All the casual racism that you would expect from the era, though.
- Bleak House by Dickens - some recent editorial about falling literacy and comprehension quoted the opening passage of the book and prompted me to pull it from the shelf. As with so many, I had Dickens forced upon me at school and my contrarian streak dominated my opinion of his writing for a long while after, but I did eventually realise that, had I been allowed to find his work myself, I would have enjoyed it. A good few decades have passed since then and I can appreciate it free of baggage now.
That first one sounds great!
Just finished The Works of Vermin by Hiron Ennes (which was fantastic); starting There There by Tommy Orange, Models of the Mind by Grace Lindsay, and What Art Does by Brian Eno and Bette Adriaanse.
Have you read Leech by Ennes? It's a bit different from Vermin but I really liked it. (Do check content warnings, though.)
Burial rites by Hannah Kent. No oppinion so far.