Parable of the Sower, Octavia E. Butler.
It started a bit slow, but it's really picking up.
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Parable of the Sower, Octavia E. Butler.
It started a bit slow, but it's really picking up.
I just (30' ago) finished Le tueur intime, by Claire Favan. Since I'm French native speaker (Belgian), read it in French although I mostly read in English (but when the author is French, better to read the original version). My opinion is mixed, on the story itself, I never considered giving up, I wanted to learn what happens next so a good page turner. I, however, had more difficulties with the writing style which I do not enjoyed that much. I also found that there was a bit too much repeated details on the crimes. After finishing it, I thought that the hero found too easily the solution and that some stuff were poorly studied by the author and thus there was a lack of realism.
What's next, I don't know, maybe I will (as often) find it in this community ;)
I just finished Witches Abroad by Terry Pratchett. I really enjoyed it, and felt like it's a big improvement over the last few books in the chronological order of the series. Deals with problematic benevolence and imposing one's will on others, and really cemented the personalities of the Discworld's three primary witch characters Granny Weatherwax, Nanny Ogg, and Magrat Garlick. Laughed a little too hard at Magrat reading martial arts books about the Way of the Scorpion by Grand Master Lapsong Dibbler of Ankh-Morpork.
I also recently read The Last Unicorn, by Peter S Beagle, which I have mixed feelings about. Not unlike Witches Abroad, it deals with the concept of how people interact with the stories we well, and the written language is poetic and really lovely, but there is a discordant note about how people just kind of... become whatever a story demands of them. People gain maturity or magic powers when they fill the role that requires it in a story, and bad stuff happens with people resist stories. It means the only entity in this book with any real self-determination, or whose actions may actual matter, is the unicorn, who kinda doesn't usually do much anyway and is not affected by stories and roles like mortals are. I don't know, I appreciated the book and really enjoyed reading it, but something about the orderliness-of-existence that rubbed me personally the wrong way, though I felt touched by the characters' pathos.
I also read The Kite Runner, by Khaled Housseini, which gave us an incredible, painterly portrait of the intimate relationship between two children, and went on to give us a window into the Afghan expat community in America, but I felt like the strength of the story was in the childhood relationship, and the book tried to stretch that story into a three-act story involving world politics that I don't think worked. I like the overall feel of the book, but at times it felt like plot points were glued together in a way that didn't feel genuine.
Finally I also read Love, Death, and Robots, the anthology of short stories used for the Netflix animation feature. I felt like it was a good introductory collection of science fiction short stories for people who might not be used to reading them; a good gateway from adaptation to source material. I didn't care for all of them, and I liked most of them. I really loved:
I have The Kite Runner for quite a while, just haven't gotten around to reading it.
Didn't know Love, Death and Robots was based on short stories. Will take a look.
Just finished Adrian Tchaikovsky's "Service Model" after really enjoying "Children of Time." Fun, as this was a rare book that I and my sweetheart read at the same time, so we had fun talking about it. Not mind blowing, but very fun and with a loveable main character.
I am really struggling to read Umberto Eco's "Name of the Rose." If anyone can give me a pep talk I'd actually appreciate it, but the incredibly long introduction set me back. I'm starting to pick up some Holmes/Watson vibes which I am tentatively enjoying, but motivation is low...
Which is why I am here looking for a new book!
Today I've started ´The Voice of the Silence´ by Helena Blavatsky. It is a book that gives me good vibes, peace and calm. I've read about a 33% of it.
Cool. What is it about?
The author talks about spiritual transcendence. It describes the steps needed to achieve a higher state of "self" called Nirvana. One of these steps, for example, is mentally detaching from pleasure and pain. That spiritual philosophy is a mix between oriental religions like Buddhism and some western elements similar to Gnostic Christian values. It's called Theosophy.
Ah, interesting!
Fahrenheit 451 :3.. there was a sale on books at my grocery store yesterday, and that one seemed to be topical to current events
What a good idea, a classic I never read yet. Will get it next.
The Kaiju Preservation Society. Really light, fun read.
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780765389138/thekaijupreservationsociety/
"The Andromeda Strain" on my phone to pass time and "The Bear and the Dragon" on my Kobo.
Is it weird to read two books at the same time lol?
theorychapter above is also binge reading Crichton. It's weird, sometimes you don't hear a name for quite a while and then suddenly multiple people are reading them. 😀
The Andromeda Strain was my first Crichton book, loved it.
Radical: The Science, Culture, and History of Breast Cancer in America.
My best friend was recently diagnosed with breast cancer (very treatable and likely curable), and we both have the type of personality where it helps to deep dive/learn a lot about scary stuff. I picked out a few books for us to nerd out together on, and this is the first one. It’s super good so far, as frustrating as some of the aspects of the US healthcare system are.