Always Coming Home by Ursula K. Le Guin, together with other folks of the Hopepunk (german) book club over at !hopepunk_buchclub@feddit.org
Have been enjoying it so far.
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Always Coming Home by Ursula K. Le Guin, together with other folks of the Hopepunk (german) book club over at !hopepunk_buchclub@feddit.org
Have been enjoying it so far.
Never read that one, let me know how you like it.
Also first I am hearing of hopepunk genre, didn't know there was a name for it.
Back to classics: I’m listening to “The moon is a harsh mistress” by Heinlein. After that I’ll go back to the Terry Pratchett saga, which definitely scratches the Douglas Adams itch
Cathar Culture
This is the first I've heard of the Cathars. The wiki article on Catharism is a wild read!
I am working my way through the Silo series by Hugh Howey. Currently halfway through Dust, which is book 3. I had heard less good things about books 2 and 3, but I'm finding that I'm really enjoying them. I think most people expect the story in Wool to continue immediately and are disappointed that Shift first focuses on backstories and giving the reader behind the scenes information before continuing the main thread. I had the luxury of being warned about the change in perspective so I feel like I was able to go in with the right mindset to enjoy the story for what it was.
Oh, you are right, whenever I get around to it, I would've been annoyed by that. Now I know! Thanks.
I liked all books in the series, but found the ending a bit disappointing..
Currently reading Clockwork angel (book 1 of Infernal devices series) by Cassandra clare which I started on 31st of July, I'm a slow reader but I'm up to chapter 4
How are you liking it? I have been recommended her other series Mortal Engines, thought haven't gotten around to it yet.
This week I read Burnout by Emily and Amelia Nagoski, hoping the nonfiction would be a good change of pace. I finished it, so I might look up some more nonfiction over the next little while.
I also read Alchemy and a Cup of Tea by Rebecca Thorne, since my hold came in at the library. I thought it was just fine as a way to end the series, and I don't wish I had the time back. A very fast/easy read.
MEG by Steve Alten
The titular megalodon qualifies it for the 1C bingo square. Unfortunately, the human characters were all disappointing, and some of them survive long enough to appear in sequels which I won't bother with.
It this the book movies are based on?
Struggling with Tristram Shandy.
I started off quite well and was getting the hang of the old fashioned language, etc, but then I went a day or two without reading it... and now I realise I have absolutely no idea what's going on!
Will have another go, but I suspect this is going to be another abandoned attempt.
Ouch, I hate when that happens. Haven't read anything like that recently though.
Yeah, I think maybe I was just overambitious. Until this summer, I haven't read so many books one after the other in many years, since before we had a kid in fact, and before I had a phone!
Something clicked while I was on holiday though and been devouring fiction since then - TS is maybe a bridge too far though!
Maybe I'll just read Infinite Jest again, something nice and simple... 😁
About halfway through The Buffalo Hunter Hunter, Stephen Graham Jones. I'm enjoying it in a somewhat depressed way. It's absolutely well written, but I keep having to look things up to go, "ugh, yet another awful thing that was done to these peoples."
The Lies of Locke Lamora. Just started this, but the atmosphere and storytelling are fantastic.
I loved that book so much... and hated the next two books so much.
What did you dislike about them out of curiosity? I thoroughly enjoyed all 3 books.
In the second book, it was just a bunch of pirate sailing stuff for kinda no reason that he is suddenly a master of even though he grew up homeless in a city with no access to boats/water. It meandered and didn't tell a very good story, at least not one I cared at all about.
The third book I can't even remember. I didn't finish it because I disliked the writing and story so much. That was close to 15 years ago, so I don't remember any details. If I remember correctly, at the time of the writing of that third book the author was going through a bitter divorce or his wife was dying of cancer or something extremely traumatic for him and his family, so the writing suffered. I do know that whatever the cause was, he opened up about his severe depression at the time.
After finishing the second Thursday Next book went right back to deathlands.
I'm halfway through 105 at the moment but may start the third Thursday Next book tomorrow at work.
How's The Sunlit Man?
Nice. Back to proper speed.
The Sunlit Man is pretty good. If it weren't for the two week gap would probably have finished it by now. There are certain things I am not a big fan of, but that's my personal preference, not an issue with the book or story.
I think I have it somewhere but have no got around to it yet. I'll see if I can find it (the sunlit man) tomorrow and try and get around to listening at the end of this week.
Would love to hear what you think of it. Hopefully I'll also be finished with it by then.
"If the Dead Not Rise," by Philip Kerr. Pretty decent so far.
still on Empire of AI by Karen Hao. these tech bros are insufferable🙄
Currently Reading: The Man in the Rubber Mask by Robert Llewelyn
Recently finished: Karla's Choice by Nick Harkaway
Started listening to audiobook of Factotum by Charles Bukowski
I just downloaded this and I am going to give it a listen starting this evening.
Update: I listened to the first chapter last night and I was hooked almost immediately.
The first chapter is about one Green Beret killing a Delta Force member after they had spent a long weekend with their families at Disney World.
They spent the entire trip at Disney world drinking, snorting coke and shoving speedballs up their asses. Apparently doing a speedball in the ass makes for a really intense high.
After driving home, both of thier wives went shopping and left their daughters with the fathers.
Anyway one of them became uber paranoid and was convinced there was a listening device hidden in the car and started dismantling the car in the drive way.
The other tried to stop him and things escalated and one shot the other to death.
I mean holy hell the SF community is not portrayed in the best light, which does not surprise me. Super secret societies tend to go dark really fast.
I actually remember when that murder happened. I am really interested where this book is going to go.
Wait, this is real story?
Yeah it is non-fiction and I’ve listened to more of it. It gets more and more intense and more and more off the hook. The Delta force if this book is real Are just insane
Just Kids - Patti Smith. Just read Bob Dylan’s Chronicles so following a thread
The Book that Held her Heart by Mark Lawrence. It's book three in his Library trilogy which is just a fantastic mix of sci-fi, fantasy, library sciences and a bit of grimdark for variety. It's been a fun series and this is another good entry.
Giving The Odyssey a go.
Hurts So Good, by Leigh Cowart.
Currently reading Thirteenth by C.M Rosens (sequel to that eldritch horror chick lit book I read last month), and Valuable Humans in Transit and Other Stories by qntm.
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Finished:
A teenager is coerced into attending a mysterious institute for college, where the students are all required to take a strange series of courses, which nobody will explain to them.
I gotta stop putting books that Storygraph considers slow-paced on my TBR. However, this was really unique, kind of a cosmic horror magic system, where the students are drip-fed the incomprehensible in a controlled way that allows them to stay sane. Also, the cover is fantastic.
A collection of very short horror stories for kids, adapted from folklore and American urban legend.
I can see some of these being kinda scary for younger kids with active imaginations, but not enough to warrant any kind of ban. Fun, bite-sized collection with cool illustrations.
On a colony ship, a detective wakes up in someone else's body to investigate a death.
This was a short, light debut. On my "fine" list.
A young witch settles in a new town by herself when she turns 13, as is witch tradition.
Very cute, very gentle. I'd only seen the Ghibli movie once (and remembered zero of it), so I rewatched it; I actually think I like the book better, although the movie does smooth out some bits.