Currently reading The Radium Girls. It's going a bit slow since there are so many names to keep up with, but it's really interesting nonetheless.
I have only heard about them in relation to poisoning and radiation, didn't know they had effect on labour laws. Should check it out.
I try to read books without knowing anything going in; just the title and author. I just finished Piranesi and The Sparrow, which were both good and benefitted from knowing nothing. I grabbed The Witches are Coming off my pile because some more fantasy sounded good. Definitely a bit of whiplash coming off some dark sci-fi, expecting some lighter Pratchett-esque witches, and getting a collection of non-fiction feminist humor essays. It's a good read, but I really set myself up for disappointment.
While I don't like going in fully blind, but I do try to avoid reading back cover summary, they sometimes spoil some of the stuff that can be very interesting when you reach it in text naturally.
A Feast For Crows, by GRRM. I recently finished up The Three Body Problem. It’s a decent book, and I enjoyed reading it, but I don’t feel the need to read it again.
I gave up on A Song of Ice and Fire when I realised he is never going to finish it.
Also, books are just too depressing. I don't like my fantasy to be that dark.
That’s definitely fair. I play a lot of the ASOIAF miniatures game, so I figured I should probably brush up on the background material. The books are fine, but he’s never going to finish them. The game based on those books is fantastic, however.
I recently started reading Stolen Focus by Johann Hari. I want to see if I can somehow regain control over my focus
- Finished Hyperion - excellent tale all round and I am impressed with Simmons' breadth of styles within the each of the pilgrim's tales. To me, the open ending was perfect and since there seem to be some division around the later books and they way that they resolve the mystery, I will leave it there for now. I may return to the other ones at some time though.
- Finished Project Hail Mary - which has a lot in common with Dennis E. Taylor's Bobiverse books in overall approach. I suppose that they could be termed 'procedural' SF, with the focus being on the resolution of successive problems. Intellectually rewarding, but with limited emotional engagement, I found. It was certainly entertaining, and I enjoyed the worldbuilding but, between this and the Bobiverse, I far preferred the latter.
- (Re)Started Consider Phlebas - I had started this a few years back, but put it aside for some reason and never resumed. I can just about recall the overall scenes, but none of the detail. I have never read any of the other Culture tales and am eager to get to grips with these books. So far it is taking a while to develop, but I only started it a couple of evenings ago.
I think the second Hyperion book rounds out the story nicely. I've never read about what is said online but I listened to both a couple of times, loved them, but never felt the need to read any further than that.
Consider Phlebas isn’t really characteristic of the Culture series as a whole—don’t hesitate to start somewhere else if you tried Phlebas before and it didn’t hook you. (They all work as stand-alone novels, with just a few tangential recurring characters.)
Yes, I had read that they were all stand alone and I may do, but I will give CP a while longer before I do. I don't dislike it, but following PHM, it is a rather different pacing.
I agree with you, also The player of games is a lot more accesible as a first book in the series. I've never read the last three books though, at some point I decided I had enough SF for a while.
I've been going through the nights watch series of discworld books, I need a funny distraction from all this bullshit in the real world.
Their commentary on the common person thinking a king will fix everything is too fitting though, especially now...
I’m about done with Character Limit, it’s about Musk’s takeover of Twitter. It’s super fascinating, an absolute page-turner. If that whole shitshow remotely piques your interest I’d recommend it.
This looks interesting. Adding it to my list.
Children of memory by Adrian Tchaikovsky about 75% of the way through. What if jumping spiders and octopodes and slime mold and ravens evolved Human level intellect 9/10 series would recommend again.
The second in that series is one of my all time favourites.
We're going on an adventure.
Got a batch of W40k books. Finished "Brutal Kunning", working on "Da Big Dakka" right now. Orks are brutal, hilarious, and almost philosophical at times, and I'm enjoying the stories from their perspective because they're the only ones really enjoying their lives in 40k (besides the poor grots...)
Cleveland, William L., and Martin Bunton. A History of the Modern Middle East (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, c. 2016), 6th edition
Nicholas Riasanovsky and Mark Steinberg, A History of Russia (Oxford University Press, 2019), ninth edition
Gatrell, Peter. Russia’s First World War: A Social and Economic History. London: Pearson Educated, 2005.
Booker T. Washington, Up From Slavery
Karl Marx, The Poverty of Philosophy
All except the last one are for school and I have not finished them but I they are much less dry than I expected.
I love history, but that feels like too much history at once.
Which of these is most enjoyable?
Currently the poverty of philosophy is the most fulfilling work but if it is your first marxist literature I wouldn't recommend it. Second best Russia's first world war.
Finished the Bobiverse series. It was a nice read, but I don't think the last one leaves room for another book in this series. I'm gonna start "all systems red" by Martha Wells next, see how that goes. I'm not to sure about the novella format though, I like doing a little longer with a story.
I also caught up on the Bobiverse recently! According to his website, Taylor plans at least ten books, though I see what you mean with the most recent having few leftover threads to follow.
Just finished Grant and Sherman: The Friendship That Won The Civil War.
Puts into perspective the brilliance of both men, and how utterly prickly Sherman was.
I'm about 600 hours in on https://wanderinginn.com/. Just started book 8. Really enjoying the series. I still have hundreds of hours left in the series. I started reading it years ago and went to the audiobook. Feels pretty good.
Now I know how people feel like with their soap operas 😆.
I have been thinking about starting a new webnovel, this looks like a good option, have heard it mentioned a few times.
There's no way to buy ebooks for anything other than kindle though, so if I get into it, would have to find some way around that.
I was able to get it on the kobo. I'm not sure what you mean by anything other than kindle?
Well, there was only amazon link, and it said "kindle format", I assume that meant it's only for kindle?
Ah gotcha. It's hidden but you can have Amazon give you the ebook format. You may need to look that up. That's what I do with all my ebooks I can't get directly from the author.
If they give you their proprietary format you can use Calibre as well.
Ah okay, thanks! I generally don't buy much ebooks so am a bit oblivious about this. My very short e-collection is pretty much all public domain and direct from author books.
And yeah, Calibre is great, use that to connect / transfer books to my very old reader.
Nice! Yeah direct from author or open publisher is the best. Thats why I like bean free library so much....
Oh, didn't know about Bean Free Library, thanks for the mention!
I'm currently reading Planetary Omnibus, one of my absolute favorite graphic novels ever, before starting The Dragon Reborn, the third book in The Wheel of Time series, by Robert Jordan.
The Wheel of Time is a bit curious to me. Even though the books are long, they feel a bit too dense, meaning it feels like there's constantly something happening with no breathers, and new characters and concepts are constantly being introduced. I'd love if Jordan took a bit more time to paint the picture, so to speak. No wonder I've forgotten almost all of it in a few decades. But despite all that, I've really liked reading the books so far. I might finish this series yet.
How's Planetary? Just looked it up, it's by Warren Ellis, he is also behind Transmetropolitan, and I just couldn't get into it.
Well, my opinion might not help you much, since I also love Transmetropolitan. But then, I also love Hunter S. Thompson's work.
Planetary is not much like Transmetropolitan, though. With Planetary, what I like the most is this sense of mystery. It's hard to describe. Planetary offers plenty of scenarios that open questions, only a few of which are ever answered, and that is kind of the point and appeal of it. It's also heavily intertextual, with a lot of references to other books, stories, comics and real events. It is, in fact, a study of the importance of stories in shaping our world, and our relationship with the stories we tell ourselves and each other. It's also a cool detective story with super heroes. It is many things. It is very sombre compared to the jocular Transmetropolitan.
So yeah, I love Planetary. I suggest maybe reading a few chapters to see if it grabs you. Can't hurt, can it?
WoT is the greatest of all time for me but man is it a labor of love at times
Reading right now „Déjà Dead“ from Kathy Reichs. It‘s so good that i already dreamed of it last night … but it was a nightmare xD
I have been reading Anathema by Neal Stephenson. I'm about a fourth of the way through and it's been great. I've read two or three of his other books which I've really enjoyed. Cryptonomicon became one of my favorite books. But so far this has been up there as something that may top that, it's been pretty good so far. I hope it ends well.
Anathem really benefits from having some background familiarity with western philosophy, and Plato’s theory of Forms/Ideas in particular. If you’re fuzzy on that, you might want to do a quick review before you get too far into the book.
Yeah, that's good advice. I actually knew the book had something to do with that. But after the first chapter or two, I did go back and need to review some of that, as it's been a while since I've taken a philosophy class. And I'm glad I did because some of the chapters I've read now I think made a bit more sense with that fresh on my mind.
I'm listening to "the light of all that falls" which is the third book in this trilogy by James Islington.
It's an interesting fiction with a couple of good magic systems, there's a lot of world building to take in, tons of places, characters, the concept of watching each other's memories, seeing into the post and future. Can be a bit hard to follow at times but it's engaging enough
I am still reading Words of Radiance by Brandon Sanderson (Stormlight book 2). I'm about 3/4 of the way through and enjoying it immensely. However everything I've read so far feels like set up, which is a little frustrating because mistborn did not have this feel to it.
Currently half way through Morningstar, third book of Red Rising by Pierce Brown. I think I'll have it finished roughly a week from now and then move on to the fourth book. Still enjoying the series, and it's nice to be able to talk to my wife about it as she's on Lightbringer. There's quite a bit of overlap with what we read, but she tends towards cozier books than I do, and I'll listen to stuff like the darkstar trilogy which I think she wouldn't enjoy at all
I was really happy with the mistborn era 2 books! I loved the original trilogy and hated the idea of the second era books, but when I actually read them I was blown away and now am an avid Cosmere reader.
I just recently finished Green Mars, book 2 of Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy. Really interesting series. It has a peculiar narrative that makes it feel like the planet or the civilization of the planet as a whole is the driving force of the narrative and the characters are secondary. I didnt really find myself attached to the characters in the first novel but by the end of the second one they had grown on me quite a bit.
I also finished re-reading Dawn by Octavia E Butler. I'll re-read the other two books in the series soon but needed a break because that book is a bit heavy emotionally. Just very bleak in some ways. Super good though, and very provoking.
I also also am casually re-listening to Steven Brand's narration of Anthony Ryan's "Raven's Shadow" trilogy which is really cool.
Yeah, I am enjoying the era 2 books. Glad to see that they are well liked.
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