I finished Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. Loved the book. There was lots of science, but it was explained well enough that it wasn't an issue. There were also certain things which may not feel very probable, but it's a science fiction, so I didn't care about that, but I can see some people having problem with that.
Started a manga, Jujutsu Kaisen, Volume 1. Just started it yesterday, after finishing Project Hail Mary, and have almost finished it. I have read a couple of small manga before, but it's my first physical one, so enjoying that. Though, when I got it, I didn't realise JJK is still an on-going series. Personally I prefer something that has finished. Ah well, already started it, so just going to read them slowly now.
Still reading The Bullet Journal Method by Ryder Carroll. The book has been a lot more helpful that I expected it to be. I never thought about the "why" part much, at least haven't done so in a while. So, all the talk about mindfulness and chapters about living the intentional life are helpful.
Not interesting because I assume most people already read ir, but I'm reading to kill a mockingbird.
I finally found time for and it's an amazing book. I really enjoying it?
Everything on this instance is fantasy. So much so that I legitimately thought it was a fantasy instance for awhile. I find any and all non-fantasy discussion to be really refreshing.
Good to know guys lol,it's an awesome book the way it's being told from a little girl perspective adds so much to the story like they way she interpret situations makes it some times really funny and some times adds a refreshing perspective to them.
The story is great and the character are really deep,I mean you gotta love Atticus he reminds me clavins dad from calvin and hobbes haha
Basically one of the first major political dystopias written in the modern sense. It's super cool too, basically the book is an old manuscript about an attempted socialist revolution, before the world was taken over by oligarchic tyrannical capitalists. There's basically two stories being told, one in the socialist narrative itself occurring in the past, and one in the footnotes, showing glimmers of some of the capitalist horrors in the "present time". Super neat way to tell a story, and I'm really enjoying it so far. It's super heavy handed, and I would maybe call it similar to a socialist version of an Ayn Rand dystopia, like Anthem, but you know... Actually good. And thematically opposite to any coherent thought Ayn Rand tried to impart onto her readers.
I'm about halfway through and enjoying it quite a bit. It a LOT different than anything else by Jack London I've read (just his Yukon/Alaska stuff)
Paved Paradise, How Parking Explains the World, by Henry Grabar
A book about parking. The history of parking, parking policy, and how it has basically ruined American cities over the past 80 years. Sounds boring but I have really been getting into city planning books recently so I'm enjoying it.
The King of Elfland's Daughter, by Lord Dunsany
As a huge Tolkien fan, it has taken me far too long to read this one. Considering Lord Dunsany was a huge influence and inspiration for JRR Tolkien, I don't think it's that controversial to say this is one of the most influential works on the fantasy genre of all time. It's beautifully written, with very poetic prose. Story is fine so far, not much to write home about but plot doesn't really matter when the writing is this pretty.
I have. Been stuck on them for about a month with not a ton of progress on books.
Paved Paradise would be fairly interesting to someone that knows nothing about city planning and such. It will definitely make you notice just how much useless space is around you for parking, and probably make you mad about it. It also goes into some be interesting history about how the mobs controlled parking in cities like New York and Chicago.
It definitely makes you look at things differently, which is always a good thing.
Death of a salesman is brilliant. My copy is fat with post it notes where I jot down parallels I could find from my life and from those of people I knew. Some of the conversations in that book helped me put into words feelings I've felt when I was younger and couldn't verbalise. I wish I had read it much sooner.
I think the copyright on it ran out a long time ago, so you might be able to pick out a paperback for cheap, or get an epub or pdf for free online.
Suite Francaise I think is unfinished - it is two parts of a bigger series. The author was a victim of the holocaust before her work could be completed.
Finished the audiobook of Best Served Cold from Joe Abercrombie. I love the narrator for the audiobook, but this one dragged for me. Just started listening to The Heroes and hope that one drags less so I can get caught back up before I start the Age of Madness trilogy.
In print I’m reading Gamechanger by LX Beckett. I’m not in love with it, but it’s getting interesting enough to keep going. If it doesn’t get better I picked up Sea of Dust from C Robert Cargill at the library as well.
The writing style is a little rough, and I'm not sure if my imagination is having trouble grasping how things are described or if they're just described so vaguely that it's giving me trouble picturing certain things (trying not to spoil anything if anyone who's reading it comes across this)
I love the premise of the story though, and most chapters are amazing. Character building is done well. But you ever come across a few paragraphs that you need to reread because you realized you didn't understand it fully? Some whole chapters are like that for me lol
I read The Silent Patient earlier this year. I have no idea how it got such great reviews, most of the plot was a series of loose threads that were completely ignored afterwards, and anything that wasn't was a plot hole. I can honestly say it was the worst book I've ever actually finished.
Finished 'Paradise 1' by David Wellington. Good old fashioned space horror/mystery with a plague of insanity and a two fisted heroine. There's even a spunky robot sidekick!
Started 'City of Last Chances.' about 50 pages in and I'm pretty happy.
Wolves and the River of Stone, the second book in this urban fantasy series about a necromancer and his buddies. It’s….not great but I’m having a good time with it!
Yeah it reminds me a lot of the first Dresden Files; good ideas and world building but you can really feel it’s the authors first books. I’m hoping the quality picks up a bit as he finds his voice because I’m overall having a good time!
How are you liking the series? I haven't read Rhythm of War. By the time I got around to it, I realised I am going to have to re-read the whole series when the 5th one comes out, so didn't start it. Going to start the re-read next year, and will read it then.
You know, people say this, and I agree to an extent but if the major dystopias, I actually think it's the least relevant? Brave New World is probably #1 for me for relevance, with Handmaid's Tale sadly not far behind it.
This is hilarious that the communities are so small that we've found each other again haha.
Codex has been consistently entertaining the whole way through. Red Rising is similar in that regard. The fight scenes are better in Red Rising and often chapters end on such a note, you just have to read the next one.
I don't read a ton of SciFi because I find it often over explains the science, etc and it doesn't move fast enough for me (3 Body Problem for example).
Red Rising is pretty straight forward in this regard. Stuff just works. The books are about the characters and the societies more than anything.
I've recently started reading again (last 5 yrs or so) and it's been almost exclusively fantasy with some SciFi sprinkled in. I've read somewhere around 120 books in this time. If I had to pick top 3, while the order would be tough it would be:
First Law Trilogy
Codex Alera
Red Rising (I've actually reread this series once already)
The only thing with Red Rising is that it is incomplete right now. However it does seem that Pierce Brown has most of the last book done up already and is committed to completing it. I have a bit of trust issues in this regard because of Patrick Rothfuss, however I feel he will complete it. Right now rumour is it's supposed to be sometime in 2024.
Opposite the Chicago PD's feelings, it's good to see you again Dresden!
I have only read a bit of JJK when I had a Shonen Jump subscription, but I enjoyed it and I keep up with the anime. It’s really good! Great combo of hilarious and depressing lol.
I finished The Takeaway by Angela Hui (wasn’t as good as I hoped; felt more like a generally summary and felt very flat. Her family felt like paper dolls and the writing was very juvenile.)
I’m back in Shift by Hugh Howey, the second in the “Silo” series. I’m tearing through it despite the fact it’s huuuuuge and awkward to carry around lol. His writing has further improved from the first in the series, though it’s nothing brilliant, and I find the world quite engaging.
I was going to binge-read JJK, but I only realised after getting the books that it's not finished yet. 😀 So, now going to pace myself with reading 1 volume every month. I don't want to read everything then wait for next volumes and forgetting everything again.
Thinking about starting Demon's Slayer or Attack on Titan, since they are already finished.
What do you think of the Silo series overall? It's on my wishlist, and may get it soon.
Recommend Demon Slayer over AOT but both are good choices! Sorry you got sneaky swept up into an unfinished series, that’s the worst.
I’m enjoying Silo!!! I actually saw the TV show first and wanted to explore the world more, and was surprised that the books are honestly quite different. The show more embraces the theme of the series as well as the characters but has a different overall method of storytelling. So I can enjoy both in different ways!
“Wool” was a bit rough at first but his style settled in as he got going. The world and writing is not overly complex, so even though the books are huge they’re not dense and I didn’t feel like I was slogging through any parts. If it’s sitting on your list tentatively because you’re worried about diving in to such a thick trilogy, I say don’t worry. They’re fast reads!
I’m excited to finish the trilogy but I’m going to take a moment now that I’ve finished “Shift” to get in a few small books first before I start up “Dust”.
Nice. How readable it is? Sometimes books like these can be very dense, though I read Einstein's Relativity a long time ago, and it was quite readable.
Working my way through "The Mechanic" by Marc 'Elvis' Priestley.
So far it's a pretty nice insight into the ins and outs of an F1 mechanic from a perspective below that of the likes of Newey or Steiner (who's books are also top tier reading).
About 85% of the way through Perdido Street Station by China Mieville. Absolutely loved the book so far, but I’m wary of the last two chapters as so many people have said it really changed their perspective on the book as a whole. The world building, various races, and monsters in this book are some of the best I’ve ever read. Also Mieville’s pros is masterful, and the book is surprisingly easy to read despite the incredibly wide vocabulary used throughout.
Just finished it and checked Lemmy and saw your reply.
Overall:
This is among the best world building I have ever read. Saying that PSS subverts expectations is a huge understatement. I won’t spoil the ending, but anyone going into the hook probably should know that it is a very polarizing conclusion. I personally loved how Mieville was willing to take this chance with such a long book. I put down the hunger games after book one because I hated that an oppressive government willing to sacrifice people for entertainment suddenly allowed Pita(sp?) and Katniss to survive. PSS respects that stories don’t have to be all tied up and neat at conclusion and that sacrifices should have meaning. Truly an outstanding experience in my opinion.