I have been a bit busy, and with not too much motivation to do much, so am still at the same place as last week.
Still reading Shadows of Self by Brandon Sanderson. Book 2 of second era of Mistborn.
I did read a bit more of it though, and it was interesting to see the antagonist and some of the other characters who appeared.
What about all of you? What have you been reading or listening to lately?
There’s a Midyear Bingo check-in post, do take a look. Even if you haven’t started this year’s Book Bingo, you can still join, as there are still 6 months remaining only 5 4 months to go!
For details, you can checkout the initial Book Bingo, and it’s Recommendation Post . Links are also present in our community sidebar.
Still working my way through Harry Potter. On goblet of fire at the moment, he said, calmly.
Just remember, there are only 7 Harry Potter books, no matter what anyone else might say.
but… there are only 7?
Exactly!
Countdown to Zero Day. It’s about Suxtnet and how something like that was unprecedented during its time.
Book 5 of Discworld, Sourcery by Terry Pratchett. Pretty entertaining sillyness that I listen to @ work mostly.
How do the audio books handle all of the footnotes?
By adding plenty of reverb when they are read.
Do they add more reverb for the footnotes within the footnotes?
Yes lol, Death’s voice also has reverb.
Who’s the voice actor?
Nigel Planer reads the Rincewind and Mort books and Celia Imrie reads Granny Weatherwax. They do a pretty good job too.
Finished “The Hazards of Urban Life in Late Stalinist Russia: Health, Hygiene, and Living Standards, 1943–1953” and am currently working on “Soviet Workers and Late Stalinism: Labour and the Restoration of the Stalinist System after World War II”.
Fascinating stuff, very data-oriented.
I just finished Mind Bullet by Jeremy Robinson, it is a continuation of the Infinite timeline books I have been listening to.
As with a lot of the other books there were links to the previous books but where as it has been mostly subtle before with this book it becomes more apparent and starts forming more links your weren’t aware of.
I believe from now the series will now merge a lot of separate threads that have been running through out and start making its way towards some kind of conclusion across the last 5 books I have. I’m looking forward to it!
I’ve also been hitting Deathlands of course, the one I am currently listening to however has changed the narrator. I do not like the new narrator much but I see this is going to be happening going forward where the cast is changed from time to time. Still enjoying the stories though so I won’t drop it :D
Well, some of those changes will hopefully be for better. So, good luck!
Thankfully it was just one book they seemed to change the narrator for so far and now it is back to the original guy :D
Yay! Congratulations!
Ancillary Sword by Ann Leckie.
I appreciate sci-fi that’s more sociological and cultural commentary instead of just pew pew space battle. Leckie feels like the modern Ursula K La Guin, blending imperialism, racism and sexism into a centuries long narrative from the perspective of AI immortality. The world building is delightful yet shocking at the same time. Highly recommend.
I really wish she included a pronunciation guide to her books. Some of the species names have me stuttering every time I come across them.
My goodness that would be nice. I’m strategically only going to discuss it in text so I’ll never have to say aloud what I read them as.
I’ve been going through Asimov’s Foundation novels. Would you say Ancillary Sword is on a similar scope? I think I’ll check it out once I’m done with Asimov.
I very nearly mentioned Asmiov in my original comment! The Foundation books are some of my absolute favorites and the Ancillary series is reminiscent in a lot of ways. Although, I would say the Three Body Problem books are the closest spiritual successor to Foundation. I’m resisting the urge to write a wall of text comparing the three, but to keep it succinct, if you enjoy Asmiov your likely to enjoy Leckie.
My book club book this time around is “Medusa’s Sisters” by Lauren Bear. It is awful. And boring. And graphic for the sake of being graphic. And I hate it. And book club is gonna get an earful from me.
Outside of that I just started “Well of Ascension” by Brandon Sanderson. I devoured “Mistborn” and can’t wait to get into this one.
Some very controversial shit. Lol
Details! We need details!
Finished The Truth of the Aleke by Moses Ose Utomi. Twistier and grimmer than the first book; hoping the third (when it comes out) will have a satisfying conclusion. One note: if you decide to read this one by itself, with the thought that you might read the rest of the series later, just be aware that it spoils the ending of the first book.
Started I’m Afraid You’ve Got Dragons by Peter S. Beagle. Light and fluffy fairy-tale-type story so far, without the melancholy undertones I remember The Last Unicorn (understandably) having. Reviews seem mixed about the second half, so we’ll see how I feel about it when I get to that point!
I just finished Yes You Are Trans Enough by Mia Violet, and now I’ve started both The Sapling Cage by Margaret Killjoy and Filterworld by Kyle Chayka
What did you think of Mia Violet’s book? I read that very early in my transition.
I liked it! I thought she did a really good job of making everything easily accessible. And finding a lot of her pre-transition feelings and experiences relatable was eye-opening and helped me accept a few things
that was my experience too! I had no idea that a trans person’s experience could be like that, and my life was so similar to hers in many ways (even spending time on the same internet forums, around the same times, lol) … I also like how wholesome Mia Violet is 💕
I’ve been rereading a book I liked as a teen, called Metropolitan by Walter Jon Williams. It’s pretty good, a little more eyebrow raising now as a wiser man (he’s a white guy from New Mexico writing about two Black characters from made up future ethnicities which have some clear parallels to real world oppressed peoples, eh…)
What surprises me most is how much of the story is a romance, it’s very 50 shades, a working class woman and a billionaire fall in love. But the billionaire is kind of a leftist revolutionary and the woman is kind of a sorcerer but its future science magic. Anyway, neat stuff, but I’m amazed teen me put up with so much romance; the science magic is really rad though, i did remember that!
Metropolitan’s setting sounds nice. Still liking it?
I finished the third and fourth book in John Scalzi’s “old man’s war” series. Currently on the fifth (out of six), so I expect to be looking for something else in the following week. I probably won’t be reading a lot this weekend due to carnival though.
The books in “old man’s war” are overall a good read, I liked the third book a little less (the fourth one made up for this), and I’m also not sold on the fifth one yet. Depending on my mood after reading the sixth book I’ll probably look into other works by Scalzi. I might also check out some SF books by Charles Stross, I did enjoy “the laundry files” a lot.
I have yet to read Old Man’s War, but his standalone books are pretty good.
“Together: The Healing Power of Human Connection in a Sometimes Lonely World” by Vivek H. Murthy
Been looking for something to read after “Bowling Alone”. “Together” is not as dry-sciency as the book by Putnam though it jumps to “evolutionary psychology” conclusions too quickly at times. The anecdotes are so overly positive that sometimes they’re hard to believe.
My personality for the longer while has been “guy who read Bowling Alone recently”. I started to drink cofee at the bar rather than go sit down. I’ve watched Quadrophenia (set in 1964) recently and the scene with the big ballroom dance party (i.e. people socializing) gave me “look what they took from you” vibes.
Bowling Alone sounds interesting, should give it a look.
I’ve been reading the Disc World series for a while now, just finished with the Rincewind books and am starting on the Death books with Mort. This series has been a fun ride and I’m enjoying seeing what will come next with every page
Death is a great character. Hogfather is one of his best.
100% serious here:
Anal Pleasure and Health, by Jack Morin, Ph. D.
My therapist recommended it. Seems great for anyone to read if they have a butt, even if they have zero interest in the pleasure aspects the book discusses
yes, everyone should read this book!!