I’m finishing up The Golden Enclaves, the last of the Scholomance Series by Naomi Novik. It fulfills The Jerk with a Heart of Gold square, but in getting in to it, it also fits the LGBTQIA+ representation square. I’ve gotten started on so many great series in the last few years doing reading challenges and this year I’m going to try and get caught up with a bunch of them. I’m super excited!

What about all of you? What have you been reading or listening to lately?


For details on the c/Books bingo challenge that just restarted for the year, you can checkout the initial Book Bingo, and its Recommendation Post. Links are also present in our community sidebar.

  • @[email protected]
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    813 days ago

    I’m continuing on Let This Radicalize You which is full of great hands-on practical “right now” tales and advice on creating the change you want to see in the world. It’s so recent yet still reads like a million years away before the second Trump term and such. But it’s solid although very detailed in its recounts of mutual aid stories, sometimes a bit needlessly I thought, but I’m already radicalized in a way so I guess some people might still need these horror stories of state abuse in such realistic grim detail.

  • the dopamine fiend
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    813 days ago

    Just finished a re-“read” of Neuromancer by William Gibson, audiobook form this time. I hated the way the reader performed, especially his shitty attempt at a Jamaican dialect for the Zionite characters. Book still rules though.

    Now I’m onto How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi, read by the author. Picked it up in physical form last month but never got to it. The audiobook is based on the paperback version, with edits and notes that are helpful and further enlightening. Great stuff.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 days ago

      I once tried listening to Iain Banks himself reading one of his Culture novels. Boy it’s bad. Nothing as stereotypical as “Jamaican accent”, just … weird. Little or counter-intuitive inflection, weird rhythm, and when he does an accent it’s … weird. It’s kinda cool to listen to though. I mean the man was a genius and somehow it still reflects in his reading style.

    • @[email protected]OPM
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      313 days ago

      Weird attempts at character voices can tend to take me out of audiobooks too. I think there’s a good balance somewhere between one reader doing all voices and the audio play-style ones for some books where in the future one could have effectively studio artists like the ones they used to sit in on albums to handle parts like that in books without the entire thing having to be a different person for each character.

      • the dopamine fiend
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        313 days ago

        I just wish somebody had pulled this guy aside and been like, “Dude, he’s a Rasta space trucker, not fuckin Tonto.”

  • @[email protected]
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    613 days ago

    Just finished ADD Friendly Ways to Organize Your Life. Pretty good, there are better books but it’s a good addition to the better books.

    Reading Managing Neuro Diverse Workplaces and Wind and Truth. I thought I was falling out of love with Brandon Sandersons work but this book has me back in, hook line and sinker.

    • @[email protected]
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      213 days ago

      Wind and Truth was great but I was kind of sad that the first arc of Stormlight was done. Of course I don’t want to spoil the ending but I feel like the second arc will feel like a completely different world and I am sad I won’t get to see more of normal Roshar. The worldbuilding and magic systems are just awesome in Sanderson works.

      • @[email protected]
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        213 days ago
        Post Wind and Truth spoilers

        Since stormlight is gone the old magic system is also kind of dead. I am excited for a more cosmere aware storyline though. It feels like things will be ramping up into a full out war between Shards after Dalinar’s gamble. Basically everybody vs Retribution which will be a awesome fight.

          • @[email protected]
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            313 days ago

            I did, it was probably one of my favourite Sanderson standalones. It was weird reading it before Wind & Truth though since I found out about Sigzil killing his spren and becoming a skybreaker before actually seeing the scene where he kills her in Wind & Truth.

  • skull887
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    512 days ago

    Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea

    I’m trying to read more non-fiction this year however I wouldn’t consider myself a history buff by any means but this book has me hooked. Like I kinda knew but I also live in the United States so I’ve been so removed from anything like this my whole life. It’s wild how 1984 it actually is.

  • @[email protected]
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    13 days ago

    Still reading Josiah Bancroft’s Tower Of Babel tetralogy, just started the third book “The Hod King”. It’s so fucking good. There was a nice interview in the last one, let’s see… ah yes, here it is:

    The original idea for Senlin Ascends came from reading Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities, which is a beautifully written travelogue of fantastic, unreal destinations. It is a perfect specimen of literary accomplishment. So, naturally, I decided to rip it off.

    At the time, I was trying to become a professional poet, which is sort of like trying to become a unicorn. The Books of Babel was going to be a collection of prose poems. The collection was going to be a fabulist pastiche, an impressionistic olio, a book of surreal psalms. In short, it was going to be dreadful, and no one was going to read it.

    Then I woke up one morning and realized it was over. I was living a lie. I didn’t love poetry anymore. We had to break up. It wasn’t an amicable split. I called poetry some awful names, and poetry changed the locks. Lonely and bereft, I started hitting up my old flames— Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, Robert Louis Stevenson— just to see what they were up to. Turns out, they were saying awful things about women and minorities. But once I got past their startling bigotry, I remembered what it was that I had loved so much about those musty old scribblers. I remembered why I had begun writing in the first place: because I liked adventure and mystery and romance. I wrote because I liked to be surprised and delighted, liked to gasp and laugh, and wanted to share the whole mad experience with someone else.

    The plot came later. The story began with disillusionment.

  • @[email protected]
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    313 days ago

    Currently reading Golden Terrace: Volume 1 by Cang Wu Bin Bai. Not my normal fare, but I was lured in by the description: historical Chinese PG-13 M/M arranged marriage romance with lots of court politics. I’m not super convinced by the romance so far, but the political aspect seems solid. I am getting a little lost with how many characters have already been introduced to the plot, but hopefully that’ll settle down once all the important stuff’s been established.

    __

    Finished London Rules by Mick Herron. Basically more of the same as far as the Slough House series goes, and fun enough. Herron’s bad guys are never really fleshed out or nuanced, which is fine, but I found the ones in London Rules to be especially one-dimensional stereotypes, to the point it was a little off-putting.

  • @[email protected]
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    412 days ago

    The Immune Mind by Dr Marty Lymon, about how the nervous system and Immune system work in concert to keep us healthy.

    What Moves the Dead by T Kingfisher. Just started, so no opinion yet, but I loved The Hollow Places.

    When Alex Easton, a retired soldier, receives word that their childhood friend Madeline Usher is dying, they race to the ancestral home of the Ushers in the remote countryside of Ruritania. What they find there is a nightmare of fungal growths and possessed wildlife, surrounding a dark, pulsing lake. Madeline sleepwalks and speaks in strange voices at night, and her brother Roderick is consumed with a mysterious malady of the nerves. Aided by a redoubtable British mycologist and a baffled American doctor, Alex must unravel the secret of the House of Usher before it consumes them all.

    And I needed a physical book to read on the beach, so I’ve also just started All the Birds, Singing by Evie Wyld, and I’m really impressed by the prose so far.

    Jake Whyte is living on her own in an old farmhouse on a craggy British island, a place of ceaseless rains and battering winds. Her disobedient collie, Dog, and a flock of sheep are her sole companions, which is how she wanted it to be. But every few nights something—or someone—picks off one of the sheep and sets off a new deep pulse of terror. There are foxes in the woods, a strange boy and a strange man, rumors of an obscure, formidable beast. But there is also Jake’s past—hidden thousands of miles away and years ago, held in the silences about her family and the scars that stripe her back—a past that threatens to break into the present.

    • @[email protected]OPM
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      312 days ago

      Though I tend to skew more towards her fantasy than her horror, T. Kingfisher is one of my favorite authors that I’ve just discovered more recently

  • GreyShuck
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    413 days ago

    Just finished Adrian Tchaikovsky’s Shroud, after a bit of delay in the middle. Some good world-building and interesting concepts, and an engaging tale - but not quite up with Children of Time, I’d say.

    About a third of the way through Iain M Banks’ Use of Weapons. It seems too focused on the flashbacks - which have not coalesced into a cohesive whole so far. There is still plenty of time, of course.

    • @[email protected]
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      213 days ago

      For Use of Weapons, the flashbacks are essential to the story, but you have to wait to the end for their full relevance.

  • @[email protected]
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    311 days ago

    I’m reading “Lost In Shangri La”, It’s a true story about an army plane carrying a lot of womens army corps personnel that crashed in the highland valley of Baliem in New Guinea, a place that almost nobody knows exists, inhabbited by uncontacted cannibal tribes, and surrounded by thousands of guerilla-style embedded Japanese troops. The three survivors, two men and one woman suffer horrific injuries and gangrene, and are on the verge of death when the US army parachutes a bunch of paratroopers in to treat the survivors, with no established plan to extract them. The mountains are far too high for helicopter extraction, and there’s nowhere to land a plane in the jungle.

    I recently got done reading “The Day I fell From the Sky”, a story about a german teenager who was the sole survivor of a mid air plane explosion who survived her plunge into the jungle and self-rescued over the course of like 2 weeks.

    Next up is “Cannibals are Human” by Helen Mcleod, an expedition back into Papua New Guinea. So I guess I’m on a bit of a jungle vibe this month.

  • @[email protected]
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    413 days ago

    A practical guide to evil by ErraticErrata (web serial)

    I’m on book two, it’s an interesting read, kind of a satire of the hero’s journey.

    • @[email protected]
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      213 days ago

      I loved this series! I tried to convince my friend to read it, but the length makes it a hard sell. Good luck!