- Joined
- Jul 7, 2022
I'm a big Sherlock Holmes fan.Recent find in a little free library. I've never read either, so I'm looking forward to tackling them after I'm done reading a Sheridan Le Fanu collection.
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I'm a big Sherlock Holmes fan.Recent find in a little free library. I've never read either, so I'm looking forward to tackling them after I'm done reading a Sheridan Le Fanu collection.
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I like all of WW. I don’t remember what comes after The Engineer, but I’ve read all of them now, and I think the series gets more fun as it goes along.Last novel I finished was The Engineer by Will Wright, of Cradle fame. It's the second book in a series that has a goofy magitech setting and goofy characters but I think I'm finally starting to get it and enjoy reading it.
I strongly believe that 95% of why fantasy works is wish fulfillment. You can have a gritty, morally grey story—but then you need sword fights and dragons. If your characters don’t actually do stuff, then the guy has to get the girl and kill the monster. Otherwise, you may as well have published a PowerPoint slideshow.the Wind and Truth release party, he calls for fans of fantasy to be more "inclusive" and not to "gatekeep." Take that how you will.
I often think the cure to stuff like this is to lean into the trope. Like, don’t just make her have DID: she doesn’t; she has actual people living in her brain that she kidnapped and is slowly torturing as they can’t return to their own bodies, and she doesn’t even know she’s done it! Or whatever.I hate the modern DID thing because existential horror about one's identity is right up my alley, but it's all been headmate/system cringe and it's awful. I want writers to write the concept in a fictional way to explore our nature, not to pander to mentally unwell larpers
I haven't read his one trilogy, but the Cradle series was really enjoyable. I'm pretty sure the target demo is like 12-to-17-year-old-boys and I was a few books in when I realized there was a complete lack of swearing, which I found interesting and weirdly wholesome. I'd definitely let my son read those books when he's older, they're fun. The Last Horizon series is growing on me, too; haven't read the third one, (The Knight) but I will later, when I let myself buy more books.I like all of WW. I don’t remember what comes after The Engineer, but I’ve read all of them now, and I think the series gets more fun as it goes along.
God, yes. Either give me demonic possession or go super weird like Being John Malkovich. Alternately, do an honest exploration of the kind of person who would claim to have DID and headmates, or write a mystery where you the reader are trying to figure out if this character is legitimately multiple people in one body or just insane. I'd read any book with one of those premises.I often think the cure to stuff like this is to lean into the trope.
Wight writes a blog (ew, gross) that’s really interesting because he talks very directly about why he makes the choices he does. To wit, a lot of it boils down to marketability and then, secondarily, his interest. So, he publishes shorter books twice a year because that means ALL of his books sell more frequently. He wrote Cradle because it’s what he likes reading, and he hates reading and writing romance, so those plots don’t feature heavily. I wouldn’t be surprised if the lack of cursing was because (1) books with swear words can’t be sold to kids and (2) use of curse words in books has, historically, been considered bad writing.I'm pretty sure the target demo is like 12-to-17-year-old-boys and I was a few books in when I realized there was a complete lack of swearing, which I found interesting and weirdly wholesome.
where do you recommend one starts with Norton? I got the time traders vol 1 from baen.I don't like this time of year so I'm binging Andre Norton right now. Guns, Germs and Steel when I get the urge to doomscroll.
I feel like I may be the exact target demo for this one. I'll look it up sometime.senior year in the class of '08
Patrick Radden Keefe is an excellent writer. Because you enjoyed Empire of Pain, you may also like his other book, Say Nothing, which delves into a murder in Northern Ireland during "The Troubles." FX recently adapted the book into a miniseries.I very much recommend this book. It's full of interesting history which sheds light on how corruptible our societal institutions really are.
If you're still reading it, how do you like it? The prose is fantastic. It's one of my favourite books. The last few chapters had my heart racing as dorky as that might sound for an old book on whaling.Starting Moby-Dick today. Please wish me luck.
I’m 25% in, and ohmygod you’re right. The scene with the Sibling (a tower) coming out as non-binary? Ludicrous. It’s a building.
Why go to the effort of making Jasnah and Wit bang but then underscore that Jasnah isn’t into sex? It’s bizarre. How did this drive her as a character or further the plot? Are we being set up for her to enjoy sex in 1000 pages? It seems like Sanderson wanted the installments to feel more “adult”, so he included (irrelevant, unsexy) coitus like how children will cuss to seem cool and grown-up to their friends.
I wish BS would go back to being an unapologetically conservative Mormon.
Have you read Sir Gawain and The Green Knight? It is a wonderful story, complex in its motives, and emotionally resonating. It is very much New Year's reading.I've never had to read through a book this careful. It’s by far the most difficult English work I have read so far. I can already see it becoming one of my favourite poems and even books. You can pick a random chapter and get lost in it.
Don't watch the A24 movie adaptation, it shits all over that beautiful work.Have you read Sir Gawain and The Green Knight? It is a wonderful story, complex in its motives, and emotionally resonating. It is very much New Year's reading.
Even through the roar and effervescence of the 1920s, everyone in New York has heard of Benjamin and Helen Rask. He is a legendary Wall Street tycoon; she is the daughter of eccentric aristocrats. Together, they have risen to the very top of a world of seemingly endless wealth—all as a decade of excess and speculation draws to an end. But at what cost have they acquired their immense fortune? This is the mystery at the center of Bonds, a successful 1937 novel that all of New York seems to have read. Yet there are other versions of this tale of privilege and deceit.
Hernan Diaz’s TRUST elegantly puts these competing narratives into conversation with one another—and in tension with the perspective of one woman bent on disentangling fact from fiction. The result is a novel that spans over a century and becomes more exhilarating with each new revelation.
At once an immersive story and a brilliant literary puzzle, TRUST engages the reader in a quest for the truth while confronting the deceptions that often live at the heart of personal relationships, the reality-warping force of capital, and the ease with which power can manipulate facts.
a wily jackalope of a novel — tame but prickly, a different beast from every angle.