What are you reading right now?

I'm excited for you! That first mistborn book is really special. Really impressive how he manages to create a world with entirely unique people, creatures, and magic systems. Have you met a mist wraith yet?
I love BranSan's modern vibe, actually engaging with people and talking on podcasts and shit, but it also makes the "carry coins to push off of midair" shit reek of speedrunning inspiration. It's great in the sense that you don't have to go "uhhr acshtually it's magic dont gotta explain shit", and to actually see in-world abuse of systems, but it's still kinda one-note. You know, like going to a lecture on "How to write magic" from Rowling, who did it fucking once and would bomb if she tried it again.

Anyway, halfway through Wool and already it's touching on season 2 of Silo. Actually nuts how quick things move; she was barely a sheriff for more than a few scenarios but in Silo it's a whole-ass thing. These books and the series underline why I hate reading: I watch 5 episodes of a show and go "I bet the books are way better" but in this case, they're not really? They're quicker and less detailed, which in turn is more world exploration which is great, though I did enjoy Silo showing some more sheriff shit.

And oh lord do I fucking hate the cunt who plays Bernhard, which is a good thing for portrayal.
 
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Like I said, the people I heard from don't really complain about the woke shit* but rather about cheap copouts to several previously established story threads, and a clear lack of urgency in a story that's (if I understood correctly) is set in the days before a pivotal scheduled event;
I feel like the deadline is handled with proper urgency
several characters being suddenly very self-aware of their psychological issues (described as "watching an Instagram reel full of mental health influencers"), and a bizarre turn to modern speech and concepts. Characters talking in ways and with terminology that don't fit the setting. One character, they said, even went "I'm the world's first therapist".
but this shit is annoying as fuck. Every character has to morally grand stand on reddit-esque psychology bullshit and it gets old, very quickly.
*They did say that the LGBTQ+ representation did feel very performative, like "see, here it is! praise me for it!". But they didn't say it with the full-throated disgust it warrants.
Its so forced and awkward in its presentation. I'll compare it to a gay relationship in The Age of Madness trilogy.
Wind and Truth:
>autistic character
>suddenly gay out of no where
>wants to fuck a crab man
>everyone is incredibly supportive
>they kiss and everyone claps

Age of Madness:
>characters have underlying feelings
>its slightly alluded to
>they make their way to a brothel
>MC catches two of his best friends
>they're literally buttfucking
>he's disgusted and stops talking to both of them
>but is also turned on by it
>disgusted with himself
>is forced to let the fags back into his life because they're useful in other ways


You can clearly see how one is grounded in reality and the other is fanciful leftist bullshit.
I love BranSan's modern vibe, actually engaging with people and talking on podcasts and shit, but it also makes the "carry coins to push off of midair" shit reek of speedrunning inspiration. It's great in the sense that you don't have to go "uhhr acshtually it's magic dont gotta explain shit", and to actually see in-world abuse of systems, but it's still kinda one-note. You know, like going to a lecture on "How to write magic" from Rowling, who did it fucking once and would bomb if she tried it again.
I really appreciate Sando's use of "hard magic" systems. Having laws that keep your magic bound makes it less of a plothole later on. The opposite of Brando would be something like Brent Weeks in the Night Angel trilogy, where he just uses "magic" to tie up all the loose ends at the end of the book. Total bullshit. Hated it.
That being said, Abercrombie has magic in his world, but never gets anywhere close to making it make sense. In fact, every time he "explains" more about the magic in the world, it just raises infinitely more questions than answers. Even the Magi in that book barely understand how magic works, and if they do know, they certainly aren't going to share.
 
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I was traveling recently and bought Kafka on the Shore at an airport bookstore and have been enjoying it, but depending on how it goes it can get really creepy so the jury is still out. I'm glad it's keeping me focused, though. Typically when I try reading my mind wanders and suddenly I've "read" 5 pages and can't recall a damn thing. Maybe I'm retarded but every now and then I find a book that really holds my attention and I can't help but think that it's the book's fault I'm distracted.
 
No Longer Human by Osamu Dazai. A fucking bummer of a book to say the least, but a great, albeit fucked up, window into the life Osamu had.
I like the part where he
keeps killing women basically because he doesn't want to die alone but then he keeps surviving his own suicide pact attempts. Like a passive-aggressive "American Psycho".

In this essay I will...

EDIT: Sorry for no spoiler in first 45 seconds.
 
Finished Soft Touch by John Macdonald, what a wild ride. Cosy little heist novel written in the 60s(?) so it the dialogue feels dated authentically, is very snappy and noir. Read some people had an issue with the ending but I thought it was a lot of fun and totally twisted.

Reading Lost World by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle now and its looking like another quick and cosy read, great characters.

Thinking either Tau Zero or Cape Fear next but I know I need to get around to reading more non-fiction thats sitting in the back log. Having too much fun.
 
I like their line but they're pretty uncommon in America from my experience.

They were relatively easy to spot where I am. They had a really nice and simple design to the covers. A solid coloured cover with a simple image depicting the book. Classic literature was solid black and the spooky shit had a maroon one. But they seem to have changed it up and each book is more individualised which sucks as I LOVED the uniformity.

There was a discount book store that was selling a whole bunch for a couple bucks each and I stocked up.

I think straight up horror was a grey colour as I do have a copy of Wagner the Werewolf which I picked up in a dollar store.
 
Finished Moby-Dick and it was every bit the masterpiece it's hyped up for, this will definitely be an annual read now!

Before January was out I also finished "The Royal Game" by Stefan Zwieg and "Less Than Zero" by Bret Easton Ellis. TRG was good, but I legit had no idea how to feel about the ending, though I was engaged throughout the entire novella - it was a nice single session read and I really wanna check out his other work now. LTZ feels like proto-american psycho with similar themes but is just shorter and kind of lesser? It still does get super messed up in the last 40 or so pages which definitely felt like reading AP again, however I'd say the first half of the book is a bit too slow, and unlike AP there's no occasional blunt lines sprinkled in like, "...and then I returned to my apartment and tortured a small puppy to death.", to recapture your attention.

Currently started "The Idiot" as my first Dostoevsky read.
 
Halfway through Wool.. Jesus christ it's so fucking fast. Entire plot points from Silo are just not there. The main character barely got to be sheriff for a few tens of pages and it's the entire focus of the first season. I'm glad they expanded it in Silo but I do appreciate how.. simple it is in Wool. I was ready for politics and deep lore and shit, but every time I do this, rarely do books actually deliver. Even Dune wasn't -that- convoluted in terms of plot.
Finished Moby-Dick and it was every bit the masterpiece it's hyped up for, this will definitely be an annual read now!
Ordered this in a clothbound hardback. Was scared it was a bad choice compared other classics but we'll see.
 
The local library book sale strongly encourages you to take something off the "Free" shelf with every purchase. I grabbed Death of an Expert Witness by P.D. James at random, went in completely blind, and quite liked it. Now reading Cover Her Face. The autistic attention to forensics and police procedures is refreshing, considering my usual exposure to mystery novels is either noir or cozy mysteries.
 
The local library book sale strongly encourages you to take something off the "Free" shelf with every purchase. I grabbed Death of an Expert Witness by P.D. James at random, went in completely blind, and quite liked it. Now reading Cover Her Face. The autistic attention to forensics and police procedures is refreshing, considering my usual exposure to mystery novels is either noir or cozy mysteries.
you may like her SF, Children of Men is a good one.
 
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Nobody asked, but I'm under the opinion that none of his work is worth reading. If you like cliche, generic, heroic fantasy then Sando might be worth while.
I like cliche, generic, heroic fantasy, and I think his writing is reddit/Writing.SE garbage.

I'd be more likely to point you towards Michael J. Sullivan
After a successful raid, Royce and Hadrian (together known as Riyria)
No.

>MC catches two of his best friends
>they're literally buttfucking
>he's disgusted and stops talking to both of them
So three characters, including the main character (of a trilogy!), are faggots. You've been tricked into reading about faggots, and you think it's good because it's "grounded in reality". Oh :wow:.

---
I'm reading The Legend of Huma by Richard Knaak, a 1988 Dragonlance book. Dragonlance is a tabletop roleplaying game based on the AD&D ruleset, it received a series of tie-in novels that got popular among non-gayming normies to the point of becoming New York Times bestsellers. It's currently pozzed and the current releases should present no interest to either nerds or normies.

The Legend of Huma was the first Dragonlance book to not feature any of the game's pregenerated characters. It is regarded as the best Dragonlance novel by people as different as 2025's American pedditors and 1999's Russian teenage boys. The authors of the original bestsellers, now senile, have always been extremely salty about it and currently intend to erase it out of existence.

Yes, the greatest hero of Humans is named "Huma". He also has a wizard best friend named "Magius". These are not the fault of the ritewr, it's in the setting. The book gets some setting facts wrong but is otherwise not terrible, notably "dragonbane" is nowhere in the text.
"Dragonbane" is Huma's honorific in subsequent myth and legend, due to him having found the titular Dragonlances and forced the evil dragon goddess to withdraw to hell for millennia, until the events of the game. Later books, written by an assortment of senile retards and wokeshits, say it was his family's surname, like if a historian said Columbus's surname at birth was actually "Americadiscoverino". Knights like Huma usually have patronymics, not surnames.
heroes-1-1_jeff_easley.jpg
the original cover illustration, by Jeff Easley
 
So three characters, including the main character (of a trilogy!), are faggots. You've been tricked into reading about faggots, and you think it's good because it's "grounded in reality". Oh :wow:.
Reading comprehension: Non-existent.
But I'm sure you'd prefer to read the gay relationship in Wind and Truth which is celebrated by the other characters. Seems right up your alley, nigger.
 
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Finished a couple of books since last oosting here. First, another houellebecq. This time i finished platform by hin. I thought it was pretty good. Ive been choosing to randomly read through his bibliography and so far have also read serotonin and submission. Platform does alot of things better than the other two, the pacing is much better and i didnt have to slog through it for it to pay off like the other two. Ive really enjoyed reading through his works and ended up getting gifted the rest of his works for Christmas so i will probably be working through them all year.

I also finished improvidence by david herod. I first heard about this book on the book club from hell podcast and thought that the concept of calling a novella an "overnight novel" was interesting. A short 90ish pages but wow! This gets alot done in those pages. Very atmospheric and you really feel a sense of danger since anything can happen. It takes place in the future in a post-collapse society thats already rebuilding itself. The main character is a soldier in the ohio company who gets sent into the West Virginia wilderness to scout out an old abandoned fort and encounters danger along the way. Finished it overnight as the author intended and really really loved it. I highly rccomend this if you want something short and with a spooky atmosphere.
 
2/3rds the way through "The Iraq War: A Military History" by Murray and Scales. Interesting so far, but I've unironically got a more in-depth look at the military campaign from several YouTube videos (1, 2, 3).

The one thing I did get from the book was that the authors were somewhat sympathetic to the WMD justification (though the politics behind the war doesn't play much part in the book). Maybe it's because it was written in 2003 and public opinion hadn't yet completely soured. I guess it is nice to not have the authors spend every other page complaining about the politics of the war.
 
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