What book(s) are you currently reading or listening to? October 28
Still reading What If? by Randall Munroe.
A very entertaining read, could've finished by now, but reading it slow so that I can understand some of the science. More than halfway through.
What about all of you? What have you been reading or listening to lately?
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I just started Enshittification by Cory Doctorow. I'm not very far and this is the first nonfiction piece of his that I'm reading but I love his writing so much I'd read his grocery list lol
I have heard a lot about it, would love to hear your review when you are finished with it.
I'm starting Winter's Heart, the ninth book of The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan. I'm actually looking forward to this, since I liked the previous book. It felt like things were finally happening and moving along, characters even got some character development! Let's see if that keeps up.
You might be coming out of the slog! But maybe there's a bit more to go. I love the series but it definitely has some issues, one of them being pacing.
Yeah, you are over the "middle slog", though the tenth book is once again a bit weird.
I finished Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. I found it beautiful and heart breaking.
Now I am reading The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett. This book has gotten a lot of buzz and now I see why. The world building is rich and intricate, the characters are flawed but likeable, and the mystery is intensely gripping. I am absolutely hooked.
I'm waiting for the Leviathan trilogy to finish so I can binge them, but Jackson Bennett's Divine Cities trilogy is also great :)
I’m almost done the novelization of the movie Star Wars Episode 5, it’s always interesting to see the differences since the books come out before the movies are out or done filming in a lot of cases.
So in this case, Vader killed a lot more Generals, and not in person, Yoda is blue, Han doesn’t say “I know” back to Leia.
Heh, didn't know novelization of movies can have such differences. I guess it means they changed Yoda's colour later, but Yoda wasn't CGI in the original movies, so wonder how that happened.
It’s based off the screen play I believe. So sounds like a filming change, wheter it’s because of colour clash or other considerations?
In episode 4 Vader drops from above in Leias ship instead of walking through a misty door, light sabers are “wrong” colours as well. So that leads me to design choices or construction issues mainly.
Episode 3 felt an entirely different story with cut content though, so it does vary. The Jedi council teased that eternal life was available in the archives, that’s why Ani was so upset and went to the emperor to try and save Padme. Entirely different vibe towards Ani the whole book.
Interesting. Specially the Episode 3 stuff about Anakin. Losing someone is one thing, but when you know that it is completely avoidable that's completely different.
Finally made it to the tenth story arc of The Wandering Inn webserial. I'm hooked and will definitely keep reading as new segments are published once I finish, but I've spent nearly all of my free time reading this for what feels like at least a month...I have no idea what to do with myself once I'm fully caught up (probably this week).
Start again from the beginning?
Gate of Ivrel, an old sci-fi/fantasy mash-up by CJ Cherryh, whose work I've been really getting into lately. This is the first of the Morgaine Cycle sub-series in the Alliance-Universe series.
I'm about 75% through and loving it so far. There's very little action, its more of a character-drive story focusing on an agent from a futurist society (Morgaine) sent to a planet to close a series of gates used for intergalactic and time travel. She, along with 100 others she was sent with, were ambushed with her the only survivor. She goes through one of the gates herself in a desperate attempt to survive, and exits in what is to her only a few minutes, but in reality over 100 years have passed. She meets with Vanye, an outcast who killed his brother (in self-defense) who is terrified of Morgaine and the stories of old about her. She employs his help thanks to an ancient, honor-bound tradition, and the two set off to close the last gate at Ivrel.
Have been meaning to read CJ Cherryh for a while now, but difficult to find her books here. May just get the ebook versions.
About half way through "service model" by Adrian Tchaikovsky. I like it, but it will take some time to finish this one since I'm kind of busy doing other stuff than reading.
Me too! I'm really enjoying so far.
Started listening to Howling Dark by Christopher Ruocchio. Its the second book in the Sun Eater series. Friend who read it said it was really good so I am gonna give it a go. I was meh after the first one but hope it gets better.
Also just started Heart of Midnight by J Robert King. It part of an old D&D series of books set in Ravenloft, which is probably my second favourite setting in D&D. Its probably not gonna be great but should be at least fun.
I'm trying to read the Black Company by Glen Cook, but I have so many hobbies and only so much time while the kids are asleep.
Also I feel like it's worth mentioning for anyone scrolling by that Randall Munroe is the writer of the very popular webcomic xkcd and you've probably seen it before.
No worries, just read at your own pace.
And yeah, love xkcd, mentioned that in last week's post (when I started reading the book).
Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy
I'm almost halfway in and really intrigued by the characters and the mystery.
This sounds like an interesting book, do share if it holds up till the end.
I have been reading both Henri de Lubac’s «Augustinianism and Modern Theology», a historical overview of the evolution of the idea of nature and grace in Catholic theology from Augustine to modern times, and Georges Bernanos’s «La liberté, pour quoi faire?» (Liberty, for What?), a book that serves as a sort of sequel to his France Against the Robots. It continues his critique of the dissipation of liberties in favor of the centralization of power in the hands of the state and capital, achieved by undermining the value of culture and substituting it with mass propaganda. It’s funny to see how a book written in the 1940s is more relevant today than ever.
"Die Tiefe der Zeit" by Andreas Brandhorst.
Title translates to "the depths of time." I don't believe it's been translated to English.
I'm only about 10% in, but I absolutely love it. Futuristic setting about 10k years in the future. Humanity won a fight against an alien species only to later go into war with another, which has lasted thousands of years.
We've engineered ourselves to survive on various worlds, but something is going wrong. We seem to be getting less fertile.
"Great Mothers" lead space ships. They live for hundreds of years and have thousands of children (grown artificially).
But now the enemy, The Crul, seems to be coming out of wormholes (on journeys that took thousands of years) just in order to fight humanity.
The Myth and Propaganda of Black Buying Power by Jared Ball
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/978-3-030-42355-1.pdf
It's thesis is that "buying power" as a proxy for political power is incoherent because the methodology is bad, the conclusions don't follow, and the institutions that propagate the myth have conflicts of interests.
I'm interested in how capitalism has captured revolutionary and ethical action with "consumer choice". That how we choose to shop is civic action to replace community and political organization.
The Proving Ground by Michael Connelly
First time in a while reading a physical book. I usually read on a kindle, but hardcover was cheaper than ebook and i though itd be nice to read from a book for once, and i will probably sell it afterwards or donate to my local library.
I'm about 80% of the way through The Works of Vermin by Hiron Ennes. I'm enjoying it, but I'm also ready to be finished with it; unlike Leech (their first book), which picked up in the latter half, this has been a bit slow for me the whole way through.
lol, it’s been so long since I last checked into one of these that I think I last was on deadhouse gates, now I’m starting the bonehunters. Really enjoying malazan. I’m listening to the complete Malazan audiobook, and it says I’m 44% of the way through!
"Shinto: The Ancient Religion Of Japan" by W. G. Aston. It's short and concise, but might be dated since it was released in 1907. Liking it so far.