going to have to pick up Slow Gods, I feel like some Claire North fuck the power
Reading at t'moment?
#30662
Posted 08 June 2026 - 09:29 PM
Yes do it!
A Haunting Poem
I Scream
You Scream
We all Scream
For I Scream.
I Scream
You Scream
We all Scream
For I Scream.
#30663
Posted 09 June 2026 - 06:44 AM
Small Gods is on my Waterstones wishlist (which is essentially my birthday/Christmas list)
Just started There are Rivers in the Sky by Elif Sharak. It's been recommended to me a few times - the stories of three lives all touched by the Epic of Gilgamesh.
Just started There are Rivers in the Sky by Elif Sharak. It's been recommended to me a few times - the stories of three lives all touched by the Epic of Gilgamesh.
- Wyrd bið ful aræd -
#30664
Posted 23 June 2026 - 10:44 AM
Got through Out Law by Jim Butcher a kind of condensed Dresden story in novella form.
Enjoyed it but perhaps not too much substance added to the series.
Enjoyed it but perhaps not too much substance added to the series.
#30665
Posted 23 June 2026 - 11:46 AM
Finished Slow God's,
Excellent as usual from North
Excellent as usual from North
2012
"Imperial Gothos, Imperial"
"Imperial Gothos, Imperial"
#30666
#30667
Posted 23 June 2026 - 11:49 PM
Quick catchup:
I read Yellowface by R.F. Kuang. With some time and distance, I've landed mostly in "I didn't like" territory with The Poppy War. Yellowface, in contrast, is contemporary fiction and something of a satire about appropriation in the literary world, and about the literary world more broadly. It's another unlikeable protagonist in first person perspective, but the overall concept makes it much more bearable because she's often the butt of the joke, and she can also be sharp and funny about her experiences. In some places though, it's a little wobbly on how self-aware the main character is -- like there's obviously a lot of self-pity and ego, but maybe there's some self-commentary that's a little more authorial POV creeping in. Anyway, still overall a good book imo.
I read The Martian and then watched the movie. Plan to do the same with Project Hail Mary soon. I don't need to say that much about this, I'm sure, as I'm super late to the game. But yeah the book is quite good, the movie is pretty good, and I look forward to PHM.
I read a book called The Whalebone Theatre by Joanna Quinn. Starts off at the end of WWI in southern England (Dorset?). The main character at first is a young girl in a family of what I guess you'd called landed gentry. Their estate is near the seaside, and a big whale corpse washes up on the beach, causing some excitment for her and various others. Eventually a couple more kids arrive on the scene, and they become prominent characters too. There's some unique people and events, but it's not as whimsical as that setup sounds, necessarily. The book is divided into parts, each one lasting a couple years with some big time jumps between, at least early on. So like by Part 2 she's a teenager with a couple younger siblings, and they're putting on plays in the whalebone theatre. Eventually it gets to WWII era, which from what I've inferred had some kind of impact on England (citation needed). In terms of my opinion -- the prose is really nice and playful, the characters are well defined, and the first half of the book is pretty great. The second half still has plenty of good qualities but the 'adult' lives of these characters wasn't quite as interesting for me.
I read Dungeon Crawler Carl book 6 -- The Eye of the Bedlam Bride. Still fun, but not my favorite gaming mechanics on this floor. Story-wise it's definitely a bridging book between the big stuff from last book to the big stuff sure to come in the next one. Not that nothing important happens, but it's definitely clean-up.
Now I'm finally starting Words of Radiance. I'm not mad at the first few chapters, so hopefully that's a good sign. I can't promise I won't pause every couple hundred pages to read something else though.
I read Yellowface by R.F. Kuang. With some time and distance, I've landed mostly in "I didn't like" territory with The Poppy War. Yellowface, in contrast, is contemporary fiction and something of a satire about appropriation in the literary world, and about the literary world more broadly. It's another unlikeable protagonist in first person perspective, but the overall concept makes it much more bearable because she's often the butt of the joke, and she can also be sharp and funny about her experiences. In some places though, it's a little wobbly on how self-aware the main character is -- like there's obviously a lot of self-pity and ego, but maybe there's some self-commentary that's a little more authorial POV creeping in. Anyway, still overall a good book imo.
I read The Martian and then watched the movie. Plan to do the same with Project Hail Mary soon. I don't need to say that much about this, I'm sure, as I'm super late to the game. But yeah the book is quite good, the movie is pretty good, and I look forward to PHM.
I read a book called The Whalebone Theatre by Joanna Quinn. Starts off at the end of WWI in southern England (Dorset?). The main character at first is a young girl in a family of what I guess you'd called landed gentry. Their estate is near the seaside, and a big whale corpse washes up on the beach, causing some excitment for her and various others. Eventually a couple more kids arrive on the scene, and they become prominent characters too. There's some unique people and events, but it's not as whimsical as that setup sounds, necessarily. The book is divided into parts, each one lasting a couple years with some big time jumps between, at least early on. So like by Part 2 she's a teenager with a couple younger siblings, and they're putting on plays in the whalebone theatre. Eventually it gets to WWII era, which from what I've inferred had some kind of impact on England (citation needed). In terms of my opinion -- the prose is really nice and playful, the characters are well defined, and the first half of the book is pretty great. The second half still has plenty of good qualities but the 'adult' lives of these characters wasn't quite as interesting for me.
I read Dungeon Crawler Carl book 6 -- The Eye of the Bedlam Bride. Still fun, but not my favorite gaming mechanics on this floor. Story-wise it's definitely a bridging book between the big stuff from last book to the big stuff sure to come in the next one. Not that nothing important happens, but it's definitely clean-up.
Now I'm finally starting Words of Radiance. I'm not mad at the first few chapters, so hopefully that's a good sign. I can't promise I won't pause every couple hundred pages to read something else though.
This post has been edited by worry: 23 June 2026 - 11:50 PM
They came with white hands and left with red hands.

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