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Borne by Jeff Vandermeer. I love him. He's so freaking weird. In this one there is a 6-story tall bear that may have once been human and can fly.
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I finished the Technomage series. If you're a fan of "Babylon 5" and stories that are resolved primarily with talking and thinking about things, I would recommend it. But if you're a fan of "Babylon 5," I can already assume you're a fan of the latter.
Next up, I'm starting the Star Wars: Aftermath series by Chuck Wendig, which my partner bought me for Christmas. They're excited for me to start reading it. I think they want to talk about spoilers without spoiling it for me.
I'm excited to read more about Wedge Antilles. I loved his appearance in "Star Wars: Rebels."
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Just polished off the first Sandman Slim novel, by Richard Kayden. Pretty good - granted, it's a cheap action movie of a book, but I like cheap action movies. Very pulp-y, I hadn't even thought of the question 'what if Harry Dresden was Dirty Harry'.
Also picked up Usagi Yojimbo vol.8, been looking forward to that one. I'm caught up on the compilations again!
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I've just finished the (current) last book in Drew Hayes' "Fred" series, which started with "The Utterly Uninteresting and Unadventurous Tales of Fred, the Vampire Accountant". I had to wait until I had some Amazon vouchers saved up, since it's not on Kindle Unlimited. I've got to say, I heartily endorse this series as well. The characters are engaging, and you want to learn more about them. There are definite character arcs as the characters change and grow; if you read book 1 and jumped straight to book 6 you wouldn't believe it, but if you follow the series you see how each evolution in the characters came about.Quoth Gerrinson View PostThen there is the series which starts with The Utterly Uninteresting and Unadventurous Tales of Fred, the Vampire Accountant. Also, really interesting characters and a fun time.
I also love the world-building; it's a well thought-out world which explains how fantasy and horror creatures can live side by side with humans without being noticed, and the consequences when a few rare humans do notice.
I admit, I also rather liked the fact that the protagonist is a self-confessed coward and an accountant who loves his job.
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I feel the need to better understand some of the choices made by my new deep South neighbors, so I picked up Confederates in the Attic by Tony Horwitz at the library.
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I finished Caves of Steel, then read the sequel The Naked Sun. I am now reading The Stars Like Dust, all by Isaac Asimov.
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Nearly finished a far-more-interesting-book-than-I-thought-it-would-be titled kira-kira, by Cynthia Kadohata. I'm pretty sure it's officially a YA book, but nonetheless I've found myself reluctant to put it down.
The narrator is Katie and her older sister is Lynn (a baby brother, Sam, makes his appearance about midway through the book). They are the children of Japanese immigrants ("kira-kira" is Japanese for "glittering") and at the start of the book they live in small-town Iowa. Katie's father owns a shop, but it's a grocery store with a lot of Japanese foods in it ... and there are few if any other Japanese families in the area.
The shop fails and the family moves to a small town (Chesterfield) in Georgia, where Katie's parents both take jobs in the local chicken-processing plant. Eventually they obtain a mortgage and buy a small house.
Then Lynn becomes ill. It comes and goes, but each time it returns it drags her further down. Katie is initially told it's anemia, but eventually learns that it is, in fact, lymphoma.
Woven into the story are friends, neighbours, and relatives who live in Chesterfield, including the children's uncle (the father's brother) who has studied hard to qualify as a land surveyor (he also works in the chicken processing plant, in the hatchery). At one point Katie asks her aunt, "When is Uncle Katsuhisa going to quit his job at the hatchery and become a land surveyor?" Her aunt looks at her and says sadly, "Sweetheart, nobody in Georgia is going to hire a Japanese man to be a land surveyor."
One of Katie's friends is the daughter of a woman who's part of a group trying to unionize the workers. Katie's mother wants nothing to do with it. She sees unionizing as lack of loyalty to the man who's paying their wages -- but oddly, she doesn't forbid Katie from hanging around with the daughter.
I'm at a point in the book now where their parents are working almost nonstop, trying to cover Lynn's spiralling medical bills and their mortgage. Sometimes one or both don't even come home (the chicken processing plant has areas where the workers can shower and sleep). Lynn is at the point many chronically ill people get to, when they make demands, one after the other, and which often contradict each other ("I want a glass of milk." "No, I want water! I don't want milk!") Much as she has always loved her sister, Katie doesn't entirely understand what's happening. She often wants to get away from Lynn but feels guilty doing so.
I have no idea whether any part of this is autobiographical, or whether it's 100% fiction, but as I said earlier, it's a far, far better and more complex book than I had thought it would be.
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The first books completed in 2020 were The Last Wish and Boy, Snow, Bird. Rather disappointed by that one as I usually like Helen Oyeyemi's work but in this one the characters felt flat.
Currently reading Sword of Destiny (2nd chronological Witcher book) and Cabal by Clive Barker.
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I'm rereading "The Tower of Kartage" by Thomas Knapp for the umpthet time
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I think that might be one of the few Asimov books I've never read ...Quoth Ironclad Alibi View PostI have started reading The Caves of Steel by Isaac Asimov.
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I finished the first book in the Technomage series and on to the second.
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Dammit, this is what I get for typing in the wee hours of the morning ... I'm pretty sure I actually had the book in front of me while I was typing that!Quoth Ironclad Alibi View PostActually it is Lindsey Davis.
The Jupiter Myth is the 14th novel in the Marcus Didius Falco series. I have read the first 13 novels in the series. They are great.
Yeah, I love the series. He's not your standard indestructible hero. He gets his ass handed to him periodically, AND he screws up on his own sometimes. He's also got a good sense of humour.
Finished reading My Turn to Make the Tea and also The Divide, a YA novel by Elizabeth Kay. The main character is Felix, a young boy who has a serious heart condition that will almost certainly kill him in the very near future (talk about a bleak start to a novel ...) He and his family are in Costa Rica and he wants to see the Great Divide, so while his parents are standing there on the path debating whether it's healthy for him to go all the way to the Divide, he skitters off on his own and goes there. But while he's standing there with one foot on one side and the other foot on the other side, he faints ... and wakes up in a totally different world, one in which our mythical beasts and peoples are real ... but humans are imaginary. He has to enlist the help of a local person (a young elf girl named Betony) and some other fantastic beasts to get home ... and there is also the possibility that a cure for his heart disease might exist in this world.
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Just finished Wicked Saints thinking it was a nice little standalone novel. Except it's the first book of a trilogy, the second book (Ruthless Gods if anyone's wondering
) isn't out until April, and I really didn't want to commit to a series right now, but here we are.
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