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Originally Posted by taosaur
I finished up Monster Hunter International. I did not realize reading Correia's Black Sword books that he was a Sad Puppy ringleader, but it's unavoidable in this one, where the premise is basically, "What if Blackwater hunted vampires in Alabama?" That said, it's not like the book is a manifesto - aside from ubiquitous gun fetishism, political statements are infrequent. If you can accept that the entire cast is operating in an opaque bubble where the Dunning-Kruger Effect is a palpable force, it's still a 3-star horror-action romp, and the insularity itself is sometimes unintentionally entertaining.
I'm seriously contemplating getting around to Battle Ground and Peace Talks, with maybe a reread or two earlier in the Dresden series, but once again I said, "Nah," and picked something random out of my sale buys. I landed on S.M. Stirling's Dies the Fire, not realizing it's a sort of companion series to the Nantucket books, which were tremendously satisfying. It does mean I'm doubling up on apocalypses, as I'm reading Kim Stanley Robinson's Ministry for the Future with my eyeballs.
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Monster Hunters International is one of my favorite books. I really liked the audiobook narrated by Oliver Wyman, IMPO one of the better narrators. Yea, if you were offended by the whole brouhaha over the sad puppies, you probably don't want to read the book. The book is very tongue in cheek, doesn't take itself seriously and has a lot of fun with gun nerds and the various stereotypes.
I didn't know that Dies the Fire was a companion series for the Nantucket books. I really liked the Nantucket series, but I had given up on Stirling and his fascination with psychotic villains. IMPO, he needs a co-author to moderate his worse excesses. Let us know how you like it, if you would.