|  06-19-2021, 05:41 AM | #30091 | 
| Genre Jumper            Posts: 1,070 Karma: 11070900 Join Date: Dec 2015 Device: Kindle paperwhite | |
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|  06-19-2021, 05:42 AM | #30092 | |
| Genre Jumper            Posts: 1,070 Karma: 11070900 Join Date: Dec 2015 Device: Kindle paperwhite | Quote: 
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|  06-19-2021, 04:07 PM | #30093 | 
| Connoisseur            Posts: 71 Karma: 2703388 Join Date: Nov 2013 Location: 51,9°N 4,2°E Device: Kobo Touch & Clara HD. FBreader on Lenovo Yoga Tab 3 Pro, Nokia 3.1 | 
			
			Onuitwisbaar, it's the dutch version of Edward Snowden's Permanent Record
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|  06-19-2021, 07:14 PM | #30094 | 
| intelligent posterior            Posts: 1,562 Karma: 21295618 Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: Ohiopolis Device: Kindle Paperwhite 2, Samsung S8, Lenovo Tab 3 Pro | 
			
			The rushed ending of Derelict book 2 and one of the two major storylines of book 3 were pretty underwhelming. Henegar was extrapolating more from his beyond-cartoonish views of present day politics and human nature, the result being an odd combination of absurd and boring. There was still fun to be had in the sci-fi / fantasy mashup, but the series was a 2.5 star experience overall. I kept the litRPG train rolling with probably the most popular title in that category on Amazon, He Who Fights with Monsters. So far, it's easily the most original and imaginative of the three series I've read. The pseudonymous author, Shirtaloon, goes with his own monsters (mostly chimeras and elementals), magic/attribute systems, and races rather than a straight DnD stable. He uses a transported-to-another-world setup, and the video game interface is a power-slash-coping-mechanism mostly unique to the protagonist. Characterization is a big improvement over the other two series, making it fair-to-middling. The prose is a little clunky, but it gets across what it needs to. Politics are probably about as much a low-key presence here as in Shadow Sun, but more in keeping with my own - the protagonist, Jason Asano, is aggressively secular, anti-authoritarian, and into helping the poor, and wrestling with how those values work in a world of hereditary nobility and very real gods. Rants happen, but the author routinely hangs a lantern on the fact that Jason is probably not as clever as he might think he is. So, it's nice that the whole genre isn't a weird off-shoot of right-wing military fiction, but odd how much politics seeps into so many of these books (based on a limited sample). | 
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|  06-20-2021, 04:36 AM | #30095 | |
| The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠            Posts: 74,433 Karma: 318076944 Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Norfolk, England Device: Kindle Oasis | Quote: 
 The Temporal Void by Peter F. Hamilton. The second in this trilogy. | |
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|  06-20-2021, 07:17 AM | #30096 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 28,880 Karma: 207000000 Join Date: Jan 2010 Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD | Quote: 
 Had you read the previous duology in Hamilton's Commonwealth universe? It's not entirely necessary to do so first, but there's a lot of tech that makes more sense if you do. Not to mention a lot of character/cultural background. Last edited by DiapDealer; 06-20-2021 at 07:24 AM. | |
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|  06-20-2021, 09:29 AM | #30097 | |
| cacoethes scribendi            Posts: 5,818 Karma: 137770742 Join Date: Nov 2010 Location: Australia Device: Kobo Aura One & H2Ov2, Sony PRS-650 | Quote: 
 The Kingdom of Copper by S.A. Chakraborty. Second book of Daevabad Trilogy. The first half of this is slow compared to the first book, but I didn't find it boring: the ambitious protagonists make their plans all unwittingly on a collision course. It's an intricate plot, neatly unfolded to a quite violent finale. A great cast and several unexpected turns. I found it impressive and enjoyable. After having read so much YA fantasy it's an interesting change to get into something a bit more substantial. But the ending is quite abrupt, more so than the first book. Thankfully the third and last book is there ready for me, so that's what I'm onto next. This book gets a firm 4/5. | |
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|  06-20-2021, 02:50 PM | #30098 | |
| The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠            Posts: 74,433 Karma: 318076944 Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Norfolk, England Device: Kindle Oasis | Quote: 
 I'm well into the second volume now, but the amount of viewpoint switching and pace of the first part of the first book is certainly poor. | |
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|  06-20-2021, 03:57 PM | #30099 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 4,061 Karma: 38840460 Join Date: Sep 2012 Location: Minneapolis Device: PWSE, Voyage, K3, HDX, KBasic 7 & 8, Nook Glo3, Echos, Nanos | Quote: 
 Just finished Small Gods by Terry Pratchett. Listened to audiobook narrated by Nigel Planer about 6 years ago so first read. Enjoyable but I hear Planer through the book (a GOOD thing!). Just started The Last Train by Michael Pronko. Murder mystery based in Japan. | |
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|  06-20-2021, 05:00 PM | #30100 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 28,880 Karma: 207000000 Join Date: Jan 2010 Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD | Quote: 
  Hamilton has a penchant for that sort of thing when he starts a new project, I think. I've started his new Salvation series, and it starts out similarly. Three distinctly different timelines and scads of POVs. | |
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|  06-20-2021, 08:36 PM | #30101 | 
| She / Her            Posts: 48 Karma: 13653962 Join Date: Jul 2020 Location: Australia Device: Kobo Forma | |
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|  06-22-2021, 08:19 AM | #30102 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 28,880 Karma: 207000000 Join Date: Jan 2010 Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD | Quote: 
 I just have to decide if I'm up for investing in what amounts to a re-skinning of his Commonwealth universe tropes. Last edited by DiapDealer; 06-22-2021 at 12:05 PM. | |
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|  06-22-2021, 08:29 AM | #30103 | 
| Diligent dilettante            Posts: 3,662 Karma: 52758936 Join Date: Sep 2019 Location: in my mind Device: Kobo Sage; Kobo Libra Colour | 
			
			Currently reading Thus Was Adonis Murdered and after just one chapter already trying to decide if the almost onanistic pleasure the author (or her narrator character, same-same) takes in her convoluted prose is worth persevering with.
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|  06-22-2021, 11:34 AM | #30104 | 
| Professor of Law            Posts: 3,755 Karma: 68428716 Join Date: Sep 2010 Location: Chapel Hill, NC Device: Kobo Elipsa, Kobo Libra H20, Kobo Aura One, KoboMini | 
			
			I am in the middle of one very long series - Anthony Powell's Dance to the Music of Time.  I am currently about half way through book 3 of 12, The Acceptance World.  Will always appreciate Poobbear for putting me on to this one a few years ago.   I only have two books left in my complete read of the Wimsey novels by Dorothy L. Sayers. I have just started listening to Gaudy Night and then only have Busman's Honeymoon after that. | 
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|  06-22-2021, 11:56 AM | #30105 | |
| Bah!  Humbug!            Posts: 64,193 Karma: 135242149 Join Date: Feb 2009 Location: Durham, NC Device: Every Kindle Ever Made & To Be Made! | Quote: 
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