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#25156 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 9918418
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Here on the perimeter, there are no stars
Device: Kobo H2O, iPad mini 3, Kindle Touch
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#25157 |
Almost legible
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Karma: 4611110
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: In a high desert, CA
Device: Galaxy Note 9, Galaxy Tab A (2017), Likebook P78
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Finished Pretender by C. J. Cherryh.
Conveniently, the court intrigue at the end of that book, I was primed to enjoy reading The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison. |
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#25158 | |
Is that a sandwich?
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Karma: 101697116
Join Date: Jun 2010
Device: Nook Glowlight Plus
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Next, by necessity, is a library book, The Sorcerer of the North by John Flanagan. I'm really having fun with this series. |
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#25159 |
The Couch Potato
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Karma: 230999999
Join Date: Aug 2015
Device: Kobo Glo, Kobo Touch, Archos 9, Onyx Boox C67ML Carta
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#25160 |
Serpent Rider
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Karma: 10219804
Join Date: Jun 2009
Device: Sony 350; Nook STR; Oasis
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I am now 25% through Don Quixote.
Thoroughly enjoying my slow read and doing these weekly updates: Don Quixote Chapters 24-29 |
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#25161 |
Wizzard
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Karma: 33048258
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Roundworld
Device: Kindle 2 International, Sony PRS-T1, BlackBerry PlayBook, Acer Iconia
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Finished Over the Wine-Dark Sea, The Gryphon's Skull, The Sacred Land, and Owls to Athens by Harry Turtledove, #1-4 in his Menedemos & Sostratos quartet of historical adventure novels originally published under his non-sfnal penname H. N. Turteltaub, starring two cousins who are sea-faring traders from Rhodes, which were a recent Phoenix Pick Press offer.
These are low-key sorts of trading/travel adventures set in the Ancient Greek-adjacent world, rather than more swashbuckling action stuff; although there are encounters with pirates and dangerous historical figures in the wake of the power-struggles arising after the death of Alexander the Great, as well as escaping from outraged husbands in selected ports. But the feel of them is almost domestically cozy, with most of the excitement coming from visiting new areas and trying to make trades and get bargains on desirable resaleable goods (sometimes successful, sometimes not). It's actually a lot more compelling than that sounds, with the characters and their world very nicely fleshed out in such a way that their personalities often drive the encounters, and are in turn affected by them, with growth and change over the course of each novel and continuing throughout the series. And there's a good deal of variation in the travel plots, with each novel taking a different route (#3 goes east to visit Phoenicia and Palestine) with different objectives (#2 sees Sostratos the scholar wanting to bring a curious fossil to the Academy at Athens), with local customs and culture put on display, showcasing the surprisingly varied islands and cities of the ancient Mediterranean, who though mainly Greek/Greek-influenced, were hardly monolithic in nature. I really liked these, and though I thought that due to certain character developments in #4, these were meant to end there as the leads moved on with their lives (one of them was based on a RL historical figure), but it turns out that wasn't a concluding storyline, and there was some setup which could easily lead into a 5th adventure, which would have been nice to see. Medium-high recommend if you like cozy travelogue sorts of historical adventure novels. Turtledove does his usual high-quality job with interweaving period-accurate historical detail in with the story, which features many engaging personalities who feel like they could have lived in the time period (instead of being modern transplants quantum leaped into the setting), convincingly conveying the excitement they experience when they come across things like probably-Chinese silk (much nicer than the local stuff from the island of Kos) and the titular “gryphon's” skull and manage to finally dispose of some olive oil a pushy brother-in-law has stuck them with, as well as the various ways in which they personally fit in or clash with their surrounding cultural milieu, and provides notes on which real-life historical figures and events actually show up. I think I could have used a little more in the way of contextual notes about the historical setting (it took me a while to figure out just what opsos and sitos were referring to when it came to the meals: for anyone else wondering, the latter is the starchy nourishing filler base and the former is the meaty/fishy treat), but that's something that could easily be remedied by reading up on Ancient Hellenic daily life on my own time. |
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#25162 |
Wizard
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Karma: 9918418
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Here on the perimeter, there are no stars
Device: Kobo H2O, iPad mini 3, Kindle Touch
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Somehow it feels appropriate to read The Apocalypse Triptych between now and January 20th. It's three anthologies - The End Is Nigh, The End Is Now, and The End Has Come - edited by John Joseph Adams and Hugh Howey, dealing with the end of the world: right before, during, and after.
Most (but not all) of the contributions are also triptychs, one part appearing in each volume. This leaves me with a minor quandary in how to read them. Should I read each book separately, maintaining the theme, or read them in parallel to follow each mini-saga? I'm leaning toward the latter option, which leaves me mildly irked that the authors are presented in differing sequence with each book. I suppose I could customize my own omnibus volume and resequence everything... |
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#25163 |
Almost legible
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Karma: 4611110
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: In a high desert, CA
Device: Galaxy Note 9, Galaxy Tab A (2017), Likebook P78
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Finished The Goblin Emperor, which is a very good book and great read, though it does feature one little peeve: why wait until the end of the book to give a pronunciation and naming-conventions guide? I mean, it's too late by then, the reader has already puzzled half of it out or just plain given up on trying. I suppose it might be helpful on the second go-round, if one were planning to do that any time soon, but for me-- there are too many books waiting to be read...
At any rate, it was a good book and will go on the favorites list. |
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#25164 |
Wizard
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Karma: 9918418
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Here on the perimeter, there are no stars
Device: Kobo H2O, iPad mini 3, Kindle Touch
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It's pretty standard, almost universal, for supplementary material to be placed at the end of the book. Appendex, index, endnotes, glossaries...
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#25165 | |
The Couch Potato
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Karma: 230999999
Join Date: Aug 2015
Device: Kobo Glo, Kobo Touch, Archos 9, Onyx Boox C67ML Carta
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#25166 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Karma: 315160596
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Norfolk, England
Device: Kindle Oasis
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Another good issue. I think I'm enjoying this much more since CC Finlay became the editor.
"Homecoming", a novella by Rachel Pollack featuring Jack Shade, set in our universe with hidden magic was very good. There were four novelets: "Vinegar and Cinnamon" by Nina Kiriki Hoffman was a wonderful siblings story. "One Way" is an interesting invention based SF story, but the idea deserves a larger setting. "Dunnage for the Soul" by Robert Reed involves an idea that I'm sure I've come across before - perhaps he's used it elsewhere. "There Used to Be Olive Trees" by Rich Larson seems to be packing too much backstory into a novelet. Five short stories: "The Regression Test" by Wole Talabi was an interesting exploration of future AI developments. "A Gathering on Gravity's Shore" by Gregor Hartmann about Franden's adventures on Zephyr will work better as part of a larger work. "On the Problem of Replacement Children" by Debbie Urbanski was heart breaking. "Alexandria" had inserts of quotes from the future of the story, which didn't quite work for me. The poems and non-fiction I mostly skipped, although the Science article about brainless robots was good Next up: The Long Cosmos by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter. The last in the series, mostly completed back in 2013. Last edited by pdurrant; 01-10-2017 at 03:30 PM. |
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#25167 |
Almost legible
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Karma: 4611110
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: In a high desert, CA
Device: Galaxy Note 9, Galaxy Tab A (2017), Likebook P78
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Okay, I am halfway through The Circle by Dave Eggers, and I hate it.
That is, the writing is good enough, but I went into the book blind, so not really sure if there is a conspiracy in here somewhere that is just taking forever to unfold or if the author is just intent on scaring me with the plausibility of this happening or what. So far, the best part is a secondary character comparing the social media of the story (an amalgam of facebook, twitter, imgr, et nauseum) to corn-based snack foods: empty of calories, satisfying in the execution but you hate yourself for succumbing to the urge afterward. The company in the book, a composite of all those big tech companies we know and (we seriously need a word that means both love and hate) that spoils the extroverts powering it. The gradual brainwashing of the main character (an introvert like myself) is just so painful to watch particularly when paired with the plethora of 'transparency'-driven great ideas being implemented that are nightmare-fuel to a Libertarian-type person such as myself. I just don't know how much more I can take, waiting for the (I hope) inevitable explosion... |
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#25168 |
(he/him/his)
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Karma: 80074820
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Sunshine Coast, BC
Device: Oasis (Gen3),Paperwhite (Gen10), Voyage, Paperwhite(orig), iPad Air M3
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So, abandon it. You aren't compelled to finish books you aren't enjoying. I know, that is hard sometimes. But it's a lesson ebooks have taught me. Finally!
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#25169 |
Almost legible
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Karma: 4611110
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: In a high desert, CA
Device: Galaxy Note 9, Galaxy Tab A (2017), Likebook P78
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#25170 | |
o saeclum infacetum
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Karma: 234636059
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: New England
Device: Mini, H2O, Glo HD, Aura One, PW4, PW5
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Last year, nearly a third of my reads were one or two stars and that's entirely unacceptable. Some of them I can justify, as in: a book club read; I was learning something; it tanked at the very end; it was a dud in an overall entertaining series; it was borderline three stars; it was mindless distraction during recuperation. However, the total is sobering. I'm glad this made me look. I need to do much better. As I said above, I've already bagged one book; here's to more abandonment! ETA: I went back to look, and I can see why I finished more than half the duds. That still leaves a lot of books for which there is no excuse. Last edited by issybird; 01-10-2017 at 11:22 AM. |
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