Die Tyrannei des Schmetterlings (the tyranny of the butterfly) by German author Frank Schätzing. A sci-fi thriller in the same vein as John Chrichton about AI and quantum physics. A great page turner, although the flowery language sometimes comes across as a bit forced.
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Just finished The Roman Villa. An older book, and dry as death.
It was interesting, however, to see concepts which were cutting-edge in the 70s (connecting certain non-Latin place-name endings with Roman villas, the collapse of the Roman economy as a function of societal decline rather than destructive invasions, the continued habitation and transformation of post-Roman villa locations) but are simply accepted orthodoxy now.
I LOVE sapphic sci-fi, please never let this trend end 🙏🏼
Currently reading Unconquerable Sun. It's fun, the writing isn't the best but it has great world building and cute lesbians.
I read Volatile Memory, which was intense but good. I just hope trans girls don't look at it as an example, the world is very dystopic and the relationship very unhealthy. There's plenty of people who support you in real life~
Monk and Robot was a little disappointing. It's nice and has some beautiful descriptions but it felt somewhat aimless. If there was any point to it it's just some liberal self-care nonsense.
The Dungeon Anarchist Cookbook, from the Dungeon Crawler Carl series.
Mostly audiobook, I really like the actor. He plays every character differently. There's a guest actor that almost made me stop the audiobook, but it was worth enduring it for the end of his arch. If you know, you know.
Picked up the series recently and tore through it fast because it's so good.
I started The Count of Monte Cristo, which has been on my to read list forever!
I actually just finished both Howling Dark by Christopher Ruocchio today. Its the second book in the Sun Eater series. I enjoyed it more than the first book in the series. At times still feels like just Dune but it did have some things i didnt expect.
Also finsihed Heart of Midnight by J Robert King. Its a D&D book from the 90s set in Ravenloft. There are a series of them bit non are connected. Was not great but was fun. So I enjoyed it.
So as of right now i am reading nothing lol. Probably pick up the third book in Sun Eater series in a day or two and then I am not sure what else.
I'm on Fool Moon, trying for a complete Dresden Files re-read before Twelve Months
Finished "Singularity sky" by Charles Stross, great book which ends kind of slow. Or at least, the beginning set some very high expectations, and then the story unfolds into something different. Good enough to start the second book "Iron sunrise", of which I have just read the prologue.
I finished Provenance by Ann Leckie. I read her Imperial Radch trilogy years ago and really enjoyed it. This was set in the same world so I expected to like it but it just fell kind of flat to me. The exploration of personhood and gender norms wasn't really there and the political intrigue felt shallow.
Now I'm on A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett, the sequel to The Tainted Cup. It is just as gripping as the first book and I'm absolutely loving it. I really need to read more from this author.
I started The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett this week and am really liking it. This is the first book I've read from him, and I'm easily getting into his writing style.
Finished Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier yesterday. It was a good gothic novel about how a person can still haunt the lives of others, even strangers, after they pass.
Last night I started Cory Doctorow’s book Enshittification. I didn’t get far, but after reading his blog a lot a year ago it mostly feels like a summary of stuff he normally writes about so far. That’s about what I hoped for. I’m interested to see what more he has to add later.
Just finished:
Midnight Rooms by Donyae Coles. A Gothic fairy tale with promising vibes of Crimson Peak, Beauty and the Beast, and Rebecca. I found it ultimately disappointing as there was never any explanation or lore provided and I thought the MC wasn't well fleshed out. But if you like Gothic vibes and romance, you might appreciate this one.
The Electric Kingdom by David Arnold. A post-apocalyptic time travel story with likable characters. Thoroughly enjoyed this one.
Currently reading American Sirens: The Incredible Story of the Black Men who Became America's First Paramedics by Kevin Hazzard. I never knew about them until they were mentioned on The Pitt. Some heartbreaking stories in the first chapter.
I had Midnight Rooms on my TBR list for a while at one point (I really liked the cover, and it sounded interesting), but your impression lines up with the reviews I read. Idk if you read Gothic often, but if you have any recommendations for good Gothic novels, I'd love to hear them!
DuMaurier's Rebecca is a classic.
Model Home by Rivers Soloman
The God of Endings by Jacqueline Holland
Mexican Gothic by Sylvia Moreno-Garcia
Where They Wait by Scott Carson
A lot of stuff by T Kingfisher:
What Moves the Dead
A Sorceress Comes to Call
A House with Good Bones
Awesome, thanks!
Reading Germinal by Emile Zola right now. From time to time it gets a bit too dry and reads more like political theory than fiction, but overall I’m enjoying it a lot. Got about 100 pages left and it seems like it’ll end in tragedy, but that was to be expected from the start.
I love the way Zola describes things. The darkness, the cold, the mines that are more like man-eating beasts than mere workplaces, make you really feel the tragic plight of the workers there.
It is also quite depressing to me how many lines I can draw from what I’m reading to what I’m hearing in my own life. The fight hasn’t really changed and the arguments that I hear also haven’t.
Probably gonna finish it this week and not sure what’s next, but I can definitely recommend this to anyone interested in politics and social justice. It feels very realistic (who would have thought, it’s realist/naturalist literature after all) and makes for a great fictional adaptation of the often pretty dry political theory on communism and socialism at the time.
Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer for the podcast - the Natalie Portman movie is very loosely based on it - its pretty good so far but I'm not far in.
Just finished The Girl Who Could Move Shit With Her Mind by Jackson Ford.
Was a fun read. Nothing too spectacular but was nice to get close to EoY and knock out a 400-pager. I'm so excited to see my StoryGraph stats at the end of the year!
I've just started a queer (somewhat furry-adjacent - don't hate me) fantasy novel called Wolf of Withervale by Joaquin Baldwin. Some fascinating world-building around a plot which has been fairly low stakes so far, but I'm hoping will build into something grander.
Oops, wrong reply button.
Just finished Isle of the Emberdark by Brandon Sanderson. Took a few hours to really get into it but once I did it was another enjoyable Sanderson book with lots of cosmere goodness throughout.
I then started book 141 of Deathlands today.
I did some more reading up about the history of Deathlands recently and think I found the reason why I think the writing has gotten better / more interesting recently.
The original author wrote up to book 33 (and the one final book at number 44) and these were all great. Then books 34 - 125 were written by a series of different authors and I think this is why those books are pretty inconsistent in terms of how good the writing was. In general it wasn't bad otherwise I wouldn't have carried on but there were definitely a few in that lot that were considerably less interesting. In this time as well there were never any real changes to the overall cast and by 125 the story as a whole definitely felt like it had started to stagnate some what.
After 125 however Graphic Audio (the company who produce the fully voiced audiobooks adaptations I have been listening to) acquired the rights to continue the story. It was after 125 that I found things to be getting considerably more interesting again, there were a lot more significant advancements in terms of the story or back story and in general I think the writing has been better.
So that kind of answered and unasked question in my mind in terms of the ups and downs in quality of the writing and I'm looking forward to these last 15 or so books knowing it is Graphic Audio at the helm now and that they are willing to push things forward and change things up. It does also answer why there were some slight changes in the way some of the characters presented over time, most of them were subtle but now I have a reasoning. One bad thing is they seem to be making the doctor more insufferable in my opinion but you can't love every character!
Ran across 'Assistant to the Villain' on Libby as an audiobook, thought it sounded fun.
I regret it.
I want to know what happens next but the narrator is abysmal. She sounds so much like an AI voice - complete with awkward pauses and bad pronunciation of unusual words - that I had to look her up and make sure she was a real person. I've actually taken to occasionally re-narrating out loud with better inflection to drown her out. I'll probably stick it out until the end of the book, but... Sorry, Em Eldridge, you're going on my 'never again' list.
Finished all the Fred, the vampire accountant books. They had a good ending that fit the story well. Lots of room for alternate stories in the future as not all dropped threads were picked up, but that doesn’t bother me necessarily.
These look interesting, I might pick them up some time.
They are pretty fun and read quickly.
Just started Johannas Cabal the Necromancer by Jonathan L. Howard. I'm loving it. If you like Adams, Pratchett, or the guy who co-wrote Good Omens early work, I just about guarantee you'll dig this.
For Whom the Belle Tolls by Jaysea Lynn.
Working my way through Aurora Blazing by Jessie Mihalik. I have less than 100 pages left and I love it. I’m excited to see what happens, but sad to be finishing it, but also excited that there is another book after this. It’s a great scifi romance series that I recommend checking out.
I started reading A Little Tea Book by Sebastian Beckworth on the side. It’s cute and has quite a bit of information about tea. I’m not sure if I’ll read the whole thing, but I’m reading sections that interest me and skimming the others. This is a library book and I recently decided to check out any book that I spend flipping through pages for more than 30 seconds. I’ve been happy with this decision so far.
Still reading Rising Up and Rising Down: Some Thoughts on Violence, Freedom and Urgent Means by William Vollmann.
That sound interesting, care to elaborate a bit? Do you like it? What genre is it? Any comparisons to something else?
I think it's a good read on a topic I don't have a lot of experience with. I'm not sure which genre it falls under and I don't really have anything else to compare it to. I'll upload images to help others better understand.









That is interesting... and gives me the creeps.
Yeah, I agree. Then I realized the reason it give me the creeps is because I don't have any experience with this topic at any real depth.
I learned a long time ago, the only reason I every fear something is because I'm ignorant about said thing.
The more I read this book, the less ill feelings it gives me.
That looks wild! I’ll have to see if I can get a copy somewhere. And from what I’m reading I also couldn’t really answer any of my questions, but in this case it sounds like that’s a good thing haha
I hope you can find it :) There's a lot more in the book in regards to information and personal experiences that isn't really in the photos. It's definetly a unique book imo.
I really want to read some of his other books, which people say are very good.
Currently partway through Masquerade by O.O. Sangoyomi.
__
Finished Shutter by Ramona Emerson (supernatural crime thriller) | bingo: minority author, orange, steppin' up
A Navajo crime scene photographer that can see ghosts is haunted by a victim seeking justice.
This ended up being more about how the MC's ghost-seeing and interest in photography impacted her childhood, rather than the thriller plot or other characters. Not terrible for a debut novel, but I don't think I'd recommend it. (Also, skip if you don't handle gore well: the crime scenes are described in vivid detail.)
Just finished The Vanished Birds by Simon Jimenez.
Not too far into Half a King by Joe Abercrombie and also about to start Best Served Cold by the same author as my commute audio book.