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I'm currently reading The Mysterious Affair at Styles by Agatha Christie. It's my third Poirot novel after Murder on the Orient Express and Murder on the River Nile. I think it will be my last.
They're fun books and well-written, but also very much alike. And that Poirot guy is getting on my nerves...
After this I have Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier waiting for me. I read it when I was a teenager when I found a copy from the forties lying around and even though it was a little too hard for me, I remember liking it. I'm curious to see how I'll like it now.
I recently picked up I Will Kill Your Imaginary Friend for $200 by Robert Brockway and thought it was pretty good. So I looked for some more stuff by him and found Carrier Wave. It's a mixed bag. The first parts are great, but then it kind of loses its way and meanders for a while, then the ending is just meh. It's strongly influenced by The Stand (especially the ending) and World War Z so if you like either of those it might be worth a look.
After Carrier Wave I started There Is No Antimemetics Division and I'm about halfway through. It's really good.
I'm on Book 3 of Dungeon Crawler Carl!
This week I started The Dresden Files and have made it to the end of the second book in three days. So enjoying it so far!
Thanks for the rec ;p
I'm listening to Good Omens (obligatory fuck Neil Gaiman), but the audiobook is fantastic. Could easily see myself re-listening over and over as a comfort read.
Reading a memoir by Travis Alabanza called None of the Above, which is a memoir about the non-binary experience technically but I highly recommend to anyone who wants to see the gendered world we live in from a new perspective. It is so fucking good.
Looking forward to starting How Far the Light Reaches: A Life in Ten Sea Creatures by Sabrina Imbler. Another memoir which I'll be reading for my book club.
I'm having a Mistborn summer, already coming towards the end of #2 of 7! Sandon Branderson sure does write long books, but these are like popcorn, lots of action and easy reads
Continuing on with my summer reading, I've picked up I, Robot (Asimov) and Professor and the Madman (Winchester) from the library.
I also checked out Hatchet (Paulsen). My niece is reading it, figured it'd be fun and quick to join in.
On the listening side, I've been going through Disrupting the Game by Reggie Fils-Aime since he reads the audiobook himself. It's very directed towards the business advice angle, but there's good biographical and Nintendo history info in there.
Currently working my way through This Inevitable Ruin the 7th book in the DCC series. Really enjoying this series and glad I picked it up.
Also listening to Queens at War the last book in Aliison Weir's series on English Medieval Queens. Thr series has been a bit hit and miss. Feels at times the Queen being documented isnt always at the forefront, but its a lot of information I never knew.
Struggling my way through Star Wars Planet of Twilight. Kids are out of school so harder to find dedicated time to read, but I also didn’t enjoy her last book either. After his is Dungeon Crawler Carl book 4.
This author (Barbara Hambley) just seems to want to describe everything as much as possible, yet there’s nothing to base it on. Yeah sure you’re talking some trees, but what are they? The lore just seems so empty.
Finished "BuyMort: Smart shopper" and started the third book "BuyMort: Rise of the Windowpuncher". They're a nice read, reminds me of the first books in the DCC series. On that note, also reading "a parade of horribles", the latest DCC book. That one is going to take a long time since I usually only read one chapter of it before going to sleep.
I really liked BuyMort a lot but I do think it loses steam towards the end. It does come to a good conclusion though and it definitely isn't bad.
I read DCC afterwards but like you I really felt like they were channelling the same energy!
I can also recommend Solo Levelling if you haven't read that which is in a similar vein again and Beware of Chicken is also a lot of fun but a bit more feel good sort of vibe!
Doing a reread of Book of the Long Sun by Gene Wolfe with chapter by chapter with alzabo soup along side!
Fantastic! I'm looking forward to my first reread of this series. Been 8 years since the first read though, so I'm waiting at least another 2
I've been holding off on short sun so I can really treasure the first read. Definitely a series I would wipe from my brain so I could read it fresh again haha.
It's time. I've started my annual trek through Middle-earth. I'm reading the first book of The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien. I've been looking forward to this all year long. Now if you'll excuse me, I'm going to lose myself in Eriador.
I'm on my second attempt at the Lord of the Rings. The first attempt was I think in middle school with a copy from the library.
I hope you enjoy it. At this point, having read it every year for like 20 years, I must conclude that it is my favourite book. That being said, Tolkien's writing, especially the slower pacing, is definitely not everyone's cup of tea, so don't feel bad if you just can't get into it. There's plenty of other great books to read.
I am currently reading the Pizza and Focaccia chapter from Flour Water Salt Yeast by Ken Forkish. I'm planning on making pizza later this week and realized I hadn't read the methodology in one sitting.
I am also reading Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges. I've started with with the Universal History of Iniquity. I'm enjoying them very much.
https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/125163/just-add-mana
Just got started but I'm finding it pretty funny.
I'm listening to:
Couriers Outbound The Wandering Inn, Book 19 By: pirateaba
https://www.goodreads.com/search?q=The+Wandering+Inn
I listen to a LOT of audiobooks (+60 last year). This is one of my all time favorite series. The worldbuilding is on par with Discworld.
If i had one complaint, its that the author has TOO MANY plotlines. Which i think is a common problem with Royal Road books.
The wandering inn is still on my "to try" list, but I always get discouraged when I see the page count of the first book whenever I'm looking for something new to read. Maybe I'll try after summer.
I just finished Pachinko. I don’t get the hype. Interesting historical perspective regarding Koreans in Japan that I didn’t have. Decent story premise, but really flat writing. I cared enough to finish the book, but overall it was a big “meh” for me.
I'm currently very slowly making my way through The Invincible by Stanislaw Lem. Still in the setup phase about 20% of the way through; looking forward to seeing how it goes.
Last week, read/finished The Faerie Hounds of York by Arden Powell. Heavier on the romance than I normally go for, but the actual plot was intriguing, and the fae were thankfully kept quite alien. Kinda insta-lovey, kinda eye-roll romance trope-y in places, but if you don't mind that, it might be worth a look.
Just finished Blindsight by Peter Watts (fucking excellent, possibly a new favourite)
Gonna try tackling House of Leaves again now that I'm all done school!
Interesting, haven't read a hard sci-fi book in quite a while, going to check it out.
Just started my reread of The Restoration of Rome: Barbarian Popes and Imperial Pretenders after about 20 years. I remember enjoying it the first time. It’s a look at three separate attempts to restore the greatness of Rome (Theodoric in c475, Justinian c572 and Charlemagne c800)
Just finished:
- Lázár: a fascinating novel about an aristocratic Hungarian family from ~1880s through the 1950s. Man, they were awful people
- The Undiscovered Country: Triumph, Tragedy and the Shaping of the American West: I wanted this to be better than it was. A look at the eras of The West through men who epitomized the era… starting in the mid 1700s with George Washington and Daniel Boone, then moving forward to Sitting Bull and Wild Bill Hickok. Unfortunately the book falls prey to the “let me just give you a series of events with varying levels of detail” form of history instead of successfully weaving a coherent narrative across 180 years of history
- The Witch by Marie NDiaye: short listed for the 2026 international Booker prize after not much critical acclaim during the original printing in 1996. It was fine. An interesting story and a unique one at that, but didn’t say much. The translation from French to English was good, I think it could have been fleshed out more and been a better read
I've just finished The Sign of the Unicorn by Roger Zelazny. It's book three of the Amber Chronicles. I've read it many, many times before, but not for about twenty years.
How are the Amber Chronicles?
Working through the Red Rising series by Pierce Brown I’m on the third book Morning Star at the moment.
I was at a local book store and saw Pierce Brown's book, but they didn't had the Red Rising in stock atm. Should get to it soon-ish.
The Sixth Nik by Daniel Kraus.