• thanksforallthefish@literature.cafe
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    10 months ago

    Having been sick and in and out of hospital for the last month I’ve churned through a few.

    I’ve re-read the City Watch sequence from Pratchett’s Discworld. Which is “Guards Guards”, " Men at arms", “Feet of Clay”, " Jingo" , “The fifth elephant” “Night watch”, " Thud" and “Snuff”

    I don’t think I can say anything more perceptive than a thousand reviews have but it was wonderful watching both the development of the main character (Sam Vimes) and the author himself. There’s about 20 years and probably 40-50 books between Guards which was about his 4th book, and Snuff which was released in 2011 while still at his peak and before Alzheimers claimed him.

    His writing style becomes more assured but also more incisive, more cutting, and to some extent his anger at the injustices in our world that he satirises in the discworld domain becomes more forceful, more pointed.

    Sam Vimes progresses through a beautifully relatable growth cycle but remains a deeply flawed real character. Never a perfectly buffed and grommed character he does strive to be the best he can be.

    Highly recommended.

    If you’ve never read Terry Pratchett he’s a satirist and humourist. He uses the device of a fantasy world to reflect the issues of our world back to us in a form that allows him to skewer the hypocrisies and mental double think we allow ourselves. All his books are onions. At the first layer is a light read any teenager can get a giggle out of, but there’s always more layers: puns and plays on words, references to “roundworld” (our existence) and philosphical analysis.

    • thanksforallthefish@literature.cafe
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      9 months ago

      Back in a hospital bed again so continuing a theme and am now doing tgeb"Witches" sequence. This is:

      “Equal Rites”, “Wyrd sisters”, " Witches abroad “, " Lords & Ladies”, “Maskerade” and “Carpe Jugulum”

      I’ve just finished Wyrd sisters, I’ll do a summary when I’ve finished the sequence

  • Gamma@beehaw.org
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    10 months ago

    Still Under the Dome, only ~30% in. It creates such an interesting and chaotic little diorama of a town, I love how events overlap in time as you hop around heads

    • LoverOfLiterature@literature.cafe
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      10 months ago

      I’m smiling.

      My memory of my gargantuan journey through that gargantuan tome is bitter sweet. King creates so many characters we adore — and more that we despise.

      I believe I saw it as a working through of the Bush Jr administration and I went so far into this thst I began a chart of the which real life people the characters represented. Like many of my ADHD projects, that one didn’t bear fruit but your bring up this title makes me smile.

      • Gamma@beehaw.org
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        10 months ago

        The baddies are awful, just the way I like them! I don’t know how many loans from the library it’ll take (I only get it for 2 weeks at a time) but the audiobook narrator is doing a great job, Big Jim’s shifts from internal thoughts to external dialogue is perfect

  • Rinn@literature.cafe
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    10 months ago

    I was in the mood for a) something that won’t require a lot of thinking and b) something high fantasy. So… I started The Way of Kings. I’m not Sanderson’s biggest fan, but I can’t deny that it’s a very quick and fun read (despite its monstrous size). No thoughts, just get swept up in the world and enjoy.

    The storm-based worldbuilding is very cool. Coincidentally, I’ve been playing Against the Storm a lot. Very interesting how a similar base idea (what if we had a world ruled by a cycle of storms?) can go in such different directions.

    Spoilery thoughts:

    spoiler

    I mostly like all of the main characters so far! Dalinar took a long time to grow on me (mostly because I share Kaladin’s burning hatred towards Lighteyed nobility and he is a part of the system), Shallan I immediately liked but I’m worried that if she doesn’t change/go through some character growth she could become annoying in future books. Kaladin is honestly the least interesting character-wise - I like reading his chapters because he is in the most immediately desperate situation and is Going Through It ™ but he’s just a bit too perfect. Y’know. Surgeon, gifted spearman, naturalborn leader, some kind of a wizard… at 19 years old. Sigh.

    And boy oh boy do I hope that the eye colour-based caste system will get dismantled/at least critically examined in some detail cause… ouch. Kaladin is so right in hating on it. But I’m not holding my breath.

    • LoverOfLiterature@literature.cafe
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      10 months ago

      Orwell offers so many hidden gems. I recently read Keep the Aspidistra Flying which kept me absolutely captivated and I could not get over how contemporary it feels.

  • Penguin_Rocket@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    I just finished Stalingrad by Antony Beevor. It describes the WW2 from German and Russian point of view, especially about the Stalingrad battle.

    It makes me see war as something absurd. People were constantly dying, by fighting or because of inhumane life conditions.

    I wouldn’t recommend it if you are extremely sensitive to violence and death.

  • JaymesRS@literature.cafe
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    10 months ago

    I finished all of The Queen’s Thief series, so now I’m back trying to finish out my Bingo Card from r/Fanasy. I finished the second Murderbot Novella by Martha Wells and The Haunting of Tram Car by P. Djèlí Clark. I’m on to Orconomics by J. Zachary Pike.

    I thoroughly enjoyed murderbot and am excited to focus on it.

  • aleq@literature.cafe
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    10 months ago

    since last I’ve read Vehicles: Experiments in Synthetic Psychology by Valentino Braitenberg. The first half is a thought experiment about building consciousness (hence synthetic psychology) with the titular vehicles and that was fantastic, the second part was 40 year old neuroscience which I a) didn’t care much about, b) didn’t understand much of.

    Then I read Sculpting in Time by soviet director Andrei Tarkovsky. Had really high hopes for it because I love everything else he’s made, but I didn’t like it very much. For Tarkovsky fans I think it’s definitely worth a read, but a lot of it is kinda stupid, my least favorite point one being that artists who make art that’s not “their own” (e.g. commercial stuff) will forever lose the ability to make art that’s “their own”.

    Right now reading Melancholia I-II by last year’s nobel prize winner Jon Fosse. My very first book in Norwegian, which is very exciting (I’m Swedish, so it’s not a huge achievement, but I like it). About half way through and liking it a lot so far. It’s incredibly strange in a very good way.

  • Yawweee877h444@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Blood Meridian. My 2nd Cormac McCarthy novel, I read all the pretty horses many years ago. Not gonna read the road, seen the movie, too depressing.

    Looking forward to getting back to sci-fi, I’m halfway through the expanse series and loving it!

  • The1029@literature.cafe
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    10 months ago

    Currently reading Godkiller. About halfway through and really liking it. Quite a short read for a new fantasy (clocks in at 300 pages), but the worldbuilding is really well interspersed through the story and dialogue.

  • ludrol@bookwormstory.social
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    9 months ago

    I have read Jumper series by Steven Gould

    I liked it, not for plot, comedy or characters but because it was fresh after couple of years reading mainly fantasy Light Novels.

    It got everything at acceptable level and it has been simillary easy read to Light Novels. I think it came at the perfect time for me to distract me from reality.

    I would love to read more of Cent’s adventures but realistically there wouldn’t be any conflict that would be a driving force for the plot without introducing cosmic horrors.

    Forth book had some confusing moments but it could be just sleep depravation.

    I would give it 7/10

  • Anthrocene@literature.cafe
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    9 months ago

    Been reading Oswald Spengler’s Man and Technics. Interesting read so far, reminds me a lot of C. S. Lewis’ The Abolition of Man, about how human scientific rationality ends up sort of out running us such that we turn it upon ourselves.