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Ablaze3594

Ablaze3594@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 5 months ago

Hey there, I mostly read Science-Fiction and Fantasy. But also non-fiction and social-political stuff.

Profile pic source :

Sun Guard, by Dominik Mayer

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reviewed The Traitor Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson (The Masquerade, #1)

Seth Dickinson: The Traitor Baru Cormorant (2015)

The Traitor Baru Cormorant ( BAH-roo) is a 2015 hard fantasy novel by Seth Dickinson, …

Gut punch, not feel good but enthralling enough to keep going.

Wow, I don't feel good after having read this book. It really got me going, with the introduction a bit slow but really set in the motivations for the protagonist. I was ecstatic to read about a character that wants to save her country from colonisation.

Throughout the book, I was hoping to be rewarded with a satisfying conclusion. Instead, I got my hopes broken and am a bit surprised with the protagonist's physical state. I'm not sure how she will fare in the next books...

... Which I'm definitly reading. But maybe not just yet. I need to recuperate after this ending...

Charlie Jane Anders: The City in the Middle of the Night (Hardcover, 2019, Tor Books)

Would you give up everything to change the world?

Humanity clings to life on January …

I'm fascinated but goes on between the lines here...

IMHO, lots of themes explored or mentioned here. Deep characters, with different cadence of growths. A cool world premise, but what got me is the ecologist twist, as well as the acceptance of the weird, non-human.

I would've liked to know more about what happened on the ship, but at the same time, the fact that we don't know what happened, that we only read the lasting generational trauma, is quite eye-opening for me.

Very good read, though long in the middle, and a bit of repetitious.

Cory Doctorow: Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom (2003)

Read Down & Out in the Magic Kingdom online at the Internet Archive.

From …

review of clone-rejuv resistance in a world where normal medicine is just make a new body and transfer you !

A weird trip in Disneyland +1000yrs and ∞ lives/clones.

Quite poetic on some levels, but I got stuck on the page-by-page degradation of the main protagonist's frenetic life. It echoed some things in me, and it still resonates now.

Much stronger for me surprisingly, than Little Brother for example, or the copyright book, Pirate Cinema, both hitting more politically than emotionally for me (albeit I felt sympathy for the characters there as well).

A good read thought ! GG Cory !

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John Scalzi: Redshirts (Paperback, 2013, Tor Books)

THEY WERE EXPENDABLE . . . UNTIL THEY STARTED COMPARING NOTES

Ensign Andrew Dahl has …

Borgovian land worms!

John Scalzi's dialog crackles with quick banter that makes his books worth reading:

Corey looked down and furrowed his brow. "Where are my pants?" he said. "We took them from you," Dahl said. "Why?" Corey said. "Because we need to talk to you," Dahl said. "You could do that without taking my pants," Corey said. "In a perfect world, yes," Dahl said.

-- John Scalzi, "Redshirts"

The only other Scalzi book I've read, Kiaju Preservation Society, let me down on plot—even when you remove the expected suspension of disbelief required of all sci-fi.

Fortunately, this book's plot holds up throughout the narrative.

The plot falls right out from the title. Think back to season one of "Star Trek: The Next Generation"—when the show was terrible. Think about all the nameless crew members who died on away missions. All those people had lives and families and worries. And their sad fate …

John Scalzi: Redshirts (Paperback, 2013, Tor Books)

THEY WERE EXPENDABLE . . . UNTIL THEY STARTED COMPARING NOTES

Ensign Andrew Dahl has …

Lasers get you killed... Who knew, am I right, clones ? (oops, wrong franchise)

Might seem like a harsh review, but I just want to be concise. The plot seems obvious rather quickly, and the story stays hilarious right through the end.

I was weirded out by the second part/ending. I think I got a bit bored by the pseudo-blog gimmick.

Excellent either way, and I'm not a star trek fan, like at all !

reviewed Prince of Thorns by Mark Lawrence (The Broken Empire, #1)

Mark Lawrence: Prince of Thorns (2011, Voyage)

Review of a lot of bloody messes...

Nice twist in terms of story lore. I was a bit confused where the story took place, and the clues are more or less subtly sprinkled in, with not too much exposition.

The main protagonist is a bit archetypal, similar to The Lies of Lock Lamora, a young masculin teen with a freakish tactical and strategic luck, who is also hyper-violent and clearly on the psychopathic spectrum, saved by a story plot-twist that explains why they are like that. But still needs to be redeemed in the next books IMHO.

Has a Cosmere , aka The Stormlight Archvive/Mistborn vibe in the greater powers that play a 1:1 worldwide game. Again, to be seen if relevant in the other two books.

Is rather similar, as pointed out by @kergoth@bookwyrm.social, to The First Law Trilogy by Joe Abercrombie.