User Profile

Daniel Andrlik

andrlik@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 8 months ago

Product exec, SFF Writer, Producer and GM of dice.camp/@ExplorersWanted , a Numenera actual play podcast.

ActuallyAutistic/ADHD, with a dash of GAD for spice.

He/him

Your mom loves me.

Location: secluded in a blanket fort

Also available on Mastodon at andrlik.org/@daniel

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Daniel Andrlik's books

Currently Reading

2025 Reading Goal

75% complete! Daniel Andrlik has read 9 of 12 books.

reviewed Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman (Dungeon Crawler Carl, #1)

Matt Dinniman: Dungeon Crawler Carl (Hardcover, 2024, Penguin Publishing Group)

The apocalypse will be televised! Welcome to the first book in the wildly popular and …

Fun fun fun

This book had no business being as much fun as it was. Even though I had seen it recommended by friends, I went in skeptical, but was sucked in right away. It's by no means high literature, but Carl and Princess Donut's escapades are a delight. What this book lacks in substance it makes up with pure candy-coated silliness. This was the perfect weekend read.

Admittedly, I am solidly in the target demographic, being an avid TTRPG player, and there was plenty of fan service along those lines. Added pluses for some nose tweaking to the manosphere as well. On the surface, this could have come across as a different take on Ready Player One, but this one didn't leave the same bad taste in my mouth.

There's a lot of world building going on in this first book, with many hints of darkness to come, and without spoilers I …

Susan J. Morris: Strange Beasts (Hardcover, english language, The Inky Phoenix) No rating

In this fresh-yet-familiar gothic tale—part historical fantasy, part puzzle-box mystery—the worlds of Dracula and Sherlock …

If Paris was the boudoir of Europe, then Lapérouse was everything that had given it that salacious reputation.

One of the finest dining establishments in all of France, it was said the literati of the Romantic era had written their magnum opuses in its candlelit corners. That jewels flashed in the shadows as the mistresses of the rich and powerful tested their diamonds on the Venetian mirrors, leaving behind scratches like the ones they left down their lovers' backs. That in Lapérouse, politics mixed with poetry and became pillow talk on velvet love seats the color of spilt wine.

It was also where they'd found the latest body.

Strange Beasts by  (Page 41)

THIS is the passage that the book should have opened with.

commented on Lotus Empire by Tasha Suri (The Burning Kingdoms, #3)

Tasha Suri: Lotus Empire (2024, Orbit)

The Lotus Empire brings Tasha Suri’s acclaimed Burning Kingdoms trilogy to a heart-stopping close. As …

Content warning Plot speculation. Please don't spoil me.