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brenticus

brenticus@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 month, 3 weeks ago

I read books and things.

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brenticus's books

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2025 Reading Goal

32% complete! brenticus has read 34 of 104 books.

reviewed Animorphs by Katherine A. Applegate (Animorphs, #1)

Katherine A. Applegate: Animorphs (Paperback, 1996, Scholastic Inc.)

Sometimes weird things happen to people. Ask Jake. He may tell you about the night …

Oh it's a kid's book for sure

I found an archive of all the Animorphs books and, for some reason, thought that reading through them for the first time in well over 20 years was a brilliant idea.

There's interesting bits here with how morphing works and stuff, but I definitely wouldn't recommend this nowadays. It's surprisingly brutal for a children's book (as all the good ones are) but it is still a children's book, and the simple language and plot really holds it back from being a really good read.

Elle Reeve: Black Pill (2024, Atria Books)

Online becomes offline sometimes and that can be very bad

It's interesting being on the internet for a good chunk of my life and recognizing the names of all the sites mentioned in this book, but did I ever really associate them with political action until recently? No, not at all. Sometimes they were cesspools, not worth thinking about. Sometimes they were strange, chaotic areas that you wouldn't walk into but you'd keep an eye on in case a gem somehow emerged. Reeve does a brilliant job of laying out how these online communities shunned even among the other online communities fermented into the alt-right movement we see today.

There are weaknesses, for sure. The way she discusses autism is really weird. The way she talks about these people who she considers horrid but kinda friends is a little weird. The way she was accepted in so many of these spaces that despised her is actually confusing and I'm not …

J. Torres, Chugong, DUBU(REDICE DUBU(REDICE STUDIO), Hye-Young Im, h-goon: Solo Leveling, Vol. 9 (comic) (2024, Ize Press)

None

It's not perfect, but definitely an interesting way for Jinwoo to progress beyond the system. He got it after the double dungeon, and he surpassed it upon his return. Very cool.

Stephen King: Carrie (EBook, 2008, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group)

The story of misfit high-school girl, Carrie White, who gradually discovers that she has telekinetic …

None

I often struggle with narratives where there is such overt, cruel, and public bullying happening over a long period of time. It speaks to such a large societal failure to deal with such instances that it beggars belief. 

I thought I would feel the same way about Carrie, but I don't. She and her family are so messed up that people don't know what to do about them. Sue and Tommy, for good reasons or not, actually make an attempt to help her. And when it all goes to hell it does so in such a way that it becomes hard to feel that much pity for Carrie in the end. 

It's a tense, fast, terrible story that never really tries to surprise you but always has you hooked in anyways. Super good read.

Set in the summer of 1917 in an Essex country estate, the story follows the …

None

Goofy little Belgian man solves mystery, POV character is just smart enough to constantly look like an idiot. It's a classic for a reason. It's an engaging mystery where I was always second-guessing my assumptions, and Poirot is actually such a fun character, shedding light and befuddling everyone in equal parts. Just a great read altogether.

Ursula K. Le Guin, Laozi: Tao Te Ching (1998, Shambhala)

No other English translation of this greatest of the Chinese classics can match Ursula Le …

None

Le Guin's translation of the Tao Te Ching is lovely. She keeps a lot of the poetic obscurity—which is also where a lot of insight is—and she doesnt shy from presenting an interpretation of the work as a whole, which strengthens the presentation greatly. There are fewer contradictions and odd asides, and there are plenty of notes in places where Le Guin took liberties, explaining both what she did and why she felt it was necessary.

Any edition of the Ching is lovely to read through, but Le Guin's strikes a balance between poetry and teaching that feels just right. Absolutely fantastic.

reviewed Dragon Ball, Vol. 7 by Akira Toriyama (  (7))

Akira Toriyama, Akira Toriyama: Dragon Ball, Vol. 7 (Paperback, 2003, Viz Media)

Only Goku, Bulma and Kuririn stand between the Red Ribbon Army and the seven Dragon …

None

I forgot about the appearance of Dr. Slump characters in this arc. Always good fun to see a genuine threat done in by gag characters.

reviewed Equal Rites by Terry Pratchett (Discworld, #3)

Terry Pratchett: Equal Rites (Paperback, 2012, Corgi)

None

Other than the climax just kind of going confusing at breakneck speed this was a fantastic book. Really love how arbitrarily self-assured Esk and Granny are. They are basically unstoppable in a university full of dweebs. Great fun.

John Scalzi: Starter Villain (2023, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

Inheriting your mysterious uncle's supervillain business is more complicated than you might imagine.

Sure, there …

None

It's sort of what I think of as a typical Scalzi book, with the down-on-their-luck protagonist suddenly being thrust into a much more sci-fi life than expected, but it's a hell of a lot of fun. Hera may be one of my all-time favourite characters. The whole thing is just funny, with a serious of ridiculous situations and a man who is too shell-shocked to do anything other than accept that it's happening and joke about it a bit.

If the end wasn't so deflating, where it all just sort of wraps up nicely with a cute bow and everyone's chill, it would probably be a 5-stars from me, but it sort of felt like the default expected ending. Enjoyable enough, but not really interesting.

Still, if you want something light and goofy this is a lot of fun. Highly recommend.

Akira Toriyama: Dragon Ball, Vol. 6 (Paperback, 2003, VIZ Media LLC)

In the frozen north, Goku's one-man fight against the Red Ribbon Army continues as he …

None

The end of Muscle Tower is fun, what with Goku being shot repeatedly and it never working. And then it sprints off to the next weird thing, and the next one after that, and then it just kind of ends. The story really isn't structured for a volume at a time, but it's still good fun.

None

Cardinal lays out why the White Paper put forth in the late 60's is a terrible framework for solving the problems of Indigenous people in Canada. There are more recent accounts of what a good solution should look like, and more fullsome accounts of problems with various agencies and treaties, but this is one of the earlier accounts that does a good job of laying out why Indigenous concerns aren't as simple as just treating them like any other Canadian.

The landscape has evolved a lot since Cardinal wrote this, and our vocabulary is able to be more specific about reconciliation, self-government, intergenerational trauma, cultural genocide, and so on, but for a time period where much of these concepts were in their early days he puts forth a solid picture of what steps can be taken to move towards real reconciliation.

None

An apprentice witch finds out that she's going to die in a year unless she can collect enough tears of pure joy to make herself immortal. It's a heavy premise, a big task, and it's handed to a goofball who kind of can't focus on the task at hand. 

This is really fun. Not perfect, by any stretch of the imagination, but Meg is a fun protagonist and seeing how she builds up relationships with the townspeople and with other witches is really nice. She isn't really sure how she's supposed to finish her task in time, but she wants to help people anyways, and it gives a sort of comfy vibe to the whole story that I enjoy. The tension and suspense is present, but Meg focuses on being hopeful (and absent-minded) rather than dreading her future.

Honestly, if I found out I had a year of good life-span …

reviewed The missing chums by Franklin W. Dixon (Hardy boys mystery stories / Franklin W Dixon -- 32)

A series of bizarre events in their home town lead the Hardy Boys on a …

None

So, like, I enjoy this one as I generally do with the Hardy Boys, but holy hell the bad guys are stupid. Kidnap the wrong kids, lose their prisoners repeatedly, can't find anyone on the island, can't escape the island... at least when the boys are dealing with pro criminals there's usually more of a struggle, but in this case the criminals are a bunch of doofuses trying to be threatening, just badly.

None

I quite like this finale. Bits of the fight with Innocent Zero don't seem to make perfect sense (like, as much as is possible) but generally it has the awesome impact of Mashle's fight scenes along with the absurd, hilarious feats mixed in when needed to lighten the mood. It's nice to see a couple of chapters of a denouement at the end for some extra goofiness, as well.

Mashle is a fun series. Sometimes it takes itself too seriously for too long, sometimes it gets a bit too deep into the power of friendship stuff, but a dude getting so buff that he can use a continent as a flutterboard is just pure fun.