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btuftin

btuftin@bookwyrm.social

Joined 9 months ago

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btuftin's books

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C.J. Cherryh: Chanur's Endgame (Chanur) (Paperback, 2007, DAW)

Review of "Chanur's Endgame (Chanur)" on 'Goodreads'

It took me ages to get through this. It had been 20+ years since I read the first three Chanur books, and the first novel in this omnibus never gripped me. I expect I just didn't remember enough of the previous book. But while I wouldn't call the second book in this volume a standalone novel, it depends too heavily on the others for that, it is a new story with mainly new characters. And it's an exciting story.

I remembered the Chanur novels as having amazing worldbuilding, and Chanur's Legacy brought that feeling back. Cherryh's alien's aren't humans with slight differences on appearance, they have more or less genuinely alien psychologies due to a non-human mix of nature and nurture. Some of them more so than others. I wonder how much even Cherryh really knows about the mysterious Knnn or the Tc'a.

I highly recommend anyone to read some …

Clint McElroy, Griffin McElroy, Justin McElroy, Travis McElroy, Carey Pietsch: The Adventure Zone: The Crystal Kingdom (2021, Roaring Brook Press)

Review of 'Adventure Zone' on 'Goodreads'

I love these books, but this sub-adventure was so packed I wondered how they would pack it all into one volume. I think they did a pretty good job, but I feel they could have pared it down even further. Yes that would have meant completely losing some fan favorites, but it would have allowed the rest to shine a little brighter.

Or maybe I'm dead wrong! What do you think?

Review of 'Alliance Space' on 'Goodreads'

This is an omnibus edition of two novels only tied together by happening in the same universe. If you want a proper review of either you should go to the individual novels and find them there, although I will briefly review both.

I just checked my list and including these two I've read over 30 novels by Cherryh, which should tell you something about what I think of her authorship. The Alliance-Union universe where these two novels are set is neck and neck with the Foreigner universe when it comes to which one is my favorite. Wait, is the second possibly a subset of the first? (Checks wikipedia!) Phew! It is not. But the first is the setting of a number of more or less unrelated series, some of which are pretty great, and the latter is the setting for a long single series, which, as far as I am …

Matt Parker: Humble Pi (2021, Riverhead Books)

Review of 'Humble Pi' on 'Goodreads'

I liked it. It's somewhat unnerving to have Matt's voice in my head while reading, but I guess that's just the price I pay for having watched most of his YouTube videos.

Maurice Leblanc: The Extraordinary Adventures of Arsene Lupin, Gentleman-Burglar (EBook, 2014, Duke Classics)

Arsene Lupin is one of the most unforgettable characters to emerge from the early heyday …

Review of 'The Extraordinary Adventures of Arsene Lupin, Gentleman-Burglar' on 'Goodreads'

Got this from the Gutenberg project after watching the TV-show on Netflix. (The TV-show is not about Arsène Lupin, but a modern day thief inspired by him.) I enjoyed it, but it is a bit dated, and although the individual stories are entertaining they lack a thread connecting them and Lupin is never given more than the "perfect thief" dimension. The attempts at fleshing out the character only highlight how much of a cardboard cutout he is.

reviewed The City We Became by N. K. Jemisin (The Great Cities Duology, #1)

N. K. Jemisin: The City We Became (Hardcover, 2020, Orbit)

In Manhattan, a young grad student gets off the train and realizes he doesn't remember …

Review of 'The City We Became' on 'Goodreads'

I was I was more in the habit of recording my progress, because I think it took me almost all of this month to get through the first 50% of this book, then the next 20% took a couple of days and I read the rest today.
Now pandemic fatigue is probably partially to blame for this, I've been reading slow all year, but I think there's a pattern in my reading of Jemisin's book where it takes me a long time to get into them, and longer and longer with each book. I keep going because I trust the author, not because the book pulls me in.
Because once they pull me in they are magnificent, and this one is no different. It is an amazing, innovative, unusual book that works on many levels and works well. The only level I can't tell if works or not is in …

Margaret Cavendish: The description of a new world, called the blazing world and other writings (1992, W. Pickering)

Review of 'The description of a new world, called the blazing world and other writings' on 'Goodreads'

If you want to read something unusual and old, this might be for you. But the odds are somewhat slim. This is a very peculiar book. The story aspect is very, very slim, and a lot of it is philosophical musings presented in the form of dialog with little effort made to make it anything other than an obvious way of presenting the author's thoughts "indirectly" and some of the musings may seem quite daft unless you remember that it was written before phlogiston theory and spontaneous generation was disproved.

It eventually becomes very meta when the author herself joins as a central character and is given advice on the benefits of creating entire worlds in your mind, and it contains an embarrassing amount of flattery of the British royals and the author's husband, but I still enjoyed the experience of engaging with proto-fantasy, proto-scifi written by a British noble …

reviewed The Quantum Magician by Derek Künsken (The Quantum Evolution, #1)

Derek Künsken: The Quantum Magician (Paperback, 2018, Solaris)

Belisarius is a quantum man, an engineered Homo quantus who fled the powerful insight of …

Review of 'The Quantum Magician' on 'Goodreads'

I eventually enjoyed some of the world building and the philosophical stuff a lot, but found the story uncompelling and thought there was a little too little exposition for such a complex setting.

Review of 'Rogue' on 'Goodreads'

I enjoyed this book from the very beginning, but even so it got better along the way. The complexity of the setup surprised me, for whatever reason, and I really enjoyed the world building DeGroof did in the first half of the book. For me personally it fell just a little flat at the end, but that is just because I'm a middle aged SF veteran who has some pet peeves and DeGroof can't really be blamed from using a perfectly normal SF-idea just because I personally have grown to hate it.

I've only read one of his short story collections, and have kept thinking I should read more of them, but having enjoyed this novel will hopefully inspire me to go back and actually do so.

reviewed Harrow the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir (The Locked Tomb Trilogy)

Tamsyn Muir: Harrow the Ninth (Hardcover, 2020, Tor.com)

"She answered the Emperor's call.

She arrived with her arts, her wits, and her …

Review of 'Harrow the Ninth' on 'Goodreads'

Tamsyn Muir writes with a vocabulary suitable for a science-fantasy necromancy novel. I have to look up obscure adjectives all the time, and some times the dictionary claims they don't exist. I still get the point. This makes it all the much more delightful when the characters intersperse the dark art with a surprise "that's what she said" from time to time, and there are a couple of hard core dad jokes in this book that really landed.

I can't wait to see what happens in the next book which is ... not out until forever! Noooo!

By forever I mean it's out next year. :P