Reviews and Comments

Martin Locked account

grid@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years ago

Avid reader of science fiction and fantasy. Lover of big ideas, poetry & wordplay, games.

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Kurt Vonnegut, Ryan North, Albert Monteys: Slaughterhouse-Five (2020, Boom! Studios)

A graphic novel adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's classic anti-war science fiction novel, scripted by Ryan …

I discovered this book existed at a moment laden with coincidence. I was in a comic book store in Berlin — my first time there. The store had only a small selection of graphic novels in English. But the proprietor was very kind and I was there on Halloween long enough to witness him giving comic books to all the trick-or-treaters. He didn’t bat an eyelash at the one child who left the store complaining to their parent “But I don’t even LIKE comic books!” I also heard a young boy ask him something in German (which I didn’t understand) to which he laughingly replied something like “you can try it” and the boy promptly put a corner of the comic book in his mouth. Anyway, I wanted to support his store, and I am a fan of Ryan North, and Kurt Vonnegut, of course, so I supposed I would …

finished reading Queen Demon by Martha Wells (The Rising World, #2)

Martha Wells: Queen Demon (Hardcover, 2025, Tor Books)

From the breakout SFF superstar author of Murderbot comes the remarkable sequel to the USA …

I enjoyed this book probably more than the fist one in the series. It had the same multiple-stories-with-the-same-characters-but-at-different-times gimmick going on, but it was somehow less distracting this time around. Also, I think I was able to keep all the characters straight this time, more so than Demon King anyway. I still think there were too many characters, and too much effort trying to make an "epic" story. I really praise the Raksura books for the world building, but this one just feels weird and somehow lopsided to me. If Wells actually knows all the details of the different factions / races, she's doing a really good job keeping them close to her chest. Big mysteries to the reader are treated as facts everyone knows by the characters, and things we know as readers are often treated as secrets from everyone but the main character, Kai. When put this way, …

William Alexander: Sunward (Paperback, Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers)

Captain Tova Lir chose a life as a courier rather than get involved in her …

I read this in a single day, but it was a day when I was taking a long plane ride, so I actually had about seven more hours in that day than usual. Very much enjoyed this space-faring adventure with themes of parenthood and virtual personhood. Would recommend!

commented on Chess Story by Stefan Zweig (New York Review Books Classics)

Stefan Zweig: Chess Story (2005, New York Review Books)

Chess Story, also known as The Royal Game, is the Austrian master Stefan Zweig's final …

There are a fair number of interesting chess quotes in the book. Many of the characters are obsessed with the game in different ways. I really loved it, because I am also obsessed.

Naomi Novik: The Summer War (Hardcover, 2025, Random House Worlds)

Celia discovered her talent for magic on the day her beloved oldest brother, Argent, left …

I loved this beautiful and lovely story. Like a fairy tale, really, though not written in the style of one. I got sucked in from the first few pages, and read the whole thing in a couple of sittings on the same day.

Neal Stephenson: Fall; or, Dodge in Hell (2019, William Morrow)

Content warning spoiler for the premise, nothing specific about plot or characters

commented on The Shattering Peace by John Scalzi (duplicate) (Old Man’s War, #7)

John Scalzi (duplicate): The Shattering Peace (Hardcover, 2025, Tor Books)

Content warning vague spoilers about the ending