Posted in Booktalk, reading list

Reading List: January 2021

The year is dead, long live the year.

  • Emergency Skin by N.K. Jemisin (novella)
  • Thud! by Terry Pratchett (maybe? Might have been end of 2020)
  • Snuff by Terry Pratchett
  • Raising Steam by Terry Pratchett
  • A Killing Frost by Seanan McGuire
  • Jingo by Terry Pratchett
  • Network Effect by Martha Wells
  • Artificial Condition by Martha Wells
  • Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
  • Across the Green Grass Fields by Seanan McGuire
  • In the Shadow of Spindrift House by Mira Grant
  • Rolling in the Deep by Mira Grant (novella)

Not a ton to say about this month – Discworld remains a stellar set of books, especially in the mid-to-late range, and we know I like Murderbot. Emergency Skin is a fun little read, especially since it’s clearly written with certain elements of the times in mind. I read Song of Achilles for a book club and it’s outside my usual range, but was interesting nonetheless and effectively character-driven (plus in looking up familiar-sounding references I stumbled onto a clue I missed in Gideon the Ninth).

I remain, as ever, impressed with the prolific publication rate Seanan McGuire manages; of the three books of hers I finished the month with, In the Shadow of Spindrift House was easily my favorite. Teen detectives in a modern Lovecraftian setting, a skin of Scooby-Doo over the rising inevitability of the deep. It’s a good and atmospheric read, available directly from Subterranean Press if you don’t like Amazon. The other two were also good, but not as suited to me personally – I read Into the Drowning Deep, the sequel, before I read Rolling in the Deep, so I already knew how that one ended and that always takes a bit of the shine off. Across the Green Grass Fields, part of the Wayward Children series, was a perfectly enjoyable read that happens through an accident of personality and publishing order to run up against impossibly high personal standards – the series has something for everyone, and the first book in the series was the one that resonated with me, so all the subsequent books are at a bit of a disadvantage in my eyes, fun as they are in their own rights. I’m sure other readers will have different favorites from among the series, and I look forward to the next books.

Posted in reading list

Reading List: November 2020

Pandemic hell continued, as exemplified by the continued rereading, this time of Murderbot and zombie journalism books.

  • Ruthless Gods by Emily A. Duncan
  • Spell Breaker by Charlie Holmberg
  • Three Parts Dead by Max Gladstone
  • Rogue Protocol by Martha Wells
  • Blindsight by Peter Watts
  • Feedback by Mira Grant
  • Network Effect (Murderbot 5) by Martha Wells
  • Beasts Made of Night by Tochi Onyebuchi
  • Crown of Thunder by Tochi Onyebuchi (continued into Dec)
  • All Systems Red (novella)
  • Feed by Mira Grant
  • Deadline by Mira Grant
  • Blackout by Mira Grant

Stand-outs:

Blindsight got knocked off the list not even a chapter in because I was not remotely in a mood to read something that started by talking about how its characters are bad people. I hear good things, and will revisit it some time, but… wasn’t feeling it then. Pass.

Three Parts Dead was fun! I guessed the final twist relatively early but that was on purpose – this was clearly a book where the big final reveal was left in the open as bait so the other twists and turns would catch you by surprise. Lots of interesting worldbuilding in this one, and a series I’d cheerfully read more of.

Feed remains my favorite zombie book, and I wanted to like Beasts Made of Night and Crown of Thunder but while Beasts Made of Night was interesting, Crown of Thunder got into some more meandering territory that wasn’t for me.