Eve - 200 million years of evolution using a female perspective
Actually finished feeling happy to be born female which working in a male dominated industry (engineering) and enjoying male dominated hobbies (skiing, climbing, backpacking) often leaves me only surrounded by guys and feeling 'wrong' to not be able to match their ways of doing things instead of able to focus on my unique abilities.
In the middle of The Way of Kings in anticipation of reading book 5.
It's not just gender - introvert vs. extrovert, biology vs. computer, science vs. project management, anyone can be excluded without effort to create a welcoming atmosphere. At least you are able to keep up in their area
(that notably many men themselves couldn't do), which already speaks highly to your capabilities and temperament!:-)
Yeah! Sometimes you just need a brain-off good time.
I'm a bit surprised by Twilight - it has a couple of moments that are surprisingly gut-punching, like "The familiar smell of my shampoo made me feel like I might be the same person I had been this morning." That hit me hard.
I halfway wanna joke and say like "I'm sorry to hear that", but you're so right: the different types of stories each serve their own roles - not every book needs to be a brain-twister or expander, sometimes we just need to veg out and relax a minute and a great book can get us there!:-D
Another collection of short stories and the label is correct, these are darker than normal King fare, very much reminded me of Bachman books. And a character from Cujo makes an appearance that's just great. 5/5 good shit
Good: political and technological world building, factions that are flawed but easy to root for, compelling action sequences.
Bad: eye-rolling 90s neocon chicken-hawk posturing, Mary Sue vibes from Honor herself, some very clumsy historical parallels, well beyond what “Horatio Hornblower in space” strictly needs, and I think Weber was maybe literally in love with her.
I never really was able to get into the honorverse much; but the march upcountry series, by the same two authors who wrote some of the honorverse, I liked a lot.
Upcountry was some of the best military science fiction I ever read. And here, for some reason, they struck the right balance for me, cancelling out both their negative ( for me) traits .
It starts with a total loser of a prince and over time he finds his stride to be more of an Alexander the Great character.
The battles range from medieval weapons to space battles with real time communication constraints, in the four books
I haven’t read an actual book in ages. If reading fanfiction counts, the most recent one I’ve read is “Shrouded Destiny” by GladiusX, set in the universe of A Song of Ice and Fire.
It’s currently updating, and has been updating once per week for over a year. The narrative has nearly reached its conclusion.
I don’t necessarily agree with all the plot choices the author has made, but it is overall very well written, with far more realistic consequences and less plot armor compared to canon.
I just finished The Spine of the World, reading the next one, Sea of Swords now. I decided to finally read all the DnD books last January so I’ve been working my way through them. I read hella fast, a trilogy a week is pretty normal, so having such a ridiculous amount of books to get through is awesome for me.
I took a break over the summer and read all the Vlad Taltos books by Stephen Brust, holy Dinah that series is so good!! I think when I need another break from DnD I’ll read that series recommendation below, This Quest is Broken. Another series I quite liked was NPC’s by Drew Hays, the audiobooks are really well done.
And hitchhikers guide is one of my favourites, glad you enjoyed it!
I liked all four books, I think the first book is best, as normal for such series.
The Questing Stones have come to Nowherested, and Evelia Greene is finally ready to receive her life's quest. Perhaps she'll be a great warrior, or a wealthy merchant, or a brilliant mage. Perhaps her quest is simply to live a quiet life, constantly honing a craft to the heights of perfection.
Or perhaps the Questing Stones will grant her the Legendary mission of popping over to the next village to pick up a loaf of bread.
Fucking Hyperion. First book I've read where I didn't like a fucking character. Damn that book pissed me off. First book I would not suggest. Anyone else dislike Hyperion?
I remember liking it, but I read it long ago so don't remember a ton of it. I might've liked it because it's Literature and you're obligated to like it.
I like the Shrike a lot, does that count as a character? I always imagined it as something cooler than depicted in a lot of art though, like something completely unreal, with angles and points that look like glitches in reality, like your GPU is trying to render something while its melting.
I was a prolific reader up to high school, then fell off a bit due to a combination of being busy with other things and not realizing my eyesight was going downhill in my early 20s.
I did reread Lord of the Flies a few years ago and it was even better than I rememebered. Helped that it was so short that constantly being interrupted didn't keep me from losing interest like a couple of the other books I tried around the same time.
We've all been there: reading uses a particular part of your brain and if you've already had to read another book for school, it's most often too exhausting to continue reading for pleasure as well. But don't worry, you won't forget your love for reading - even though you have to set it aside for a bit to focus your attentions elsewhere:-).
The audiobooks for HHGttG are quite good if that's your sort of thing. Stephen Fry does a great job on the first one. I didn't quite like the voices in the other ones, but they were still overall well done.
In the middle of reading Tress of the Emerald Sea, by Brandon Sanderson. I haven't read any of his stuff other than his completion of the Wheel of Time series. I saw that Tress is a good standalone book in the series so I figured I'd try that out. It's good so far, but seems rather YA compared to what I assume the rest of the series is like.
I haven't read his YA but I'm in the middle of Stormlight 5, and yeah it's not YA. His adult books are generally the sort that you'd be comfortable giving a teenager but they deal with heavy stuff like class conflicts, cycles of racial violence, and ethical questions.
If you're interested in a stand alone of his adult books I'd recommend Elantris or Warbreaker, though both will get sequels later, neither was written knowing that.
"Schizoid Phenomena, Object Relations and the Self" by Harry Guntrip.
I've been reading all the Dune novels in publication order. The Guntrip book was an interlude in the middle of "Paul of Dune" which is my... 15th Dune book? I've lost count. Lol. But anyway, I'm back to reading that now.
After that, I'll probably start "Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will" by Robert Sapolsky.
That's the ones. I had a friend who was a Dune superfan who convinced me to continue after I'd finished Frank's books. He expressed to me that he liked the Brian Herbert better and wished they'd started the recent Dune movies with Legends of Dune, the Dune trilogy by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson that's set earliest in the franchise.
(To be fair, it's ridiculously unrealistic to wish for that. And it'd only really be "better" than starting with Frank's book if they adapted basically... 11 to 14 novels worth to finish off the whole saga.)
Now, I'm not going to say I like Brian Herbert's better. Nor that there aren't things that I don't dislike about the Brian Herbert books. But there's a lot to love as well.
I'll talk about some of that in spoiler tags, but even in the spoiler tags, I won't give everything away.
Things I dislike about the Brian Herbert books:
spoiler
The whole "superhuman" thing (Bene Gesserit and various Kwizatz Haderach's) kinda wasn't a thing in any of the prequels until very near the end.
They definitely diverged from Frank's vision for the franchise in certain ways. Largely to tie the prequels (that were set before Frank's first book) to the sequels (that were set after Frank's last)).
Some of the books that come in between Frank's books drag a bit.
Things I like:
spoiler
I was afraid talking explicitly about the happenings during the Butlerian Jihad, the Brian Herbert books would ruin the mystery, but I've been really happy with how he pulled that off.
The way the sequels dealt with the long future of how Ghola technology would be used was great, I think.
The Brian books did introduce some of the best characters in the franchise.
Yes! I've read Behave and Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers already and both were amazingly informative. The premise of Determined holds particular interest for me, so I'm expecting even greater things from this one.