- What book is currently on your nightstand?
- Who is the author?
- What genre?
- How do you like it?
- Would you recommend it to others?
Becky Chamber’s “Record of a Spaceborn Few.” It’s an interesting approach to a post-earth science fiction story. Each chapter jumps between different characters, which takes some getting used to after the first two books in the series would focus on the perspective of individual characters for longer stretches.
I’m not enjoying quite it as much as I did the first book in the series, “The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet” (which I thought was wonderful!), but this post is a good reminder to get back to finishing it up.
Someone suggested Models of the Mind by Grace Lindsey. Since I’m always looking for more books on what makes us tick, I added it relatively quickly and got to it at the end of last week.
I thought it was decent. It covers a variety of different ways to investigate the brain, and does go into some technical detail. It gave me a few ideas to investigate further. I personally could have done without the significant chunk that covers the biographical details of the different scientists, though. It was integrated reasonably well, but I would have rather had more depth on the various topics. It doesn’t go to the top of my books on intelligence/etc, but it was decent enough.
It mentioned Jeff Hawkins Thousand Brains (with some mention that there isn’t a lot of evidentiary basis for the structures he’s discussing in the real brain), so I grabbed that, too. I’ve read less of that one, and am taking it with a grain of salt, but i think some of his thoughts may ultimately translate to new approaches to AI down the line. I haven’t read enough to suggest it or not, yet. His other book On Intelligence is similar and not bad though.
Translation State by Anne Leckie
Definitely a recommendation. If you like Iain Banks, you need to check out Leckie. Get started with the Ancillary trilogy, though, or this one might be confusing.
I finished both Hyperion and Golden Son a couple of days ago.
I’m kind of disappointed with Hyperion… It was compelling, and the world building was incredible, but the whole book just ends without resolving anything. It was all just lead up to where some resolution should happen and it just abruptly ends. I’m going to have to read the next book just to see where the first book was supposed to go…
Golden Son is the second book to Red Rising. The first book was good, but this one was incredible!
Currently reading Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky and Morning Star by Pierce Brown.
Both are scifi - Morning Star is the 3rd book in the Red Rising series - I can’t recommend this series enough!I’m only about 20% into either of them, will report back.
Had to buy Red rising now that I read your comment, never heard about it. I recently read Hyperion as well and what made me suffer through the book was all the long ass descriptions of everything. The world is amazing and the story, but I’ll wait a while before I read the others.
Children of Time is amazing! I’ve read Children of Ruin, the second book which is equally as great and just started on the third one. If you haven’t read it, then check out Three Body Problem. I found it better than Hyperion, although very dystopian and kinda sad. Good read though. Thanks for the recommendation.
I have Three Body Problem requested on Libby - just waiting for a copy to come available to borrow. Someone recommended it and Hyperion at the same time, so I’m hoping for a better experience with that one. :D
My wife and I, but mostly her, read too much to purchase anything but our favorites. We rely heavily on our kindles and borrowing books through Libby to keep us from going broke and filling our house.
I’m also a fan of the red rising series, it’s fantastic. The final book came out today too. Need to finish the first Malazan book before I jump into it though.
Same happened to me with Hyperion, did read the second one, was not satisfied.
Children of time is very good, I have the second part in my backlog.
Currently reading The Earthsea Quarter by Ursula Le Guin, finished the first book, I like it a lot. I like how they handle magic and names.
Will check your recommended books :)
I have a special place in my heart for Ursula LeGuin - The Wizard of Earthsea was one of my favorite books as a kid. This series was sort of my first jump from goosebumps and other RL Stine novellas to young adult fantasy.
I was more than a little sad when my son didn’t enjoy it as much as me. :'(
Red Rising is such a good series. The sixth book was released yesterday, so starting on that as soon as I’m done with my current series.
But an even better series is the Children series by Tchaikovsky. Did a “tour” of his sci-fi books after Children of Time, and can recommend them all. Shards series (starting with Shards of Earth) just finished, so another good series from him there.
But a word of warning about Children of Memory (the final book in Children series):
spoiler
There is a chapter there near the end, and it is the only time, ever, that i have cried at something i’ve read.
EDIT: Sorry if anyone saw that last one before i got it in a proper spoiler. Apperantly lemmy doesn’t follow proper markdown for spoilers…
Looks like I have to add these to my list!
Currently Reading:
The Iron Heel, by Jack London
Basically one of the first major political dystopias written in the modern sense. It’s super cool too, basically the book is an old manuscript about an attempted socialist revolution, before the world was taken over by oligarchic tyrannical capitalists. There’s basically two stories being told, one in the socialist narrative itself occurring in the past, and one in the footnotes, showing glimmers of some of the capitalist horrors in the “present time”. Super neat way to tell a story, and I’m really enjoying it so far. It’s super heavy handed, and I would maybe call it similar to a socialist version of an Ayn Rand dystopia, like Anthem, but you know… Actually good. And thematically opposite to any coherent thought Ayn Rand tried to impart onto her readers.
Paved Paradise, How Parking Explains the World, by Henry Grabar
Not too far into this one, but it’s a non-fiction book about parking policy, and how parking has basically ruined American cities over the last 70 years. I’ve been really getting into city planning books lately, so we’ll see how much I like this one. Some pretty eye opening statistics so far, and the writing style seems fine.
DNF’d recently:
Walden, by Henry David Thoreau
Jesus this dude is insufferable. I read a lot of dense stuff, and have read many authors that like the sound of their own voice, but Thoreau takes the cake. Preaches self-reliance and disparages philanthropy but squats on his buddies land and lives off of gifts from friends, while doing absolutely nothing and providing no value to society. The guy just exudes a “holier than thou” attitude throughout the whole book, with absolutely nothing to back it up. I quit after 100 pages of this absolute joke contradicting himself the entire time. He would occasionally stumble upon some brilliance that I found a bit insightful, but it was few and far between, and the 98% of the rest was pure, unadulterated garbage. I really haven’t had this negative of a reaction to something I’ve read for quite some time, I generally like everything I read.
The Beekeeper of Aleppo , a 2019 novel by Christy Lefteri. It deals with the plight of refugees from Aleppo in Syria to Europe during the Syrian Civil War. While a work of fiction, it is based on the author’s experience over two summers volunteering in Athens at a refugee center.
I am reading resonance by Hartmut Rosa. I like and would recommend it. It is a sociological academic book that criticizes classic sociology and the indicators we use to be too extremely focused on the possession and use of resources. It tries to propose a scientifically measurable and quantifiable way to determine how much one is ‘resonating’ with the world around them, how much they see it as something happening to them VS something they can shape and feel a response from. I read it for my masters so maybe not for fun reading.
I’m about 70% through Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. It’s not bad, but I think I like Noemí more than I like the book itself.
I struggled a bit with that read myself. It uses a lot of classic gothic tropes and was a bit slow moving for me, (think Castle of Otranto) but my friend absolutely loved it.
Now that I’m in the last 100 pages, I’m more engaged–even if I’m mostly just rooting for Noemí to burn High Place to the ground. I definitely don’t think it’s a bad read, but I agree the first half took some determination.
To The End of June, which is a book about foster care in New York, very good read.
Our Share of Night, Mariana Enriquez. Her second book translated into English, it’s an absolute crime how much great writing we miss for lack of translation.
Real Life by Brandon Taylor, finalist for many prizes, about a queer black university student.
Currently reading Uncrowned by Will Wight.
It is the seventh book in the Cradle series, and the twelfth and final book was released not that long ago, so i figuer i’d read through the series again before reading that final one.
The series is mostly Fantasy, with some Sci-Fi mixed in. Would definitly recommend it, but beware that it is a YA series, and there are some elements that definitly shows that…
Just finished the City of Ghosts, Tunnel of Bones, and Bridge of souls trilogy from VE Schwab. They’re YA fantasy set in modern times, the protagonist being a 12-year-old girl who’s best friend is a ghost. Light and easy reading, and a nice fit for younger audiences.
I’ve been working through Schwab’s works after reading The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, which is also fantasy, but definitely for older audiences. The chapters alternate in both time and characters, and there are enough twists in the story to avoid predictability.
Well I should be finishing The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu but honestly western magical realism just isn’t doing it for me. It’s August’s small book club read so I’ll get back to it.
In the meantime I’ve been re-reading Last Exit by Max Gladstone because Ruthanna Emrys and Anne Pillsworth are starting a re-read discussion and I’m reminded that it was awesome and that I felt like there was a lot I was missing when I read it the first time, so just refreshing my memory to be able to keep up with the discussion.
Currently reading Eight Perfect Murders by Peter Swanson. I’ve taken a bit of break from it bc the last chapter I read had a twist that threw me for a loop lol