Reading When Moon Hits the Eye by John Scalzi.
I am still in the start, but the premise is hilarious. Looking forward to how everything unfolds.
What about all of you, what have you been reading or listening to lately?
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The Lone Wanderer,
It’s a litrpg with an extremely fleshed out world and magic system.
https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/95097/b5-stubbing-july-21st-the-lone-wanderer-a-world-hopping
There’s a link to it’s royal road.
Blurb:
"An accidental clone. Talent no one saw coming. Infinite worlds to explore.
Percy was born with little hope of standing out-just another face in a world ruled by bloodlines and class.
Starting with the lowest Red core and mocked as a waste, Percy was always overlooked by his peers and scorned by the powerful. But when his bloodline awakens with the power to send clones across worlds, he seizes the chance to shatter expectations.
Exploring strange realms teeming with danger, Percy returns with priceless treasures: divine techniques, obscure knowledge, and even the seed of a second mana core stolen from an advanced civilization. But the road to the apex is riddled with peril. The elixirs he needs to advance? He’ll have to master alchemy to brew them himself. The Great Houses, scheming titans, and invading gods?
They’ll do anything to crush him before he can prove that even a so-called waste can reach the stars.
What to expect:
-Weak to strong male MC
-Daily releases
-Fast paced with frequent powerups
-Fantasy setting with magic and a system
-Isekai elements (Percy often possesses random bodies on distant worlds)
-Western cultivation elements (Cleansing mana core to extend lifespan)
-Morally grey MC (Willing to break a few rules but not a scumbag)
-Alchemy
-Runecrafting"
Been cackling while reading David Mitchell’s “Unruly” recently. Recommend to anyone who gets a kick out of irreverent history.
Just started The Body in the Backyard by Mark Waddell. Queer cost mystery. Pretty good so far
kinda fell into one hell of a slump. I’m still reading The Astral Library by Kate Quinn. It’s taken me about a month at this point. But going to finish it today hopefully.
edit: i finished my book and bought a new one. Now I am reading this
I really enjoyed When Moon Hits the Eye! Very silly and entertaining overall
Just finish Piranesi by Susanna Clarke, and I’m about a third of the way through James by Percival Everett.
Both are so good!
I really enjoyed James, and when I talked about it with my friends who also read, they said it was the weakest Percival Everett book. It just made me more excited to read some of his other stuff.
Currently reading the Red Rising saga, I’m at book 5, titled “Dark Ages”.
Highly recommended.
I have a young family friend that wants to read those. obviously you like them enough to read to book five, but do you think the content is appropriate for a younger reader?
I’m the wrong person to ask regarding age appropriate content. My father deemed it appropriate to let me hack people with a chainsaw in Grand Theft Auto Vice City at age 4 and so I’ve never been limited in the media I consume.
The first book is considered YA though, from the second book onwards it’s getting a more series tone. There is violence, mentions of drugs here and there, power struggles, politics, mentions of rape and more wicked stuff.
I hope this will be enough information to make a decision.
I am a poor judge of this as well, but that was very helpful!
Audio book: the new dungeon crawler Carl book
Paper book: on my 3rd attempt of House of Leaves. This is not an adhd friendly book
Finished the 4th book of the Children Of Time series, but I think I will have to relisten to it at don’t point. My mind wandered too much in some parts
House of Leaves, I gave it a go back when I was 17, and there’s parts that are gripping, but most is … I dunno, maybe felt like he was trying way too hard. But it certainly is quite the story and quite the book, physically. Do you have a physical copy or ereader? I’m curious to see how it’s presented in a digital format.
A hardcover physical version
Can’t imagine a digital version working too well, as the page layout is so important to the book
Ray Nayler - palaces of the crow, good so far, haven’t found a book by him that wadntat least good. Recommend " the mountain in the sea" also
I’m now reading Rebecca. It is good. Well-written, interesting story.
On the one hand I totally understand the main character’s feelings and actions, but on the other I sometimes want to scream at her to do something, anything other than what she is doing. This is a good lesson for myself…
Just finished Light Bringer (Red Rising Book 6) by Pierce Brown.
I think next it’ll be We Burned So Bright by TJ Klune as a short read and then maybe A Closed and Common Orbit by Becky Chambers.
Still working on The Invincible by Stanislaw Lem. Finally getting into the meat of it! The author is good at getting across the dusty feel of the planet without spending paragraphs on it; I feel like that’s an underappreciated skill.
Huh, I haven’t read that one yet and I’m a huge Lem fan.
Have you read Eden? That’s always been my favorite. It explores the question of how alien aliens would really be if we encountered them. Something that most sci-fi conveniently either glosses over completely or uses earth-like comparisons like reptiloid, etc.
Also the automated factory that produces nothing… 😚👌
I have not! This is my first Lem. I’ll take a look at it; thanks for the rec!
I was in the middle of the night circus, but because I’m also reading Mattiemo my library borrow lapsed and I have to reserve it again.
There Is No Antimemetics Division by qntm, as an audiobook. Highly recommended, in any format you like.
Just finished that myself. Great book.
I’m absolutely entranced by Robin Hobb. After reading the Farseer trilogy I just started the Liveship Traders trilogy and I’m already fully committed.
In between I tried one of her works as Megan Lindholm: Wizard of the Pigeons. A dive into the mind of a homeless person in Seattle. Somehow it’s categorized as “urban fantasy” but I don’t see it in the fantasy genre at all. Unless you’d count Kafka as fantasy. Not the best comparison but the only one I can think of right now.
You’re so lucky. Liveship Traders is a real adjustment from the Fitz books. Enjoy them, great stories ahead.
Thanks.
Thing is I’d never even heard of that author until someone mentioned her in one of these posts here. I wonder how many more gems in ugly last century fantasy covers there are…







