Third Perpetual Book Thread

zakman

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258
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Finally got back to reading fiction after a long hiatus (during which I got partway through Abundance by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson, not sure if I'll go back to that or not at some point). I picked up Behind the Veil, the third book in John Ringo and Lydia Sherrer's TransDimensional Hunter series about professional gamers fighting virtual monsters in an augmented reality game. The group it follows are still students in high school so there is some social and real-life obligations they have to deal with. Still enjoying the series and trying to allay my worry that John Ringo will abandon another book series I'm reading with the fact that there is a coauthor who seems to be really involved in the series, though I'm not sure how they divide up the writing on it. My other fear is that they will eventually screw up explaining what is going on with the TDMs in the game and the real-world events/plot that they are actually real. Really not sure how they are going to explain why the weapons/armor/stats in the game translate to fighting a real-world enemy. But even if they screw up either of those, I think the ride has been worth it for me - been enjoying the characters and action and the different perspective of having a female main character as an upcoming elite gamer, even if no one knows she was already elite in other online games as she played under the fictitious identity Larry "the Snake" Coughlin to get around the perception of her gender and age. Still waiting to see what happens when that fact gets revealed.
Obligatory OH JOHN RINGO NO.
 

dzid

Ars Centurion
3,373
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Measuring the World

Written by Daniel Kehlmann (Translated by Carol Brown Janeway)

I really enjoyed this historical fiction that follows the life and exploits of Alexander von Humboldt and Carl Friedrich Gauss (the botanist Bonpland doesn't even get a mention in the reviews, and he's one of my favorite characters).

With its lively translation, Daniel Kehlmann’s Measuring the World tells the parallel stories of two scientists who were child prodigies, Alexander von Humboldt and Carl Friedrich Gauss. In the early 19th century, the business of measuring, naming and categorizing the known world was in full swing.
 

zero cool

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I have inhaled the second book of Assassin’s Anonymous, The Medusa Protocol. It’s been a pretty enjoyable ride so far. Got about a third of it left, pretty good chance I’ll finish it tomorrow. Excellent popcorn fiction.
Thanks for this recommendation, these were quite fun.
 
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dzid

Ars Centurion
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This article on phys.org about the precipitous decline in reading in the U.S. has to be one of the most depressing things I've come across in some time:

A sweeping new study from the University of Florida and University College London has found that daily reading for pleasure in the United States has declined by more than 40% over the last 20 years.
 

ChaoticUnreal

Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius
7,904
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My first foray into LitRPG was Dungeon Crawler Carl. I figured, according to the reviews, that was the cream of the crop. I enjoyed that series (I've read all the released books so far) pretty well, so I figured I'd dip my toes in a little more. Without knowing anything about any of the authors, I just checked out some reviews (mostly, Amazon's Kindle pages for the products) and found the series "The Good Guys" by Eric Ugland. Mostly, I was looking for a series that had a few books in it already and had good ratings and this series had 15 books in it so far with lots of 4+ reviews. So, I decided, what the heck. Turns out, I liked this series quite a bit... actually probably a little more than DCC, mostly because it has fewer of where the author seems to think: "let me figure out something to write that I think will be funny" moments in it. There's humor and a few times (like half a dozen that I can think of) they were of the "let's do/say something funny here" moments but most of the humor "fits better" in the books, to me (rather than being forced like I felt a lot in DCC). The books are fairly short novels. I can usually finish each one in about four hours or so of reading on my Kindle... so like two books per week given my weekly reading time. I read this series and enjoyed it enough to try out another series of his called "The Bad Guys".

It turns out, "The Bad Guys" is set in the same world at the same time as the other series but with a different set of characters. I don't want to give any spoilers away but I liked how this one turned out, too. This series is only 11 books and each book is about the same length as the other series. I finished that up and found that there's a 16th book in "The Good Guys" so I'm reading that now.

The author has started, I think, two other series (with like one or two books each so far) but I don't know if they're in the same world or whatever as "The Good Guys" and "The Bad Guys". I'm planning to read those when I finish the 16th book in TGG.
I love DCC but I feel it leaves the LitRPG genre behind after the first like 3 books. The skeleton is still there but it is barely touched on.
 

Thegn

Ars Legatus Legionis
14,185
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Realized Shroud wasn't Alien Clay (I thought I'd already read it because the description was close enough that I got them confused) and finally got it at the library. Yet another Tchaikovsky first contact novel, which implies contempt, but I love the fuck out of his stories and ate it up. I think I've read everything of his that interests me, but really need to sit down and go over his bibliography with a fine toothed comb and make sure. My current favorite living author...
 
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Diabolical

Senator
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I forgot to update the thread - I read Accomplice to the Villain, by Hannah Nicol Maehrer (bookshop.org). Book three of the tale of Evie Sage and the man she works for, The Villain. It was, as is par for the course for the series, quite silly. I enjoyed it quite a bit - we get more development of some side characters, some romantic payoffs (well, nearly) and a plot twist you could see coming from WAAAAY the hell over there and I'm honestly shocked didn't have someone playing dramatic piano notes in the text while it was happening.

Liked it, can't wait for the next one.

Up next? Warehouse, by Rob Hart (bookshop.org), about a) a dystopian future where an Amazon-like controls everything, b) a guy who has decided working for faux-Amazon is bad but it's better than what is going on out there, and c) a corporate spy. I really like the Assassins Anonymous books, so I'm hoping for good stuff here.
 
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necklessone

Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius
8,880
Finished The Tainted Cup and A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennet over the past week or so. I don’t read a lot of mystery, but the fantasy setting is neat and the characters have been fun.

Followed it up by rereading Stephen King’s The Long Walk ahead of the movie. It’s always been a favorite and the movie is getting decent reviews - might actually catch it in a theater.
 
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Oddabe19

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6,867
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Up next? Warehouse, by Rob Hart (bookshop.org), about a) a dystopian future where an Amazon-like controls everything, b) a guy who has decided working for faux-Amazon is bad but it's better than what is going on out there, and c) a corporate spy. I really like the Assassins Anonymous books, so I'm hoping for good stuff here.
Started it, didn't get that into it, but realized I had Recursion by Blake Crouch due back to the library sooner so read that and never got back to The Warehouse. Recursion was very good, by the way.

Picked up Green Mars (Kim Stanley Robinson) the other day, but haven't started it yet, hoping to finish Green and Blue this year and finish it out. I liked Red Mars a lot, but wished it had a little more of some characters, so I'm hoping to get that out of Green Mars.
 

Diabolical

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Started it, didn't get that into it, but realized I had Recursion by Blake Crouch due back to the library sooner so read that and never got back to The Warehouse. Recursion was very good, by the way.

After reading Dark Matter? I found myself severely disappointed by Crouch’s writing. Haven’t picked up anything else by him since. I know I’m in the minority here, and that’s okay. Y’all have fun with his stuff.
 

Oddabe19

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I did like Dark Matter when I read it, though, not a ton (I have it 3/5 on my Excel sheet), but I liked Recursion much more, a 3.5 on that sheet. Looking back, Dark matter, wasn't all that great.

I would give Recursion a try, it does break the brain a bit. But yeah, if you're not into his stuff, it probably won't redeem your thoughts on his writing. They're the only two books I've read of his. Like Dark Matter, ending is very predictable once you get an idea of what's going on, about 2/3rds though the book.
 

Jeff J

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Picked up Green Mars (Kim Stanley Robinson) the other day, but haven't started it yet, hoping to finish Green and Blue this year and finish it out. I liked Red Mars a lot, but wished it had a little more of some characters, so I'm hoping to get that out of Green Mars.
It took me a week to read Red Mars, four years to read Blue Mars, and six months to read Blue Mars. YMMV.
 
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Quarthinos

Ars Praefectus
3,011
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Ran out of new books in Audible for now, so I'm rereading the Culture novels. Consider Phoebus is being a bit of a slog, but I dimly remember that the real bad bit is done now. And it looks like Audible has finally decided to pay someone to read the rest of the books into a microphone, so hopefully by the time I'm done with the ones I have, there will be new ones!?
 
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zakael19

Ars Legatus Legionis
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Picked up Green Mars (Kim Stanley Robinson) the other day, but haven't started it yet, hoping to finish Green and Blue this year and finish it out. I liked Red Mars a lot, but wished it had a little more of some characters, so I'm hoping to get that out of Green Mars.

Wow, I think I read the first two of those when I was an early teen. It's been a minute.
 

zakman

Ars Centurion
258
Subscriptor
Just finished Stone and Sky, the latest in the Rivers of London series. A good story as always, but I did have to stop a chapter or so in and go read one of the inter-book novellas just to get some background on a few of the supporting characters. That's the one slightly annoying thing about the series, there are so many stories outside of the "main" books that it's hard to know if the passing reference in the novel is something from a previous novel that I just forgot, or something from one of the side stories that I haven't read yet.
 

dredphul

Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius
6,219
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Been mostly reading LitRPG of varying quality.

Some of the longer running series are starting to go off. With no realistic limit on length of the book, some authors are just writing 1000+ slogs that aren't as enjoyable as earlier entries in their series. Lack of physical limitations and not paying for an editor leads to worsening reading experiences.

In better news, I picked up "The Grief of Stones" (sequel to "Tomb of Dragpms") and a novel/short-story "The Orb of Caraido" by Katherine Addison. These are additional entries set in her Goblin Emperor wold. There's another book that's a direct sequel to "Grief of Stones", but I'm not trying not to buy too many books at once (I also bought into the Martha Wells collection just to have all the books).
 
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zakael19

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In better news, I picked up "The Grief of Stones" (sequel to "Tomb of Dragpms") and a novel/short-story "The Orb of Caraido" by Katherine Addison. These are additional entries set in her Goblin Emperor wold. There's another book that's a direct sequel to "Grief of Stones", but I'm not trying not to buy too many books at once (I also bought into the Martha Wells collection just to have all the books).

Two authors I wish I could read for the first time again.
 

dzid

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3,373
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Ran out of new books in Audible for now, so I'm rereading the Culture novels. Consider Phoebus is being a bit of a slog, but I dimly remember that the real bad bit is done now. And it looks like Audible has finally decided to pay someone to read the rest of the books into a microphone, so hopefully by the time I'm done with the ones I have, there will be new ones!?
I sort of liked Hydrogen Sonata. But I haven't read them all, by any means. The dialog among the ship computers was entertaining.
 

Oddabe19

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Wow, I think I read the first two of those when I was an early teen. It's been a minute.
There's a story to that. As a kid in the late 80's and 90's, I loved to read. However, since we lived far from the library and didn't have much money, I only really read what I could get a hold of. Encyclopedias; classics; yard sale books; compilation books; books from school library, etc... That, and if we went to the library, I was too overwhelmed by the selection. I grew out of it because of English classes in high school made reading miserable for me.

25+ years later, Just after COVID, the Mrs. (who loves to read, and blasts through about a book every other day) and I went on a camping trip and I went to the library and took out The Mote in God's Eye for the trip and I re-realized how much I liked to read after that. So I've been picking up anything I can, older, newer, etc... Specifically, hard(er) sci-fi, stuff I can easily visualize, but I have been expanding out recently (i.e. Murderbot; Wayfarers; etc...). Not too many newer things, because I've never read a lot of the excellent stuff from pre-2k, if they weren't considered a classic.

Anyway, Red Mars was one of the first few I read after getting back into it, and I loved it, but I've been so excited reading other stuff, I'm just now getting to Green Mars, but that's only because I happened to see it on the shelf at the library when I walked through grabbing a book recommended to me in the ADHD thread. I knew it was on my Excel sheet, so I thought "Why not".
Use of Weapons, tells it's story in a quite unique way.

I think the only book of The Culture series I haven't read is, Excession. Seems like it's out of print, or I just couldn't find it anywhere.
Use of Weapons is the next one I want to read, of the ones in the Culture series, it's the one I can't seem to get a hold of in the county library system. Since I live in a such a heavy pacifist, Anabaptist, Mennonite, area, I suspect no one has bought it and then donate due to the title alone.

I might have to rectify that for the County Library system.
 
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abj

Ars Legatus Legionis
18,357
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Use of Weapons, tells it's story in a quite unique way.

I think the only book of The Culture series I haven't read is, Excession. Seems like it's out of print, or I just couldn't find it anywhere.
I wouldn't recommend Excession as an audiobook. There are lots of time stamped conversations between the minds that get pretty tedious being read out loud.
 
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Auguste_Fivaz

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5,960
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Economics in America
An Immigrant Economist Explores the Land of Inequality
Deaton, Angus

Deaton is a professor of economics at Princeton, Nobel laureate and co-author of Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism. The book is a tour of economics from his viewpoint, he takes apart the discipline and those that practice it, explains its history and tries to inform us of the impact of economics on public policy - which he thinks in minimal and is Ok with that. He is not a fan of American health-care.
He's a good writer and makes a dry subject enjoyable. There were a few chapters that I skipped due to reasons.
Check it out, from our local library.

1757452389857.png
 

NervousEnergy

Ars Legatus Legionis
11,566
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Use of Weapons, tells it's story in a quite unique way.

I think the only book of The Culture series I haven't read is, Excession. Seems like it's out of print, or I just couldn't find it anywhere.
I had no idea there were rights issues - have to find my old copy around here. I thought Excession was the best of the Culture novels, and I enjoyed them all.
 

dzid

Ars Centurion
3,373
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Sea of Glory
America's Voyage of Discovery
The U.S. Exploring Expedition of 1838-1842

Author: Nathaniel Philbrick

Philbrick tells the story of one of America's earliest and most ambitious attempts at a voyage of exploration and scientific discovery. It follows a group of six sailing vessels commanded by Charles Wilkes, a man that after reading this book, I have very mixed feelings about. Over the course of several years, the expedition among other things named the continent of Antarctica and collected specimens of all types that eventually became the foundation of the Smithsonian Institution.
 
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zero cool

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Enjoyed the novella Automatic Noodle by Ars contributor Annalee Newitz. It’s about a group of robots inheriting a ghost kitchen in a newly-independent California with bot “human rights”. I guess you could describe it as “cozy” and I love the world building.
 
Enjoyed the novella Automatic Noodle by Ars contributor Annalee Newitz. It’s about a group of robots inheriting a ghost kitchen in a newly-independent California with bot “human rights”. I guess you could describe it as “cozy” and I love the world building.
It’s on my read next list!
 

Diabolical

Senator
29,140
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Enjoyed the novella Automatic Noodle by Ars contributor Annalee Newitz. It’s about a group of robots inheriting a ghost kitchen in a newly-independent California with bot “human rights”. I guess you could describe it as “cozy” and I love the world building.
Looks fun. Wishlisted - my local book store doesn’t have it, unfortunately.
 

Auguste_Fivaz

Ars Praefectus
5,960
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index.aspx

I'm Gone
by Jean Echenoz,

Just finished this fun read, borrowed from the library. While the blurb given doesn't really do it justice, let's just say that Echenoz is rendered into English by Mark Polizzotti with great effect, carrying an interesting plot with humor, strong characters and some good twists and turns. With an introduction by Lily Tuck.
Now for the blurb:
A sophisticated Parisian art dealer abandons his family to join a treasure hunting expedition to the Arctic, only to find himself caught up in a bizarre theft (linked to corruption in the international art market.) Winner of the 1999 Prix Goncourt.
My edit ( ) above, not sure why they wrote that.
 

dredphul

Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius
6,219
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Finished "The Orb of Cairado".

It's definitely a short read, a novelette.

The plot felt familiar, like the author took the bones of a story I've read before and then wrapped it in the flavor of the Goblin Emperor world.

It was a pleasant read though. I enjoyed it and wouldn't mind other books with the main character.
 
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