What are you reading?
Dec. 21st, 2022 08:27 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
What are people reading? I'm currently reading _A Killing Frost_ by Seannan McGuire (an October Daye novel). Not the best, but I'm still invested in the series, and have some hope that there's more going on that minutia of Elvish law driving the plot.
Has anyone else read _The Ministry for the Future_ by Kim Stanley Robinson? How much of the solutions for climate change actually make sense?
Also two horror novels. _The Southern Book Club Guide to Slaying Vampires_ by Grady Hendrix. Do not be deceived by the title. The book starts off funny and gets terrifying. Physical, mental, and social horror. A new idea that I haven't seen before-- a vampire who gets his victims involved in bad investments to make them financially dependent on him-- in addition to the stuff about blood and madness.
_The Hollow Places_ by T. Kingfisher. Inspired by "The Willows" by Algernon Blackwood. In which a museum of oddities becomes a problem and a solution. Very scary, but to say more would be spoilers. Suffice that there's plenty of whimsy and more than sufficient fear.
I'm still reading "The Willows". Even if you don't like horror, I can recommend the beginning as excellent nature writing. The Danube is a bigger deal than I realized. There's a reason The Blue Danube waltz has so much lift and drive.
Also, I had no idea it was that feasible to die a mere century ago in flat land at moderate temperatures just by taking the wrong branch of the multiply divided Danube. If you don't like horror, bail out when things start to get disquieting.
Has anyone else read _The Ministry for the Future_ by Kim Stanley Robinson? How much of the solutions for climate change actually make sense?
Also two horror novels. _The Southern Book Club Guide to Slaying Vampires_ by Grady Hendrix. Do not be deceived by the title. The book starts off funny and gets terrifying. Physical, mental, and social horror. A new idea that I haven't seen before-- a vampire who gets his victims involved in bad investments to make them financially dependent on him-- in addition to the stuff about blood and madness.
_The Hollow Places_ by T. Kingfisher. Inspired by "The Willows" by Algernon Blackwood. In which a museum of oddities becomes a problem and a solution. Very scary, but to say more would be spoilers. Suffice that there's plenty of whimsy and more than sufficient fear.
I'm still reading "The Willows". Even if you don't like horror, I can recommend the beginning as excellent nature writing. The Danube is a bigger deal than I realized. There's a reason The Blue Danube waltz has so much lift and drive.
Also, I had no idea it was that feasible to die a mere century ago in flat land at moderate temperatures just by taking the wrong branch of the multiply divided Danube. If you don't like horror, bail out when things start to get disquieting.
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Date: 2022-12-21 02:11 pm (UTC)Did you know that the Blue Danube waltz has to do with river pollution? The Danube is an amazing river at least the bits I know around Budapest, Vienna and Bratislava.
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Date: 2022-12-21 03:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-12-21 05:17 pm (UTC)The Danube is certainly nothing like blue.
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Date: 2022-12-21 02:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-12-21 03:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-12-21 05:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-12-21 03:06 pm (UTC)Next will be A Restless Truth by Freya Marske.
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Date: 2022-12-21 10:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-12-22 07:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-12-23 08:27 am (UTC)Most recently read Sanderson's The Lost Metal, which I enjoyed even if I'm somewhat annoyed at his plotting. This one brought the story more directly up the wider Cosmere, which makes me wonder if I need to read more Sanderson Cosmere books that aren't set in Scadrial if I really want to understand what's going on.
I read The Hollow Places a while ago. It's a good whatever it is.
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Date: 2022-12-23 10:06 am (UTC)