FrancesScott
Not a virgin
- Joined
- May 15, 2025
- Posts
- 352
For me it’s The God of the Woods by Liz Moore. Lots of familiar women - young and older - with many variations on lots of familar characteristics, even in the flashback sections.
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Loved it!The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley
Not read that series by Atkinson yet, but if you like his work and are interested in the subject, I highly recommend his "Liberation Trilogy," about the US Army in the ETO during WWII. First book is "An Army at Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942-1943."Money by Martin Amis. I've never read any of his novels before. I'm only about 70 pages in, so I'm reserving judgment for now.
My current nonfiction read is Rick Atkinson's The Fate of the Day, the second volume of his history of the American Revolutionary War.
That one took my breath away. Just reading the section beginning "It was a silence of three parts" I fell completely in love. The second book dragged in parts. I've given up hope of ever seeing the series completed. PR is in the same group as GRRM and Scott Lynch.Been rereading "The Name of the Wind" by Patrick Rothfuss. Wish he'd just finish the trilogy instead of rewriting existing stories.
I keep intending to read "The slow regard of silent things" but I worry it will just anger me.That one took my breath away. Just reading the section beginning "It was a silence of three parts" I fell completely in love. The second book dragged in parts. I've given up hope of ever seeing the series completed. PR is in the same group as GRRM and Scott Lynch.
At least they make me feel better about not working on some of my series here.
Me too. Although I enjoyed the two short stories he did ("The Lightning Tree", which is about Bast, and "How Old Holly Came To Be").I keep intending to read "The slow regard of silent things" but I worry it will just anger me.
I enjoyed her first trilogy, then became frustrated with the wilful stupidity and/or whininess of her characters. The Fool in particular drove me away.I go back to Robin Hobb when I need my fix of "Massively blind protagonist who needs a slap upside the head"
The fool comes full-circle in the Tawny Man trilogy. If you haven't, you should, if only for the closure for Fitz.Me too. Although I enjoyed the two short stories he did ("The Lightning Tree", which is about Bast, and "How Old Holly Came To Be").
I enjoyed her first trilogy, then became frustrated with the wilful stupidity and/or whininess of her characters. The Fool in particular drove me away.
Those three aren't the same, though.That one took my breath away. Just reading the section beginning "It was a silence of three parts" I fell completely in love. The second book dragged in parts. I've given up hope of ever seeing the series completed. PR is in the same group as GRRM and Scott Lynch.
At least they make me feel better about not working on some of my series here.
Love Murderbot. I'm curious what you think its gender skews as? It's a genderless construct, but everyone seems to have a different opinion about it. My feeling is that it skewed very slightly feminine.Fiction: re-reading Martha Wells' Murderbot Diaries series, currently on #3 (Rogue Protocol)
Non-fiction: Devon Price's Unmasking Autism.