Reviews and Comments

bbbhltz

bbbhltz@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 8 months ago

Hard Sci-fi, Dystopia, Space, High Fantasy and Speculative Fiction are my drugs.

I like to make lists and write stuff on my blog.

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reviewed Dual Memory by Sue Burke

Sue Burke: Dual Memory (2023, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 4 stars

Sue Burke, author of the acclaimed novel Semiosis , returns with Dual Memory, a standalone …

Brilliant story, wonderful characters

4 stars

The story begins abruptly. Soon, we are drawn into a science-fiction tale with a small cast of characters and tropes. There is action, subterfuge, and even courtroom drama. Is this story a warning? Are we mice?

Brandon Sanderson: Rhythm of War (2020, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 5 stars

The Stormlight Archive saga continues in Rhythm of War, the eagerly awaited sequel to …

Romain Lucazeau: Latium (French language, 2017, Éditions Denoël) No rating

Dans un futur lointain, l’espèce humaine a succombé à l’Hécatombe. Reste, après l’extinction, un peuple …

It is immediately clear that the author is heavy into philosophy. I had to reread a few paragraphs to keep things clear in my head, but now I've caught on to what's happening. It looks like I am in for a very interesting story.

Nicole Galland: Master of the Revels (The Borough Press) 4 stars

In this brilliant sequel to The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O.—an enthralling, history-bending adventure …

Surprising suspenseful

4 stars

Hard to put down. I was deep into plot and characters. The story is absurd, but that was what I needed.

As a fan of dystopia and speculative hard sci-fi, it was great to have a lighthearted read like this. I like history, but am not a history nerd. I thought Shakespeare was fine as a student, and I am an English professor, but I am not at all a Shakespeare nerd. History and Shakespeare are two main themes here and it didn't bother me one bit to learn some interesting tidbits along the way.

Sure, I wouldn't have read the first book in the series had Neal Stephenson not been the coauthor. I admit that. I am certainly glad that the story continued on here.

Hope to read another absurd story in this series someday.

Nicole Galland: Master of the Revels (The Borough Press) 4 stars

In this brilliant sequel to The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O.—an enthralling, history-bending adventure …

Read book 1 and loved it. So far loving this one too. Having way too many ideas for DEDEs though. Like, go back just a few years and make it so nobody could ever screenshot anything. Imagine that. Like, just casually push software designers to not invent the feature, and then go back and create some sort of patent for the idea. Not for money. Just so I could create a funny name for it. And, of course, to prevent the undetermined amount of CO2 and bandwidth used so people can share private conversations with eachother.

Ted Hughes: The Iron Man (Paperback, 2005, Faber Children's Books) No rating

The Iron Man came to the top of the cliff. Where had he come from? …

Starting reading this little gem to my son. Only takes about 7 pages to knock him out.

This is not the story of the movie. I don't know how they pulled the movie (The Iron Giant) from this story. Inspired by and based on are very flexible terms.

Anyway, we are literal pages from the conclusion. Excellent little story for children. Although, if you are reading it to a child who has heard of the Marvel character, I recommend referring to the character in the book using the name from the film, because explaining that Iron Man and the The Iron Man are not the same, and then explaining that Iron Man is just a guy in a suit? Not as much fun as reading this short story.