Books

duanetoops,

Understanding is observance, vigilance. The will and ability to sit, watch, listen, learn, and wait...

https://duanetoops.substack.com/p/another-word-for-change

@bookstodon

jhilden,
@jhilden@vis.social avatar

Recommendations for a good printed world atlas, with vegetation zones and the like in addition to physical and political geography? Cartographical execution should be good quality! Preferrably recent, can be fairly expensive but not looking for something insanely collectible. Languages English or Swedish.

itnewsbot,
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

How Review-Bombing Can Tank a Book Before It's Published - The website Goodreads has become an essential avenue for building readership, but ... - https://news.slashdot.org/story/23/06/29/1954252/how-review-bombing-can-tank-a-book-before-its-published?utm_source=rss1.0mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed

susanneleist,
@susanneleist@mastodon.social avatar

A man rushes through the doorway to the shop, clutching his throat & dying in a pool of blood. When David approaches Elizabeth to interrogate her, she stares into his icy blue eyes, stunned she'd agreed to him.

MEET ME IN MAINE
by Susanne Leist

https://amzn.to/2TvFk8n

@bookstodon

Kathrin,
@Kathrin@trouth.eu avatar
mrundkvist, Swedish
@mrundkvist@archaeo.social avatar

My summer : Nicholas Ostler, Mervyn Peake, William Somerset Maugham, Mark Twain, Robert Heinlein.

duanetoops, (edited )

New issue of the newsletter goes out first thing tomorrow morning.

Some thoughts on making; making hope, making gifts, and making meaning...

You can subscribe below if you'd like to give it a read when it comes out:
https://duanetoops.substack.com

@bookstodon

pussreboots,
@pussreboots@sfba.social avatar

Five stars: Dying for Devil's Food by Jenn McKinlay and Susan Boyce (narrator) (2019) is a return to the earlier tone of the books before all the organized crime and romance melodrama. Mel reluctantly goes to the 15 year high school reunion, knowing full well she will probably be bullied again, but she and Angie were hired to provide cupcakes.

http://pussreboots.com/blog/2023/comments_06/dying_for_devils_food.html

@bookstodon

starbreaker, en-us

There's a thread about books people could not finish despite their efforts on the Tildes forum. Since I'm banned over there I can't chime in, but they can't stop me from posting my own list of failed attempts here.

Gravity's Rainbow

I've made at least a dozen attempts at Thomas Pynchon's World War II novel since I was eighteen, and I've never managed to get far beyond Pirate Prentice's banana breakfast.

Infinite Jest

Of course I've tried to read the novel that made David Foster Wallace famous, since it was published the year I turned eighteen and I still felt obligated to at least try to read and appreciate literary fiction in order to be "serious" about writing. I just never succeeded, most likely for the same reasons I never finished Gravity's Rainbow. It seems my patience for postmodernism is limited.

The Name of the Rose

I know how Umberto Eco's medieval mystery ends, but I don't count it as a book I've successfully read because there are dozens of passages that I just don't have enough Latin to read. It helps a little that I had seen the film adaptation first.

The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms

I'm not sure what stopped me from finishing N. K. Jemisen's novel, or the Inheritance Trilogy of which it's the first. Maybe I got distracted, or perhaps I couldn't bring myself to care about the characters and their struggles. I should probably pick it up again and give it another shot.

The Warded Man

Once I got it into my head that Peter Brett's novel would have worked better as a shonen manga called Tattooed Devil Killer ARLEN I could no longer take the novel seriously or suspend disbelief. That the protagonist basically turned into Batman after a time skip didn't help matters.

Polychrome

Ryk E. Spoor's homage to L. Frank Baum's Oz novels would probably have had more appeal for me if I had actually read Baum's novels as a kid instead of simply watching the film adaptation of The Wizard of Oz when it ran on TV between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Apparently Baum's setting got a lot weirder after Wizard. Spoor's novel assumed prior knowledge of the setting and characters that I lacked and couldn't be bothered to acquire.

Drood

I liked Dan Simmons better when he wrote science fiction. I was also going to say that I liked him better before he became a raving bigot writing unhinged rants about the evils of Islam, but the seeds of that bigotry were latent in the 1980s when he wrote Hyperion. It doesn't help that Drood requires knowledge of Charles Dickens' life and work, particularly his unfinished Mystery of Edwin Drood. I could acquire it, but I was never a fan of Charles Dickens' and I can't be bothered to read his work just so I can make sense of this one novel by Dan Simmons.

The Elfstones of Shannara

I had been told by a few dozen Terry Brooks fans on r/fantasy that Elfstones was a better novel than his first novel, The Sword of Shannara, but the magic just wasn't there for me. Maybe if I head read Elfstones first, and as a child instead of an adult

Byzantium Endures

This is the first of Michael Moorcock's novels of Colonel Pyat, and I've been slogging through it for five years, reading a little more at a time. This isn't a failure on Moorcock's part, but a triumph of characterization. Pyat's dishonesty is the least of his repugnant qualities, and I can only take so much of him at a time. I'm only halfway through Byzantium Endures, and there are three more Pyat novels after that.

I don't think I'll get through them all in my lifetime unless I'm already in so cynical and misanthropic a mood that Pyat's racism, anti-Semitism, nationalism, and misogyny somehow buoy me instead of bringing me down.


If there are books you haven't finished despite a valiant effort, why not blog about them and email me a link? I'm curious.

syndicated from starbreaker.org./blog/books-i-…

@bookstodon

gutenberg_org,
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

"In this unbelievable universe in which we live, there are no absolutes. Even parallel lines, reaching into infinity, meet somewhere yonder."

Pearl Comfort Sydenstricker Buck was born in 1892. In 1938, she became the 1st American woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature "for her rich & truly epic descriptions of peasant life in China" and for her "masterpieces", two memoir-biographies of her missionary parents.

Books by Pearl S. Buck at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68577

2ck,
@2ck@qoto.org avatar

@bookstodon just found out there's a redirection from indiebound links to bookshop.org: was that a unilateral thing? was there drama?

ppatel,
@ppatel@mstdn.social avatar

:

Pratik has read 'Great and Precious Things'

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/5643993035

Behindthepages,

I haven't finished my Poppy War journey yet, but I hope to pick up the last book in July. @bookstodon

ppatel,
@ppatel@mstdn.social avatar

A look at review-bombing campaigns on , which can derail a book's publication long before its release, affecting both new and established authors

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/26/books/goodreads-review-bombing.html

kenthompson,
@kenthompson@mastodon.world avatar

The Overstory, by Richard Powers: you are one of 8 or so main characters, all obsessed with trees for very different reasons and variously aware of the disappearance of trees from the planet and what that portends for life. 4 of 5 library cats. 🐈 🐈 🐈 🐈

@bookstodon

simplysyn,

Lone Women blew my socks off, I did not expect to love this book so much. It was heartfelt, atmospheric, gritty, and full of powerful women. @bookstodon
https://youtu.be/DJrUScz-DXY

thomasfuchs,
@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io avatar

What’s in your nightstand book queue?

BookClub,

This month on we read "The 42nd Parallel" by John , a big sweeping tale of America at the turn of the 20th century, including door-to-door book salesmen getting chased by a farmer with a shotgun, which happened all the time back then. @bookstodon
http://www.bowiebookclub.com/episodes/2023/6/26/the-42nd-parallel-by-john-dos-passos

duanetoops,

Working on next week's newsletter...

Thinking about art as something that breaks the economy of exchange, a gift intended to be given away...

You can subscribe below if you'd like to give it a read when it goes out on Wednesday:
https://duanetoops.substack.com

@bookstodon

mapodofu,

Even Though I Knew the End (CL Polk) 10/10

This is an astonishingly beautiful novella, set in a 1930's Chicago that has mystical elements hiding in plain sight.

One part sapphic romance, another part supernatural sleuth story, and another "it's complicated" family drama, I simply couldn't put this 130 page book down once I got going.

Darkness is explored - both of the human variety and the demonic - but the entire piece ultimately glows with hope.

@bookstodon

ppatel,
@ppatel@mstdn.social avatar
duanetoops,

The invisible forces of angst and agitation are also the unseen energies that cause us to ignite...

https://duanetoops.substack.com/p/in-the-common-dark-we-find-each-other

@bookstodon

ppatel,
@ppatel@mstdn.social avatar
ppatel,
@ppatel@mstdn.social avatar
likewise,

There are 2 new library books burning a hole in my Kindle—so, Monday afternoon, if you could just be on your way. @bookstodon

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