ninsiana0, to bookstodon
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Total books read in 2023: 78
Advance reader copies: 23
Library books: 27
Owned: 18
Digital/ebook editions: 77
Physical copies: 1
Women authors: 34
Men authors: 6
Trans or nonbinary authors: 9
Queer authors: 19
POC authors: 17
Fiction: 78
Anthologies: 2
Written by Seanan McGuire: 15

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cbcrypto, to books

Happy New Year @bookstodon
Here are the I enjoyed most in 2023:

  1. Becky Chambers - A Closed and Common Orbit
  2. Brian Johnson - The Lives of Brian
  3. Katherine Addison - The Grief of Stones
  4. Edward Ashton - Mickey7
  5. Martha Wells - All Systems Red
  6. Helene Wecker - The Golem and the Jinni

All 54 books I read last year: https://bit.ly/cbcrypto-reads-2023

ninsiana0, to bookstodon
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Books 73-78 read in 2023.

The last reading roundup of the year.

LOST IN THE MOMENT AND FOUND by Seanan McGuire

MISLAID IN PARTS HALF-KNOWN by Seanan McGuire

The great 2023 Reread of the ENTIRE Wayward Children series was so much fun. I see so much of myself & my loves in these books, which is, I think, the entire point.

THE DEEP SKY by Yume Kitasei

A Very Queet, Who Done It, Locked Room, in Deep Space. Delightful.

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kimlockhartga, to books
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@bookstodon Are you in the mood to read something which plays with form and style? HANGMAN, by Maya Binyam might be for you. It is one of those novels where you both wonder what the heck is going on, and where in the world you're headed, until it all comes together. I really enjoyed it, like nothing else I've read this year. And it's under 200 pages.

My full review: This novel is deftly, smartly written, and demonstrates a paradox about the nature of life itself, which is that it is equally obscured when the lens is too wide, as it is when the lens is too close to its subject.

The story is told via the narrator's journey, but that's not really the heart of this story. The author's delivery has a funhouse, "there but not there," stretched and surreal feel. There are very real observations, however, and they are all deeply political. It's like a mashup of Kathryn Davis and Helen Oyeyemi books, with an even deeper level of social commentary.

I enjoyed the experimental nature of this short, but impactful novel.

And that ending?!? I'm so glad I didn't put it together until the last minute.

This book satisfied my need for something completely different, where the author takes chances. I will gladly read anything Maya Binyam writes.

FionaMNT, to books

Book no. 28: The Readers' Room, by Antoine Laurain, translated from French by Jane Aitken, Emily Boyce & Polly Mackintosh.
A great Parisian literary mystery!

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