JonSparks, to writing
@JonSparks@writing.exchange avatar

#WritersCoffeeClub 23/5: What gets in the way of your writing?
Life.
Riding bikes, and cleaning them afterward. Going to coffee shops (but we have some great conversations about writing, so maybe that’s a help not a hindrance). General household chores.
And more life. How do people with full-time jobs and kids manage it?
#writingCommunity #ThreeKindsofNorth #TheSunderingWall #VowsAndWatersheds #writing #books

NerdsofaFeather, to books
@NerdsofaFeather@wandering.shop avatar

Book Review: The Dragonfly Gambit by A. D. Sui

Political plotting and elaborate shenanigans done right says @chloroform_tea at the NOAF blog

http://www.nerds-feather.com/2024/05/book-review-dragonfly-gambit-by-d-sui.html

@bookstodon

Haste, to books
@Haste@mastodon.social avatar

Question for fellow library nerds: I recently found a book from the 70’s which has “Return to Morgue” printed on the side no less than four times.

I’ve see this on correspondence before, but never understood what it meant. Surely they don’t mean an actual morgue (why send a book or letter there?) so I was wondering if this was a library or archivist term.

This particular one is “Investigative Reporting and Exiting” by Paul Williams, which is out of print.

RogerBW, to books
@RogerBW@emacs.ch avatar
strypey, to privacy
@strypey@mastodon.nzoss.nz avatar

"Everybody looks at everybody all the time and you don't need to be a celebrity to feel the need for privacy. I myself was recently in big trouble with my Confessor for being slow to post a birthing video. I'm not talking about being either an extrovert or an introvert: I'm talking about people who don't believe privacy is a perversion, people who think it might even be a virtue."

Trafford, Blind Faith by Ben Elton, 2007

booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

THE LONG-AWAITED SEQUEL TO Jasper Fforde’s enigmatic 2011 novel Shades of Grey is a fascinating, mysterious science fiction picaresque where decoding the secrets behind the worldbuilding is part of the fun. B PLUS

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/red-side-story-jasper-fforde/1144181618?ean=9781641296281

@bookstodon

#book #Books #bookreview #bookreviews #fiction #novel #novels #sciencefiction

kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

Yesterday I posted a review of books 3 - 7 in the "Dublin Trilogy" (Adrian McKinty, I'm looking at you...)

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/dublin-trilogy-books-3-7-caimh-mcdonnell

Anyway, I listened to these, they were funny, bit on the silly side and really enjoyable.



@bookstodon

stevenray, (edited ) to random
@stevenray@sfba.social avatar

Only a few pages in, this is already one of my favorite books of the year. Brilliantly written, an easy read yet so full of crucial perspective.

weirdwriter, to books

Forget Medium and Substack, this writer made 40 websites to tell a mystery story. I don’t exactly know where to start the mystery, but you can read about the project at https://dansinker.com/posts/2024-05-10-doesntexist/ #Books #Mystery @bookstodon

CultureDesk, to books
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

How do writers become famous? It's clear that talent is not enough. Cass R. Sunstein looks at the factors and trends that lead to literary recognition, from Oprah's Book Club to premature death. This extract from his book, "How to Become Famous: Lost Einsteins, Forgotten Superstars, and How the Beatles Came to Be," appears on LitHub.

https://flip.it/jjERwR

@bookstodon

Schnuckster, to books
@Schnuckster@beige.party avatar

Just finished another short novel that Benjamin Zephaniah wrote for teenagers. Read two so far. They give an insight into young people's lives for an old sod like me, but more than that, they're just really well constructed, and sensitively and subtlely written. It's not a genre that attracts due credit, but the man excelled in it, clearly. 📖 @bookstodon

MagentaRocks, to books
@MagentaRocks@mastodon.coffee avatar

I find this so unsettling, yet condensed and things like CliffsNotes have been around for years. I think this enables people with ADHD and those with the attention span of fleas, yet, maybe it can be useful for some. At least this isn't all AI.


@bookstodon

May be pay-walled, no gift link option available.

"Can You Read a Book in a Quarter of an Hour?
Phone apps now offer to boil down entire books into micro-synopses. What they leave out is revealing."

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/05/27/can-you-read-a-book-in-a-quarter-of-an-hour

beexcessivelydiverting, to books
@beexcessivelydiverting@mastodon.online avatar

If you’re a fan of podcasts, there are over dozen podcast dedicated to and the Brontes. If I’m missing any, let me know so I can update the list!

https://excessivelydiverting.substack.com/p/austen-bronte-newsletter-issue-7-podcasts

@bookstodon

beexcessivelydiverting, to books
@beexcessivelydiverting@mastodon.online avatar
bjkingape, to books
@bjkingape@mastodon.online avatar

Thrilled that KAIROS, written by Jenny Erpenbeck and translated by Michael Hofman, has won the International Booker Prize. I found this novel so affecting in its weaving together of German history and personal history. https://www.npr.org/2024/05/21/1252680852/kairos-jenny-erpenbeck-2024-international-booker-prize-winner#:~:text='Kairos'%20by%20Jenny%20Erpenbeck%20wins%202024%20International%20Booker%20Prize%20Jenny,undergoes%20its%20own%20political%20transformation.

beexcessivelydiverting, to books
@beexcessivelydiverting@mastodon.online avatar
Aleenaa, to books
@Aleenaa@india.goonj.xyz avatar

'I Fell in Love With Hope'

This beautifully written book captures the essence of finding light in the darkest of times and the enduring strength that love and hope can provide 📖

@mastodonindians

libreture, to books
@libreture@mastodon.social avatar

BooksByMood from Gaël Thomas is really handy!

Pick your mood, and get a selection of matching book suggestions. 💜

https://booksbymood.com/

gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

British writer and physician Arthur Conan Doyle was born in 1859.

Doyle was a prolific writer; other than Holmes stories, his works include fantasy and science fiction stories about Professor Challenger, and humorous stories about the Napoleonic soldier Brigadier Gerard, as well as plays, romances, poetry, non-fiction, and historical novels.

Books by Arthur Conan Doyle at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/69

Book cover of The case-book of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle

Likewise, to books
@Likewise@beige.party avatar

The water wasn't the same down here.

Water is what runs out of the kitchen taps or a playground drinking fountain. It fills bathubs and pools and yes, of course, the ocean- but at a certain depth, water becomes a barrier from all you remember, all you think you know.

*Nick Cutter, The Deep

*An author I’ve never read, but have wanted to. Any thoughts?

SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

French SF author Jean-Louis Curtis (1917-1995) was born on this day. I reviewed his sole SF collection: The Neon Halo (1956, trans. 1958) https://sciencefictionruminations.com/2021/12/22/book-review-the-neon-halo-jean-louis-curtis-1956-trans-1958/
#scifi #sciencefiction #books

ikleenex, to France French
@ikleenex@mamot.fr avatar
gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

Thoughts on the precipice

"How immense the universe is!
How eternal history is!
I wanted to measure the immensity with this puny five-foot body.
What authority has Horatio's philosophy?
The true nature of the whole creation.
...
I have no anxiety.
I recognize for the first time.
Great pessimism is nothing but great optimism."

in 1903.

Japanese philosophy student Misao Fujimura carves a poem into a tree at Kegon Falls before committing suicide over unrequited love.

RogerBW, to books
@RogerBW@emacs.ch avatar
JonSparks, to writing
@JonSparks@writing.exchange avatar

22/5: Is your antagonist more a dragon or a dragon rider?
Once you’ve explained what a dragon is…
Ask Perriad and she’ll probably see herself as a dragon rider (or else as a slayer of dragons!).
Ask Jerya, or anyone else who‘s butted heads with Perriad, and they’ll see her as a dragon—and they won’t mean it as a compliment.

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