Nebula Award finalist.
Reviews and Comments
computer scientist, mathematician, photographer, human. Debian Developer, Notmuch Maintainer, scuba diver
Much of my "reading" these days is actually audiobooks while walking.
FediMain: bremner@mathstodon.xyz
bremner@bookwyrm.social is also me. Trying a smaller instance to see if the delays are less maddening.
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David Bremner wants to read Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher
David Bremner wants to read Poison Ivy by Evan Mandery
David Bremner wants to read Jackal by Erin E. Adams
David Bremner stopped reading The Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett
David Bremner stopped reading Deverry: Books 1-4 by Katherine Kerr
David Bremner started reading Daggerspell by Katharine Kerr
David Bremner commented on Deverry: Books 1-4 by Katherine Kerr
David Bremner commented on Africa Risen by Sheree Renée Thomas
I'm about half way through this. I'm reading it on my phone which at the moment is less enticing than audiobook while multitasking or a paperback in the bathtub. I am not a big reader of short stories, I think perversely because of a lack of attention span. I have a hard time keeping in my head what I think about a collection of stories, especially a big collection like this. Just looking at the table of contents I have a clear recollection of maybe half of the stories I read so far.
David Bremner wants to read Deverry: Books 1-4 by Katherine Kerr
I'm a sucker for a good deal. USD12.99 for 58 hours of audiobook! I hope the narration is good as @kitkerr@wandering.shop says, because that's a lot of narration.
David Bremner wants to read The Mimicking of Known Successes by Malka Older
Based on the review by @Princejvstin@wandering.shop
David Bremner commented on The Mimicking of Known Successes by Malka Older
Long form review at www.nerds-feather.com/2023/02/review-mimicking-of-known-successes-by.html
David Bremner commented on The Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett
So far I am enjoying this much more than the last Discworld novel I re-read (Reaper Man). Who knows, maybe I'm just in a better mood, or maybe Pratchett developed as a writer in the intervening 19 novels.
David Bremner reviewed Noor by Nnedi Okorafor
Personal Trauma, dystopia, but also optimism and warmth.
4 stars
At points this book reminded me strongly of certain influential works of speculative fiction, most notably Murderbot (corporate surveillance dystopia, cyborgs are people too) and Neuromancer (cyberspace, hacking as a kind of magical system). On the other hand, Okorafor writes confidently from the point of view of young Nigerian woman in the near future.
For me the warmth comes from the details of daily life in (roughly contemporary) Nigeria. On the other hand I don't have much of a reference point other than other books by the same author.
The book is, and is-not "hard" science fiction. It relies (mainly) on technology for setting and plot devices, but doesn't spend a lot of time on the technical details, and in one or two places might be jarring for the nerdier reader.
Content warnings: occasional violence, some body trauma. The moderate amount of sexual content is thankfully unrelated to the violence.