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outofrange

dylankuhn@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 5 months ago

Reading for sanity, solace, meaning, meandering. Partial to mountains and desert, climate themes, balancing the heavy with the light.

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Too Like the Lightning (Hardcover, 2016, Tor Books) 4 stars

"The world into which Mycroft and Carlyle have been born is as strange to our …

So many ideas and a story too

4 stars

The strangest mashup of history and futuristic sci-fi I've read. Chock full of philosophy, ethics, religion, gender, and politics with some supernatural forces thrown in like a potent catalyst. Fascination trumps plausibility, but the historical references insist that we consider what worlds our ideas might conceive.

The Art of Shralpinism (Paperback, Mountaineers Books) 4 stars

Makes the title seem less corny

4 stars

I was a little turned off by the title, fearing a book full of "shredder bro" lingo. There is some, but it's written from a more humble place than I expected, and is full of advice that could improve my time in the mountains on a split board. I've never been into snowboarding movies, I know Jeremy Jones mostly through his nonprofit Protect Our Winters. There's only a bit about that, though the importance of climate change is given due weight. The content feels a little jumbled up, but comes across as sincere and reflects a lot of experience that is worth passing on.

Adrift (2023, Sourcebooks, Incorporated, Sourcebooks Landmark) 4 stars

Climate migrants and sailing with amnesia

4 stars

Starts out as an amnesia plot thriller, which can be interesting but won't hold my interest without adding something else. It then gets into the characters and climate theme which it does well and thoughtfully. There's a little sci-fi woven in but it doesn't overreach, and works to provoke thoughts about what climate migration may look like.

The botany of desire (2001, Random House) 3 stars

A Random House Trade Paperback

The dance of plant and human desires

4 stars

The conceit - are plants using us more effectively than we use them? - still works over 20 years later. The stories still feel relevant even if they have since taken some unexpected turns. An interesting contrast to Camille Dungy's "Soil", but as a non-gardener they both have my admiration.

A Wizard of Earthsea (EBook, 2012, Clarion Books) 4 stars

Originally published in 1968, Ursula K. Le Guin’s A Wizard of Earthsea marks the first …

Entertaining and interesting in historical context

4 stars

I enjoyed this story for young adults while also appreciating how Le Guin weaves some deeper themes into something that appears a little formulaic at first. Savoring how one by one the mainstream expectations are broken, especially considering what those expectations would have been in 1968, made it an appealing read.

Camp Zero (Hardcover, 2023, Atria Books) 3 stars

In remote northern Canada, a team led by a visionary American architect is break­ing ground …

Interesting climate fiction

3 stars

This was better than I expected from a random impulse read. It's a pretty good mix of characters in a climate-themed story that is consistent, makes some cultural commentary, and tries some unconventional narrative devices that work pretty well. There are scientist characters, but it's not a particularly science-driven story.