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Phil in SF

kingrat@sfba.club

Joined 1 year ago

aka @kingrat@sfba.social. I'm following a lot of bookwyrm accounts, since that seems to be the only way to get reviews from larger servers to this small server. Also, I will like & boost a lot of reviews that come across my feed. I will follow most bookwyrm accounts back if they review & comment. Social reading should be social.

2024 In The Books

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Phil in SF's books

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2025 Reading Goal

10% complete! Phil in SF has read 3 of 28 books.

avatar for kingrat Phil in SF boosted
Akwaeke Emezi: Pet (Hardcover, 2019, Make Me A World, Make Me a World) 5 stars

Humans will never have a true utopia.

5 stars

This was such a great read. It had me sucked in from the start to the end. Emezi did an amazing job with weaving tension through the magical realism. I didn't read any information on this book before reading it, so I was quite surprised at the arrival of Pet.

Jam is a selective-speaking 16 year old that has grown up in a utopia where people are allowed to be with who they want to be with and are able to decide who they are without any push-back. Jam was born as a boy and at a young age got fed up with being called a boy and finally expressed it to her parents and they were able to easily work with doctors to figure out options and how to go about everything. I really appreciated having a book with a trans main character where the focus of the book …

Content warning what happens to Bud the cat

reviewed Caught Stealing by Charlie Huston (Henry Thompson, #1)

Charlie Huston: Caught Stealing (EBook, 2004, Ballantine Books) 5 stars

Henry “call me Hank” Thompson used to play California baseball. Now he tends to a …

Straight up loved this

5 stars

Henry Thompson had his leg broken attempting to steal a base, ending his baseball career in high school. Then he drives a car too fast and kills a buddy. Moves to New York from California with a girl only for her to get a traveling job and leave him in the dust. When the novel starts, Henry Thompson is a bartender in the middle of a bender, but actually living a decent life of a loser without real prospects. Then he gets beaten up by Russians, who it turns out are looking for Henry's neighbor next apartment over, who has skipped town leaving Henry to watch his cat. Stuck in the cat's carrier is a key and criminals want it.

I was hooked. Henry makes bad decisions, but not "go back into the chainsaw room in a horror film" bad. So Henry pinballs around the story between various criminal factions …

avatar for kingrat Phil in SF boosted
Doreen Vanderstoop: Watershed (AudiobookFormat, 2023, Freehand Books) 4 stars

It is 2058, and the glaciers are gone. A catastrophic drought has hit the prairies. …

Really good

4 stars

The novel reminded me of "Parable of the Sower/Talents" at times because the way people react to climate change and the ensuing destruction of their livelihoods is the main focus. It's a lot less grim. I thought it was a very realistic take on how society would be like. It's set in Canada so their dystopia is also a bit nicer than the usual US based variant. Recommended for anyone into climate fiction.

Colin Holmes: The Oxygen Farmer (EBook, 2023, CamCat Publishing) 2 stars

After 35 years of living on the Moon, cranky old oxygen farmer Millennium Harrison has …

Bleah

2 stars

The prose is merely functional. There's a lot of "As you know, Bob..." Using the wrong words. Using the wrong math.

And at 27%, i still don't care about the central mystery: a radiation filled lunar vehicle buried under regolith in the center of a forbidden zone. Apparently a secret landing on the moon in the 1980s. But there's no reason for me as a reader to care. The MC gets an itch to find out the story, but that's the only hook. The MC being curious is not transitive to the reader. There's no stakes.

Colin Holmes: The Oxygen Farmer (EBook, 2023, CamCat Publishing) 2 stars

After 35 years of living on the Moon, cranky old oxygen farmer Millennium Harrison has …

Rem levels are point five two times ambient background standard. Personal protective measures should be considered. Radiation advisory.

The Oxygen Farmer by  (21%)

Oh Colin, that does not mean what you think it means.

Radiation that is half the standard ambient radiation is a good thing for a person, not an indication of an increase.

(yes. getting close to DNF.)

started reading The Oxygen Farmer by Colin Holmes

Colin Holmes: The Oxygen Farmer (EBook, 2023, CamCat Publishing) 2 stars

After 35 years of living on the Moon, cranky old oxygen farmer Millennium Harrison has …

I have no recollection of putting this on my hold list at the library. Now that I have it I'm going to give it a shot but something is screaming to me that this will be one I put down. It's SF but neither the author nor the book is on ISFDB. So I half expect to post a DNF message in a couple days.

reviewed Personal by Lee Child (Jack Reacher, #19)

Lee Child: Personal (EBook, 2014, Delacorte Press) 4 stars

You can leave the army, but the army doesn’t leave you. Not always. Not completely, …

Definitely feels like Reacher is on the down side

2 stars

In typical Lee Child fashion, Reacher figures out the scheme ⅔ of the way through, but refuses to tell anyone else, including the reader. Until the conclusion. At that point he monologues the conspiracy at its perpetrator and we get to see how it all fits together.

Except it doesn't. There's a few plot holes that are never filled.

Also, one of the bad guys is someone 7-ish inches taller than Reacher. Because he's huge, he has a big house. The man builds a "regular" house but has everything scaled up 50% so he'll fit. But holy heck does the prose drone on about it through multiple chapters, like no one ever wandered the halls of a European castle with wide hallways and giant doors. No, this oversized house takes extra getting used to that of course only Reacher can adjust to in quick fashion. Pfft.