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Phil in SF

kingrat@sfba.club

Joined 1 year, 9 months 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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Success! Phil in SF has read 53 of 28 books.

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reviewed Bunny by Mona Awad (Bunny, #1)

Mona Awad: Bunny (EBook, 2019, Penguin Books)

Samantha Heather Mackey couldn't be more of an outsider in her small, highly selective MFA …

Ugh, no

Samantha—loner and outsider at prestigious Warren University—finds the rest of her writing cohort beneath her and relentlessly denigrates them with her arty friend, Ava, until an invitation arrives.

I did not care for this at all. I found it predictable, and irritatingly coy about its predictability. The protagonist is the worst mean girl of all the mean girls, and a tedious, self-absorbed one at that. I just found everything about it silly and boring, and wouldn't have read it had I known it was magical realism, which I despise. Absolutely not for me.

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Steven Rowley: Celebrants (2023, Penguin Publishing Group, G.P. Putnam's Sons)

Celebrations of Life for the Living.

This book really resonated with me, but I’m also in the same age and cultural cohort as the characters. Add to that a personal event similar to the instigating event for the story and it was practically written for me.

After the loss of their close friend just prior to college graduation, the remaining friends create a pact to hold funerals for each other while they’re still alive. Through the years the friends call on the pact. Secrets are revealed and their friendships are repeatedly tested. They learn whether the pact a testament of their bond or a desperate grasp to hang onto a time long since passed?

While the specter of mortality weighs on the Celebrants more than the Guncle series, Steven Rowley’s punchy wit, irony, and joy shine through the same. While it doesn’t break new ground, it celebrates life, next chapters, and not leaving things unsaid.

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reviewed The Hexologists by Josiah Bancroft (The Hexologists, #1)

Josiah Bancroft: The Hexologists (2023, Orbit)

The first book in a wildly entertaining new fantasy series from acclaimed author Josiah Bancroft …

The Hexologists

One sentence: loving couple does mystery investigation during a magic-driven industrial age

Things I enjoyed about the book:

  • established caring relationship between two very different people, who understand each other's quirks and needs (reminds me some of MRK's Glamourist Histories)
  • investigators who aren't cops (and are also anti-royalist)
  • setup for future books, but not in a way that detracted from this one
  • interesting magic system that also has social implications
  • an industrial age powered by fuel from portals to a hell dimension (and requiring people to fight back monsters trying to come back through said portals)

I know "romp" is overused as a fiction description, but this is a romp if ever I've seen one. It's grippy action scenes and compelling characters, but more than that a romp for me is fiction that calvinballs its way to undiscussed locations or adding new worldbuilding details with very little foreshadowing. I …

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reviewed Hild by Nicola Griffith (The Hild Sequence, #1)

Nicola Griffith: Hild (2013, Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

In seventh-century Britain, small kingdoms are merging, frequently and violently. A new religion is coming …

Hild

4 stars: loved this book, would recommend

This was a reread but it's been a long time - I remembered almost nothing of it. It is a work of historical fiction about the very early years of a woman about whom very little is known but who eventually became a saint.

I feel like I had an easier time reading it the first time though - I spent a lot of time rereading pages and flipping back to try and figure out what was going on. I didn't have a lot of trouble with the Old English words sprinkled throughout, most were clear from context, doubly so if you've read a lot of fantasy, and I think helped disconnect them from words with more modern connotations (e.g. a gesith is not exactly a knight), and it helped a lot that I had just played an online game set in a …

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Eden Robins: Remember You Will Die (2024, Sourcebooks, Incorporated)

"Can the absence of words tell a story? Like a pattern in lace, the holes …

Remember You Will Die

This may be my own categorization, but there sure have been a lot of books recently that are written in an interconnected mosaic structure. When reading one of these, my brain goes into a similar mode as a good mystery novel, but instead of pinning suspicious plot elements to my cork board, I'm instead sifting out small fragments of imagery and theme. It's not unlike the feeling when you see a lot of online posts talking indirectly about the same current event, while you are uninformed and trying to feel out the shape of the subject from only its subtooted outline.

I start with this context because I have read a lot of these mosaic books lately, and it's tricky for me to distill my feelings about this book without making direct comparisons. Primarily, Remember You Will Die suffers from coming in the immediate shadow of the emotional punches of …

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Brit Bennett: The mothers (2016, Riverhead Books)

"A dazzling debut novel from an exciting new voice, The Mothers is a surprising story …

Do you ever stop reading a book because you can’t imagine how things will turn out ok?

Please message me if you know if this book has a happy ending. But otherwise i might just let it go.

reviewed Love & Estrogen by Samantha Allen (The Real Thing Collection, #4)

Samantha Allen: Love & Estrogen (EBook, 2018, Amazon Publishing)

In this unforgettable meet-cute, Samantha Allen traces her story of self-discovery during gender transition and …

Nice short memoir of falling in love while transitioning

It felt like a memoir 2/3 about transitioning and 1/3 about falling in love. There's not a lot of strife detailed; by the end Ms. Allen has transitioned and she and her paramour have married.

quoted Love & Estrogen by Samantha Allen (The Real Thing Collection, #4)

Samantha Allen: Love & Estrogen (EBook, 2018, Amazon Publishing)

In this unforgettable meet-cute, Samantha Allen traces her story of self-discovery during gender transition and …

I walked through Indiana University's campus that Monday morning to the sprawling Gothic building that the Kinsey Institute calls home, prepared for yet another day of hibernation in the library.

Love & Estrogen by  (The Real Thing Collection, #4) (2% - 4%)

It now occurs to me that the Kinsey Institute is located on the campus of a public university in a very red state. I really hope it isn't fighting for survival...

... and it is: Indiana University officials ditch plan to split off Kinsey Institute, known for its sex research

Goddammit. At least the university isn't rolling over.

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Sarah Gailey: Upright Women Wanted (Hardcover, 2020, Tor.com)

“That girl’s got more wrong notions than a barn owl’s got mean looks.”

Esther is …

I love genre confusion, especially when I wasn't expecting it

I went into this book knowing nothing about it except that Sarah Gailey is the author, and I've liked a couple of her other books. I recommend this approach, it is so much fun.

Similar to M. A. Carey's approach to "The Book of Koli" that way.

reviewed Angel's Tip by Alafair Burke (Ellie Hatcher, #2)

Alafair Burke: Angel's Tip (EBook, 2009, Harper)

Thrilled to spend the final hours of her spring break in the VIP room of …

Convoluted & stale

Content warning mild spoilers that you could probably figure out anyway