@travisfw no idea what the French call it. i don't speak a lick of French.
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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.
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Phil in SF's books
2025 Reading Goal
42% complete! Phil in SF has read 12 of 28 books.
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Phil in SF replied to Travis F W's status
Phil in SF started reading Elder Race by Adrian Tchaikovsky
Phil in SF quoted The Treatment by Mo Hayder (Jack Caffery, #2)
She poured coffee from a cafetiere into two Isle of Aran mugs, spooned sugar into an earthenware pot and set it on a tray.
— The Treatment by Mo Hayder (Jack Caffery, #2) (11%)
new vocabulary: cafetière
- A coffee pot containing a plunger made of fine mesh with which the grounds are pushed to the bottom when the coffee is ready to be poured
Phil in SF quoted The Treatment by Mo Hayder (Jack Caffery, #2)
Come on, let's have a shufti at the park, shall we?
— The Treatment by Mo Hayder (Jack Caffery, #2) (2%)
always getting new vocabulary from UK books: shufti
- A look or reconnoitre, especially a quick one
Phil in SF started reading The Treatment by Mo Hayder (Jack Caffery, #2)

The Treatment by Mo Hayder (Jack Caffery, #2)
In a quiet residential area in London, a couple is discovered bound and imprisoned in their own home. Savagely battered …
Phil in SF reviewed Cop Hater by Ed McBain (87th Precinct, #1)
The pulpiest of police procedurals
3 stars
Three detectives are killed in quick succession in Isola, a fictionalized version of New York City. Fictionalized, according to the author, so he could take liberties with how the cops in New York City actually operate. Full of dames and men who appreciate the swell of a woman's chest and gangs that rumble, cops that harass suspects based on hunches, having a drink or two on the job and a general lack of respect for the Bill of Rights that predated the Warren court. The crime is solved through luck, accumulating evidence (I like this part) and a not very smart impatient criminal. There's a lot of copaganda in it, but the police are not portrayed as being particularly smart.
Phil in SF finished reading Cop Hater by Ed McBain (87th Precinct, #1)
Phil in SF started reading Cop Hater by Ed McBain (87th Precinct, #1)
Phil in SF finished reading Dream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Dream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Chiamaka is a Nigerian travel writer living in America. Alone in the midst of the pandemic, she recalls her past …
Phil in SF reviewed The Warrior's Apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold (Vorkosigan Saga, #2)
How To Lead A Military Without Trying
3 stars
Miles Vorkosigan washes out military school and heads to another planetary system to spend time with his grandmother and her family. There he decides to bail out some down & outers using his name and a bit of family money and do some smuggling/inter system trade to recover the money. Things go poorly and the only way through each obstacle is bluffing, and at every step he succeeds but has to face every larger obstacles afterward.
As a sci-fi adventure plot, it's adequate. But Miles "I'm a nice guy using my position to try to get in the pants of the woman who reports to me" vibe really brought me down. At least the character who raped women in the previous book wasn't given a "I was just following orders and feel bad about" pass from the narrative. Which it seemed like it would. There's still some amount of "we …
Miles Vorkosigan washes out military school and heads to another planetary system to spend time with his grandmother and her family. There he decides to bail out some down & outers using his name and a bit of family money and do some smuggling/inter system trade to recover the money. Things go poorly and the only way through each obstacle is bluffing, and at every step he succeeds but has to face every larger obstacles afterward.
As a sci-fi adventure plot, it's adequate. But Miles "I'm a nice guy using my position to try to get in the pants of the woman who reports to me" vibe really brought me down. At least the character who raped women in the previous book wasn't given a "I was just following orders and feel bad about" pass from the narrative. Which it seemed like it would. There's still some amount of "we still have to honor him for the good stuff he did" though.
Phil in SF reviewed Birdman by Mo Hayder (Jack Caffery, #1)
Enjoyable police procedural
4 stars
First in a series, where Jack Caffery is the new detective in the unit and gets a case where 4 bodies of prostitutes are found buried in a shallow grave. Suspicion falls on a few different folks. The author includes a few chapters from the perspective of the criminal in a fairly transparent try at misleading the reader. Once you get to the twist, you'll see it too. Enjoyable for me because the detective work is less movie plot magic wandism and more basic forensics. However, there's a fair amount of sensationalism. And as for the crime itself, many aspects of it seem unlikely and overly intricate to further the sensationalism and plot twists.
Phil in SF wants to read Cop Hater by Ed McBain (87th Precinct, #1)
Phil in SF started reading Dream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Phil in SF finished reading The Warrior's Apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold (Vorkosigan Saga, #2)

The Warrior's Apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold (Vorkosigan Saga, #2)
Discharged from the Barrayan Military Academy, Miles Vorkosigan chances on a jumpship with a rebellious pilot and arranges to take …