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Phil in SF

kingrat@sfba.club

Joined 1 year, 8 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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Success! Phil in SF has read 46 of 28 books.

stopped reading The Wall by Gautam Bhatia (Sumer, #1)

Gautam Bhatia: The Wall (EBook, 2020, HarperCollins India) No rating

‘Imagine a horizon.’

‘I can’t.’

Mithila’s world is bound by a Wall enclosing the city …

Meh. So around the city of Sumer for generations has existed the Wall. There's like 15 circles inside the wall, and the Elders and Shoortans and other groups have some sort of complicated ruling system. But noone is to go outside the Wall or even attempt it. This is, so far, the story of a group of young people who dream of leaving.

However, there's little in the story that makes me care if they succeed, nor can I bring myself to care that there's intrigue between the powerful groups.

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Christina Lynch: Pony Confidential (EBook, Berkley)

An NPR “Book of the Day”

In this one-of-a-kind mystery with heart and humor, a …

Excellent excellent page turner about a pony saving their human from being convicted of a crime

This book is extremely white woman coded. A woman who calls her family poor after their bought her a pony? Yes, but does it also punch up? Also yes. This book ties a very amazing thread between prison cells, kill pens for animals, and how animals & humans ALL suffer through callous behavior of humans.

It is also written as a very entertaining mystery! I absolutely devoured it in my insomnia. The hater pony realizes he actually loves his human and did in fact run away abandoning her. He makes a long journey back to her. The end is very Hollywood-ish which is explained by the fact that the author says she wanted to write a movie first but turned it into a book. There is NO copaganda. There is plenty of stories of animal abuse though so be warned. There is sorta a romance but it is very light. …

Gautam Bhatia: The Wall (EBook, 2020, HarperCollins India) No rating

‘Imagine a horizon.’

‘I can’t.’

Mithila’s world is bound by a Wall enclosing the city …

And what about the woad that you grow in that so-called City garden, that you price so high that only you Elders and your farm-owning cronies can buy it- from yourselves?

The Wall by  (Sumer, #1) (6%)

new vocabulary: woad

a yellow flowered European plant of the cabbage family. it was formerly widely grown in Britain as a source of blue dye, which was extracted from the leaves after they had been dried, powdered, and fermented.

reviewed Six Bad Things by Charlie Huston (Henry Thompson, #2)

Charlie Huston: Six Bad Things (EBook, 2005, Ballantine Books)

Hank Thompson is living off the map in Mexico with a bagful of cash that …

Enjoyable, but repeats elements of book 1

Henry Thompson is living the life of a fugitive in Mexico, where his stolen money goes a lot further than in the US. And where he's a lot safer. Until a Russian shows up, recognizes him, and tries to collect the money. Henry survives the encounter, but concocts a plan to return to the US.

So thus begins the new descent, which follows a lot of the same plot elements as book 1. Multiple groups chasing Henry for money he doesn't have in his possession but which he could theoretically lead them to. Bad guys betraying other bad guys. People getting killed, many of them by Henry himself.

The main differences this time? Henry doesn't feel quite as bad as before when he hurts people. And instead of being chased through the streets of New York, he's being chased from Mexico to California to Las Vegas.

Still fun, but doesn't …

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Everina Maxwell: Winter's Orbit (Paperback, 2022, Tor Books)

While the Iskat Empire has long dominated the system through treaties and political alliances, several …

Winter's Orbit

I gave myself a comfort reread of this book to remember again how much I enjoy it. It's still great.

Winter's Orbit is a queer romance / science fiction book. Personally, I think folks who like one genre but don't read the other would enjoy this book, but in practice it seems like the combination seems to make folks bounce from the idea. I wonder if perhaps this is why nobody else seemed intrigued to read this for hashtag SFFBookClub. Also, the romance is largely PG rated, if that's important to you one way or the other.

The plot hook is that reticent and duty-bound Count Jainan has recently lost his husband; in order to politically preserve an interplanetary treaty, he is quickly remarried to easygoing and irresponsible Prince Kiem. When Kiem's friendly overtures are rebuffed, Kiem tries to give Jainan space to mourn and not push him or through …

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Martha Wells: Witch King (EBook, 2023, Tom Doherty Associates, LLC)

Kai-Enna is the Witch King, though he hasn’t always been, and he hasn’t even always …

Review of "Witch King" by Martha Wells

Fun, engaging story built around magic, empire, friendship, and vengeance. A familiar quest, but with enough twists and turns and different takes to keep returning to. Easy, comfortable writing that immerses you in an expansive world with complex characters and lots of compelling scenes and powerful moments, but with occasional moments that seem out of place as well. Clearly Book One of a series to come, but a good and satisfying story in its own right, and I'll definitely read the next one.

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Sofia Samatar: The Practice, the Horizon, and the Chain (2024, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

The boy was raised as one of the Chained, condemned to toil in the bowels …

A story of caste and academia in the far future

Samatar’s novella is set in the far future on a fleet of ships that escaped a dying earth. It offers biting commentary on social hierarchy and academia. A well paced and moving read let down slightly as the science fictional elements give way to the fantastical near the end in a way I found awkward.

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reviewed The Aeronaut's Windlass by Jim Butcher (The Cinder Spires, #1)

Jim Butcher: The Aeronaut's Windlass (Hardcover, 2015, Roc)

Jim Butcher, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Dresden Files and the …

Jim Butcher is too un-self-aware to write far future spec fic, I think

Or maybe he's just a dick, I dunno. Certainly the Harry Dresden character reads like a self-insert character and he's a bit of a dick. Anyway, the ups:

Talking cats! Who save the day. And frankly they were written very well. Obviously Butcher knows and loves cats. Could have used more cat action.

Kickass ladies all over the place.

Great airship battle writing. That was fun.

An intriguing setting.

The downs:

The intriguing setting not well-explored or adequately explained. Humanity has been living in spires for at least 2,000 years, and the surface of the planet is basically uninhabitable. Full of strange, dangerous creatures that become maddened by a slight taste of human blood. OK... but why is one spire "Albion" (blegh, read the Book of Koli for why this is barf-worthy) and one spire "Aurora" and why are the clearly stand-ins for the British Empire and the Spanish Empire? …

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