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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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Phil in SF's books

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Success! Phil in SF has read 51 of 28 books.

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reviewed In Universes by Emet North

Emet North: In Universes (2024, Cornerstone Publishing)

For fans of Emily St. John Mandel and Kelly Link, a profoundly imaginative debut novel …

In Universes

Incredible.

We've read a number of books for #SFFBookClub that have a short story structure with interconnecting themes and worldbuilding (How High We Go in the Dark, and Under the Eye of the Big Bird) but In Universes is my clear favorite among all of these.

Structurally, this book is a series of short stories with a single point of view. Each story takes place in different adjacent-ish branching multiverses, some of which veer into more magical realism and externalized metaphors while others are more realistic. Thematically, this book is about dealing with internalized homophobia, trauma, depression and grief. But it's also about (queer) possibility and transformation and acceptance.

It's interesting to me just how many things I underlined (virtually) while reading this book. Delicious turns of phrase. Devastating sentences seemingly directly targeted at my feelings. Interconnecting thematic ideas everywhere. I found myself utterly engaged in its …

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Peter Watts: Blindsight (2008, Tor Books)

hard

Hard, as jargon-heavy sci-fi, as violent eldritch horrors, as our unlikable unforgiving neurodiverse crew tears apart those around them, as a philosophical conclusion about consciousness, self-awareness, and artificial intelligence. It is surprising to me that I still deeply liked it on re-read.

John Scalzi: Slow Time Between the Stars (EBook, 2023, Amazon Original Stories)

An artificial intelligence on a star-spanning mission explores the farthest horizons of human potential—and its …

An intelligent, autonomous ship talks to itself

Finished off all the Far Reaches stories and they really were a disappointment overall, especially this entry.

This is a monologue by an intelligent, autonomous ship sent to seed humanity into the galaxy. Humans can't survive the thousands and hundreds of thousands of years to travel to an extra-stellar planet. But a ship with AI that has all of human knowledge, including how to create humans from atomic building blocks, could.

This one changes cuts off contact a couple of years outside the heliopause, and then we get 25+ pages of its super-intelligent thinky thinkies. Including the part that it never gets bored because it's just not thinking when it doesn't have to. In effect, this is some what-if philosophy about humans expanding through the galaxy from Scalzi, put into the words of an AI, and almost no story to speak of.

Adrian Tchaikovsky: Alien Clay (EBook, 2024, Orbit)

The planet of Kiln is where the tyrannical Mandate keeps its prison colony, and for …

Interesting take on the prison planet trope

I was hooked from the start with Tchaikovsky's description of sending prisoners to Kiln as freeze-dried corpsicles that are reanimated on arrival. Actually doable? Actually money-saving? Hell if I know. Grabbed my attention.

Kiln has life. Not only does it have life, it has monuments built be an intelligent species, but there's no sign of them. That's a secret that was kept from Earth by it's rulers, the Mandate. Arton Daghdev, our protagonist is an unorthodox xenobiologist. A prisoners because of the unorthodoxy. But also he didn't know because it was kept so tightly secret. And the last part of of the premise is that there aren't exactly species on Kiln. The flora and fauna, such as they are, are more agglomerations of species with one purpose each: a stomach and an eye and a leg muscle get together to form a symbiotic creature. But they can all split up …

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reviewed Alien Clay by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Adrian Tchaikovsky: Alien Clay (EBook, 2024, Orbit)

The planet of Kiln is where the tyrannical Mandate keeps its prison colony, and for …

Alien Clay

This is now my favorite Adrian Tchaikovsky book. The writing is grippy, the narrator is wry, and I love the way the plotlines of revolution against authoritarianism and academic exploration of alien biology intertwine with each other.

Some extremely minor asides that I appreciated:

The narrator is quite funny and I appreciate the way he sometimes deceives the reader; there are several scenes where you get the surface level view of the scene and then find out shortly afterwards that he's also doing something furtive simultaneously.

I love that the authoritarianism is all about black and white binaries, and the book casually infers that one of the characters fell into political disfavor because they are some flavor of non-binary (without using that word, thank goodness).

This is also somehow the second academic adjacent alien book that I've read recently, with James SA Corey's The Mercy of Gods being the other. …

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Eric Ugland: Scamps and Scoundrels (2022, Air Quotes Publishing)

A very LitRpg novel

A thief turned reluctant hero gets isekaied after a house fire, and goes rogue.

Another LitRPG novel, and I'm not entirely sure that I appreciate the stats obsession of the genre. I think I like a little less RPG in my novels. Still a fun read. I didn't enjoy this one was much as “Dungeon Crawler Carl”, nevertheless I'll be reading a couple more because I've been told the kobolds are worth it.

Adrian Tchaikovsky: Alien Clay (EBook, 2024, Orbit)

The planet of Kiln is where the tyrannical Mandate keeps its prison colony, and for …

So here we have someone who has never on a subcommittee, or robbed a bank, or even fiddled his taxes, but the algorithm looked into his data footprint and electronic pareidolia did the rest.

Alien Clay by  (68%)

New vocabulary: pareidolia

The perception of apparently significant patterns are recognizable images, especially faces, in random or accidental arrangements of shapes and lines.

This is the second use in this book of this new word for me. I love this word, because people are pattern making animals. so much so that we'll gladly make false patterns.

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Lisa Harding: Wildelings (2025, HarperCollins Publishers)

Tense story with uncertain motivations

The Wildelings by Lisa Harding was on a 'dark academia' reading list I came across. I don't know if it fits into that category. Still, it takes place at a fictional Dublin university (named after Oscar Wilde) and deals with some dark elements of human nature, so sure.

The story revolves around Jessica and Linda, two friends who met as girls in their small town, and who have come to Wilde together. Jessica is a pretty, talented, and ambitious young woman with aspirations in theater. Linda, on the other hand, came from a difficult home life and was essentially adopted by Jessica and her stepmom. Linda is shy, unsure of herself, and afraid of attention. From the beginning, Jessica has had a dominant position in the relationship, never seeing Linda as any threat to her popularity or social standing.

At Wilde, they meet Mark, a philosophy student who is in …