also misericordiae@kbin.social

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Joined 5 months ago
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Cake day: March 3rd, 2024

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  • Finally started On Stranger Tides by Tim Powers, which has been on my TBR for ages, patiently waiting for me to be in the mood for pirates. I can already see how it inspired the Monkey Island games.

    Finished The Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John le Carré. Solid Cold War espionage plot written during that era, with George Smiley from Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy involved in the background. Like To Catch a Thief, it has some slurs and a questionably large age-gap relationship, but that’s not terribly surprising. Worth a look if you like stories about intelligence services playing human chess.

    Bingo squares: Older Than You Are (1963), What’s Yours Is Mine (HM), Now a Major Motion Picture, Award Winner, (alt) Pseudonymous Work, (alt) A Change in Perspective




  • Started The Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John le Carré, which is fine so far, although I am getting tired of the 1950s/60s women character tropes.

    I put Weak Heart on hold last week, but I might pick it back up again.

    Finished Foul Days by Genoveva Dimova. This was a fun, fast read about a witch who tries to regain her lost powers in a fantasy city, complete with creatures from Bulgarian folklore and a handsome detective. Somewhat similar in vibe and content rating as T. Kingfisher’s fairy tale fantasies or early Robin McKinley, but with much thinner characterization. It did leave some loose ends for the sequel coming out in October, but not so many as to be obnoxious, imo. Oh, and sidenote: the informational pamphlet mentioned by the MC during the story was hidden at the end of my copy, so if you find the creature names confusing, hunt it up.

    Bingo squares: New Release (HM); Eazy, Breazy, Read-zie; Debut Work; (alt) A Change in Perspective.



  • Still working on Foul Days by Genoveva Dimova. It’s fun so far.

    Also started Weak Heart by Ban Gilmartin. It’s not at all what I thought it was going to be (it’s less horror, more supernatural angst), but the writing is good. Their other book is listed as new adult, and I think that probably describes this, as well.

    Finished Dark Star by Oliver K. Langmead. Review is in last week’s thread.

    Bingo squares: Plays With Words, What’s Yours Is Mine (HM), Mashup, Among the Stars (HM) (technically).


  • Finished it over the weekend. Despite descriptions being just a line or two, I still got a good sense of everything, thanks to other, strongly evocative lines (like you expect from poetry). In that way, I liked it quite a bit, and will happily try other verse novels in future.

    However, in terms of story, I don’t think my opinion of Dark Star rises above “fine”. The noir aspect was about what you’d expect, but the worldbuilding (billed as scifi) was too much–or not enough?–dream logic to work for me. Reminded me a fair bit of A Man of Shadows by Jeff Noon, which I also didn’t really jive with.





  • Finished The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson. I had heard this was a good early horror, and an inspiration to Lovecraft, and I definitely glimpsed that in a few places. The rest of it, however, hoo boy, was that a slog to get through. I’d expected the of-the-period prose style/voice, but it really felt like he smooshed several separate stories into one, with excruciating detail in some parts, and a complete lack in others. The only bright spots, for me, were aspects that seemed like proto-versions of things I’m familiar with (namely, the Dark Sign from Dark Souls, Piglins from Minecraft, and the Beach from Death Stranding), although I have no idea if they were actually inspired by this book or not.

    Bingo squares: Older Than You Are (HM), It’s About Time, Among the Stars. May count for Bookception and Stranger in a Strange Land, as well, but ehhh.

    I’m a few pages into a couple of books atm, which I started as treats while I tried to get through The House on the Borderland: Foul Days by Genoveva Dimova, and Dark Star by Oliver Langmead. The latter is a verse novel, which I didn’t realize was a thing! Looking forward to seeing how the experience differs from normal prose.