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Humph ([personal profile] spiralsheep) wrote in [community profile] booknook2025-05-28 08:42 pm
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RIP (Read In Progress) Wednesday

What are you reading?

Weds is the time, is the place, is the motion,
Weds is the day we are reading....
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[personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi 2025-05-28 08:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Endless Night by Agatha Christie. I suppose it's a re-read but I've forgotten the plot and none of the characters are likable. Some Cadfael (12 century monk) mysteries. I put down my Inspector Rebus. I don't know when I'll pick it up again. I have the 600-page The Seamstress to read, too. TBR pile is growing brick by brick.
Edited 2025-05-28 20:04 (UTC)
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[personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi 2025-05-28 09:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, good. I have only read the first few pages but it is one of my friend's favorite books and I have a 'recommended' square on my bingo. I had to order it through the state library system because we didn't have it locally so I should get on it because it'll have to go back sometime and, you know, 600 pages.

Ah, interesting. Ha, ha, that disappointing. Yeah, why would you make nobody likable? Not one? And we haven't got to the murder yet so that's disappointing. I have my thoughts about what the 'twist' will be but I really don't care. They can all hang as far as I'm concerned.
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[personal profile] peaceful_sands 2025-05-28 08:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Finally I have finished 'Nausicaa of the Valley of the Winds' box set (1000+ pages in a dual hardback set) - I didn't love this although I know it has a real following in some parts - I actually found it quite relentlessly depressing although this may be my frame of mind at the moment.

I also finished listening to 'The Mistake' by Wendy James yesterday and 'Adrift in Currents Clean and Clear' by Seanan McGuire today as it's only short. Next up is 'The Golden Enclaves' by Naomi Novik - I'm not loving this series like I did with Uprooted but I'll stick with it to the end of this volume. In physical format, I'm almost at the end of 'Earthsea - the first four books' by Ursula le Guin (still - hopefully it'll be finished before the end of the month) and 'The Murderbot Diaries Vol 2' by Martha Wells. I think I need to look through my TBR pile for a few things that I'm excited to read when I've got through these (although the Murderbot ones are good - I loved the audio versions but this is my first opportunity to have the in print versions).
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[personal profile] petrea_mitchell 2025-05-28 08:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Just finished reading Valentine Pontifex. Great book, but like with Lord Valentine's Castle, I am startled to see how much this work which is just remembered as a cool planetary romance is about the relationship between the planet's many colonial species and its original inhabitants, in a way very similar to the politics around the United States and Native Americans. I am especially surprised that it's never come up in any discussion I've seen about sf and its relation to and interrogation of colonialist attitudes.
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[personal profile] silversea 2025-05-28 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)
I finished reading They Bloom at Night by Trang Thanh Tran and it was okay. Read The Floating World by Axie Oh afterwards. I think I've just really outgrown YA literature at this point, everything have been "just fine but would not continue/reread."

I started The Anti-Ableist Manifesto by Tiffany Yu last night for a change. This appears to be very surface-level so far, which reminds me that I should probably pick up some more indepth books on disability in the future.
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[personal profile] lycomingst 2025-05-28 11:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Just started, A Difficult Woman by Alice Kessler-Harris. A bio of Lillian Hellman.
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[personal profile] pedanther 2025-05-29 12:24 am (UTC)(link)
If you'd asked yesterday, I would have said Jirel of Joiry, a collection of sword & sorcery stories that were originally published in Weird Tales in the 1930s alongside Conan the Barbarian - the point of interest being that these are written by a female author and the tough warrior protagonist is also female. I gave up on it yesterday after reading the first three stories and deciding I wasn't getting anything out of them: the protagonist has some imaginatively weird adventures but we barely get to know anything about her as a person so I never felt like there were meaningful stakes.

I'm still working through A Choice of Catastrophes. I've been increasingly encountering reminders that the book is fifty years old: the section on asteroid impacts doesn't say a word about the dinosaur-killer asteroid, for instance, because that wasn't in the conversation yet in 1979. I've just started the section on ice ages, and it'll be interesting to see if 1979 Asimov has anything to say about anthropogenic climate change.
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[personal profile] drawnecromancy 2025-05-29 12:44 am (UTC)(link)
It's a shame Jirel of Joiry didn't end up being that interesting ! At least I hope A Choice of Catastrophes is more enjoyable to you, personally I do enjoy realizing how differently people thought about things in decades past :)
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[personal profile] inchoatewords 2025-05-29 12:39 am (UTC)(link)
I just finished The Tin Drum by Gunter Grass; it took me ten days to get through. It is a bit long but also it was a little difficult and to be honest, I'm not sure I fully understood it! I know it's allegorical about WWII, but there were still parts that were confusing.
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[personal profile] drawnecromancy 2025-05-29 12:42 am (UTC)(link)
I'm reading "Mrs Victoria buys a brothel", and so far it's lovely, delightful, and really funny ! I'm not usually one for Far West stuff or romance books, but the pitch from the author sounded like pure fun, so I wanted to try. And I'm having a great time :)
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[personal profile] zenigotchas 2025-05-29 12:45 am (UTC)(link)
Spawn and a new gaming creepypasta I've never heard of before (Training.bsp). Aaah I have too many books I wanna read >_
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[personal profile] cornerofmadness 2025-05-29 02:08 am (UTC)(link)
The Smoke in his Voice - an indie book in desperate need of editing (great title and cover though)
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[personal profile] hafnia 2025-05-29 03:20 am (UTC)(link)
I'm about halfway through The River Has Roots and will finish it as soon as I have time to read again. I'm enjoying it! :)
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[personal profile] elizalavelle 2025-05-29 03:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm really excited to read this one, it sounded fantastic!
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[personal profile] silversea 2025-05-29 06:22 pm (UTC)(link)
That was a great book, I really enjoyed the fairy tale vibes!
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[personal profile] soricel 2025-05-29 05:32 am (UTC)(link)
About halfway through Ghosts by Dolly Alderton. Breezy, quippy, normie, tender. Lots about dating and the shittiness of millennial men, but also (I think) lots about trying to create/maintain a sense of stability to one's memories and identity, which is maybe one of the things people use long-term monogamous relationships for. The narrative voice gets in my head and makes me want to try making clever observations about people.
Edited 2025-05-29 05:34 (UTC)
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[personal profile] elizalavelle 2025-05-29 03:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm reading The Appeal by Janice Hallett. It's an interesting way of presenting a mystery in that we're essentially reading case files of correspondence and the occasional legal note. I have 100 pages to go and have a guess at the whodunit but it's really a guess at this point. It's been a fun read so far.