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Date: 2025-06-18 07:59 pm (UTC)https://spiralsheep.dreamwidth.org/672259.html
My current reading
70. When the Earth was Green, by Riley Black, 2025, non-fiction popular palaeontology.
71. Inventing the Renaissance, by Ada Palmer, 2025, non-fiction history / historiography. Very good so far, apart from one typo in which Jacob Burckhardt lived to the age of 169. Nice.
72. Book published in the 1920s, read for a reading challenge. Not a great choice, apart from the fact it's short, but I've read most of the usual suspects from that decade. I probably should've asked for recs of less well-known books, or re-read something I already know I like.
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Date: 2025-06-18 08:10 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2025-06-18 08:16 pm (UTC)I'm a little sad that the later books have deviated from Cleric Chih being a listener/observer, I felt the frame narrative was much stronger with them having a limited role.
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Date: 2025-06-18 08:23 pm (UTC)So far I am liking it a lot.
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Date: 2025-06-18 09:16 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2025-06-18 09:29 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2025-06-19 12:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-06-19 12:22 am (UTC)On the non-fiction side, A Choice of Catastrophes is talking about pandemics and showing its age again.
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Date: 2025-06-19 12:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-06-19 01:40 am (UTC)On paper I'm on "The Monster Baru Cormorant," sequel to "The Traitor Baru Cormorant" and I continue to be riveted! I can't wait to see how this story ends.
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Date: 2025-06-19 02:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-06-19 03:38 am (UTC)* I am almost through the Game Changers series by Rachael Reid. I started with book 2, Heated Rivalry, because it's getting a TV adaptation and now I am reading the whole thing. Series is good, but also very uneven. I'll post about all of them when I am done.
For now, I do have a post on Blood Trail and Heated Rivalry.
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Date: 2025-06-19 04:12 am (UTC)I've got two books I'm still trying to finish. One will have to wait until after the OT, as it requires a lot of Scripture reading to go along with it. This is Women of Easter, and goes back to a couple months before Easter. LOL BUT it is WELL worth the read!! I've just been unable to find time YET to complete the final chapter, the study guide... But I WILL get there!!
Also working on finishing What Got You Here Won't Get You There, which has been derailed by the OT as well but which I've got less than 50 pages left to, and I ended up starting a light read, a book by Trace Adkins, on my first night on the new client while I wait for access to finish kicking in... Lots to learn on the first, and Trace definitely has A LOT of ideas. Can't say I agree with them all, but he WILL make you think!
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Date: 2025-06-19 06:19 am (UTC)Currently reading:
- Cold Eternity by S.A. Barnes (so far, I'm about a third of the way through and things are both starting to get weird and starting to get frustrating because it's obvious I haven't yet been given enough background to figure out if the weirdness is deliberate or just wonky plotting.)
- Into the Broken Lands by Tanya Huff (started slow, and though it's picking up, it's starting to feel repetitive and I'm REALLY not looking forward to another 66% of the book with some of the characters - there's a few incredibly arrogant and entitled characters that I wish would just get eaten by monsters already, but know that at least the one won't be.)
- The Wonder Engine by T. Kingfisher (entertaining enough, though reading this at the same time as The Devils was really messing with me - totally different tones. Also I feel like in later books she realized, oh, wait, maybe leaning so hard on the "gnoles are like dogs" isn't a good look...? Because yeah, the gnole character being treated like a talking dog in this is not a good look.
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Date: 2025-06-19 07:57 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2025-06-19 11:19 am (UTC)As part of my ongoing research on food and World War One I picked up a reprint copy of American Indian Corn (Maize): A Cheap and Wholesome Food" by Charles J. Murphy, edited by Jeannette Norton Young. Murphy worked at the Department of Agriculture in the late 19th century as an expert in corn and it's promotion internationally and it's obvious that he spent a lot of time studying the topic. In addition to recipes from New England and the South, he provides information about how native groups were better at processing the grain for better flavor and increased nutritive value. Those recipes, often more a narrative description than a precise recipe, come from Mexico and the Dakota, Hopi, Zuni, Western Apache and unnamed New England tribes.
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Date: 2025-06-19 01:56 pm (UTC)i'm rereading Dragon Ascending by
Aeraneth, a solo leveling fic that i adore. the worldbuilding just makes my brain brrrr. it's awesome. (also it's made want to reread solo leveling :D)