quillpunk: garak from DS9 asking "are you distracted, doctor?" (garak)
[personal profile] quillpunk posting in [community profile] booknook
It is once more Wednesday. What are you reading? 👀

Date: 2024-04-24 02:00 pm (UTC)
starfleetbrat: photo of a cool geeky girl (Default)
From: [personal profile] starfleetbrat
Reading Quarter Share (Golden Age of the Solar Clipper, #1) by Nathan Lowell which I would call cozy sci-fi. I'm about 12 chapters in and its been pretty low stakes and a bit of found family and generally just kind of chill. Im enjoying it a lot.

Date: 2024-04-24 04:53 pm (UTC)
blueshiftofdeath: walter white happily holding out a pizza (pleased)
From: [personal profile] blueshiftofdeath

I'm reading Stolen Focus by Johann Hari. So far so good!

Date: 2024-04-24 09:27 pm (UTC)
enchantedsleeper: Hello Kitty holding a pencil (Default)
From: [personal profile] enchantedsleeper
I've been working my way through the Discworld City Watch books (re-reading) and I've just started Jingo. I keep meaning to also start something new but I'm lazy about it. I have so many good graphic novels waiting...

Date: 2024-04-25 12:48 am (UTC)
ebaths: “Portrait of a Young Woman” by Vigee-Le Brun (Default)
From: [personal profile] ebaths

I’m reading Freddy’s Book by John Gardner. It’s a book-within-a-book; the frame story really captured me, but the book-within has been less gripping.

I picked it up from a Little Free Library! The cover/title interested me, and the pull quote from an Ursula K. Le Guin review on the back solidified my interest. We’ll see if I can get through it alright XD

Date: 2024-04-25 02:24 am (UTC)
sixbeforelunch: vintage computers in front of a desert landscape, no text (old computers)
From: [personal profile] sixbeforelunch

They Do It With Mirrors by Agatha Christie. It's a Miss Marple novel. I haven't read it before, but I'm sure I saw an adaptation at some point. Can't remember how it ends, though. I'm about 2/3 of the way through, and enjoying it for the most part, excepting the casual racism that keeps popping up.

Date: 2024-04-25 07:49 am (UTC)
peaked: PETER. (pic#15366009)
From: [personal profile] peaked
So close to finishing Such Sharp Teeth by Rachel Harrison. Still enjoying it!

Reading the Dance of Dragons in Fire and Blood by GRRM. Got up to the section I wanted to read to… and now I think I'm going to mark it as read because I can't be bothered reading on. (I forgot how the world was neck-deep in misogyny. :/)

Think I will start my Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo reread tonight!
Edited Date: 2024-04-25 08:56 am (UTC)

Date: 2024-04-25 01:09 pm (UTC)
wearing_tearing: ([stock] library)
From: [personal profile] wearing_tearing
Currently almost done with Welcome to the Hyunam-Dong Bookshop by Hwang Bo-reum! This has been such a cozy and amazing read. I'm reading it via ebook, but am already looking into buying a physical copy so I can annotate it.

Also started The Diablo's Curse by Gabe Cole Novoa! The first two chapters were excellent and I can't wait for the weekend so I can really dive into my reading :D
Edited Date: 2024-04-25 01:09 pm (UTC)

Date: 2024-04-25 05:36 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] einhornmaedchen
(Hello, I am new! :))
I am currently reading "Gestohlene Vergangenheit" ("Stolen Past"), the second volume in a series of historical novels taking place in the age of Vikings. The main character is a woman called Linea who has been made ruler of a Norwegian village and is heading out to discover new shores. The author is called Smilla Johansson and she's from Germany. Sadly, I don't think the books have been translated yet :(

They are very well-written and exciting, even for someone like me who has never been particularly interested in vikings.

Date: 2024-04-26 01:24 am (UTC)
white_aster: stacks of books (books)
From: [personal profile] white_aster
I DID finish Four Lost Cities by Annalee Newitz, which was good nonfiction about "abandoned" ancient metropolises. I read books like that for insights into how different cultures arrange themselves, and this book did a good job of that. It did suffer from the usual archaeology problem of them just...not knowing exactly what had happened because there were no written records, but still...interesting read.

Now I am reading The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett,(uuuuuh fantasy Sherlockian mystery in a world that's a cross between Standard Eurocentric Medieval, Morrowind, and Pacific Rim? I've yet to figure out if I'm going to find the main detectives boring and wish that the setting had some different main characters) and Armageddon Science: The Science of Mass Destruction by Brian Clegg (nonfiction about various weapons of mass destruction and apocalypse scenarios.) The former came up on my library loans, and the second is an actual physical book from my bookshelf that I picked up because watching the Fallout TV show gave me End of the World on the brain. So far Armageddon Science is ok, but he lost points for starting with the DUMBEST and least plausible armageddon scenario: that the LHC would create weird runaway quantum effects that destroy the universe. >_> Not sure what he or his editors were thinking, there. But now we're into nuclear bombs, which is more of what I'm wanting. :D

I gave up on Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky. I usually self-select better and don't DNF things, but this was the first of his books I'd read, and he's just not the sort of writer that I enjoy overmuch. Very creative worldbuilding, very nice hardish science, but...gosh, I got about 17% in and there wasn't yet a character I knew enough about to care what happened to them. And that's just a deathknell for me: I need good characterization. And my loan was expiring, and it was SO LONG of a book, and I was reading reviews and heard how there was a lot of churn in characters and I just...decided to part ways with it.

Date: 2024-04-26 05:48 am (UTC)
svgurl: (Default)
From: [personal profile] svgurl
I just started The Strangler Vine by M.J. Carter, a mystery set in British ruled India about a former soldier and a secret political agent who team up to track down a missing writer. So far, it's interesting. :)

Profile

a nook just for the books

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    1 23
456 78910
111213 14151617
181920 21222324
252627 28293031

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 30th, 2025 01:20 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios