Reviews and Comments

73pctGeek

73pctGeek@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 9 months ago

73% geek, the rest is girly bits.

I'm a shy lurker who enjoys friendly interaction but is bad at initiating. I like reading. Find me elsewhere on my blog, on mastodon, on pixelfed.art (art), and pixelfed.social (other stuff).

What my stars mean: ★☆☆☆☆ Hated it ★★☆☆☆ Didn't like it ★★★☆☆ It was OK ★★★★☆ Liked it ★★★★★ Loved it

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Sol Smith: The Autistic's Guide to Self-Discovery (Paperback, 2025, New World Library)

An interesting and validating read

Probably the first book I've read that specifically deals with late-diagnosed autism. While I didn’t find any of the strategies in the book particularly innovative or helpful, the advice seemed slightly more concrete than in other books. Still not actionable enough for me to fully grasp, I think. However, reading this felt very validating. Certain chapters really resonated.

TL;DR I think this is a great book to read early on in an adult diagnosis journey, but I'm still looking for something more.

reviewed Rapport by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #7.5)

Martha Wells: Rapport (EBook, 2025, Tor Publishing Group)

“Rapport: Friendship, Solidarity, Communion, Empathy” is a short story set in the world of Martha …

Too short, but very sweet

Perihelion and its crew try to carry out their mission at a station in the throes of a hostile takeover.

Rapport is a woefully short, but delightful tale that explores more of the relationships between crew and machine intelligences, and is very sweet. I hope we get more of this in future Murderbot books.

Spoiler warning, no SecUnits appear in this short story. Before reading it, I’d have pooh-poohed the idea of Murderbot story without my beloved protagonist. I want MOAR Murderbot! However, now not only do I love Murderbot with all my heart, but Perihelion too.

Sierra Greer: Annie Bot (Paperback, Mariner Books)

Dark, timely sci-fi

Annie was created to be the perfect cuddle bunny companion, but after she was switched to autodidact mode, things are changing. She’s learning.

Greer writes well, and deftly brings up a host of issues for the reader to ponder. I found the first 20-30% of this book absolutely breathtaking and genuinely exciting. Though I didn’t find the ending quite as exquisite, I don’t see how Greer could have ended it in a truly satisfying (to me) way.

A very timely novel that deals with really heavy, dark themes but remains extremely readable. I’ll be reading more Greer novels in the future.

Eric Ugland: Second Story Man (The Bad Guys, #2) (2019)

Needs Moar Kobolds

Clyde is seemingly going straight(ish) in this sequel to “Scamps and Scoundrels”. No longer just out for himself, he's accumulating roommates at an alarming rate, and might even do a few good deeds.

It was fine, but the LitRPG elements really started to grate on me. I'm just not interested enough in the world or the characters (other than the kobolds), to read any of the sequels any time soon. The kobolds, however, were worth the read. I really liked Boris. What I wouldn't give for an all-kobold heist novel. Do a “Lies of Locke Lamora” but make it kobold, and I'd be all over it!

K. J. Parker: The Folding Knife (Paperback, 2010, Orbit)

A cunning protagonist being clever

The trials, tribulations, and machinations of a clever boy who grows up to become First Citizen of the Vesani Republic.

As a very Parker protagonist, Basso is clever, exceedingly cunning, and often very charming, and is always ready with a deft solution to obstacles he saw coming far in advance. Well, almost always.

I'm a sucker for a highly competent and clever protagonist, and I really like the bittersweetness that laces Parker's books. TL:DR If you like Parker's novels and writing style, this is yet another enjoyable read.

Becky Chambers: To Be Taught, If Fortunate (Hardcover, 2019, Hodder & Stoughton)

At the turn of the twenty-second century, scientists make a breakthrough in human spaceflight. Through …

Not my favourite Chambers read

An astronaut chronicles her mission to far-flung worlds, and desperately hopes that someone reads it.

I didn't enjoy this as much as I've relished previous chambers novels. Perhaps it was the novella format, or maybe the subject. It's still a very Chambers book, but somehow missing whatever gives me a frisson of delight every time I finish one.

Glad I read it, but unlike every other Chambers book I've read, I'll probably not reread it. 5 stars to the title however, love it and where it comes from, and that did elicit a shiver of pleasure!

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.

reviewed Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman (Dungeon Crawler Carl, #1)

Matt Dinniman: Dungeon Crawler Carl (Hardcover, 2024, Penguin Publishing Group)

The apocalypse will be televised! Welcome to the first book in the wildly popular and …

Light, fun, and slightly gory.

Marine tech Carl, along with the cat, gets isekai’ed into a “Running Man”esque nightmare of a dungeon crawl.

I was dubious at the start, but it grew on me as I progressed through the book and was a light, enjoyable read. The characters are not interchangeable Emmas, the writing is fine, and often actually amusing when it tries to be funny. This is definitely a book for people who enjoy gaming, TTRPGs, or LitRPGs, I’d not recommend this series to anyone unfamiliar with any of those things. I’ll be reading more of these.

Caroline Madden: The Marriage Vendetta (EBook, english language, Park Row)

Eliza Sheridan is at her wits' end with her husband, Richard. Not only did he …

Too silly and full of self-pity for me

Though blurbed as “darkly funny”, “feminist”, promising a “vindictive marriage therapist”, and using the tagline “revenge is in session”, it was a huge disappointment. It's a tedious book about a dim helicopter parent wallowing in self-pity, her cardboard cut-out “friends”, including a “yummy mummy” caricature, unpleasant husbands, at least one of which is a sex pest, and a child who reads “Dilbert”, all capped with “they all cheered at the end”.

I found it silly, unsatisfying and a waste of time obnoxiously free from anything vaguely fun, or even an iota of revenge. And, Dilbert FFS?!

Alice Feeny: Beautiful Ugly (Hardcover, 2024, Flatiron Books)

Too silly for my tastes

An author, struggling after the disappearance of his wife, takes his agent up on her offer and retreats to an island in order to write his next novel.

This was not for me. Rife with weak characters, and poor writing, the prose is fussy and simplistic with no differentiation between different “voices” or styles of writing. F.ex. “newspaper articles” read like the rest of the prose, lacking any journalistic verisimilitude. I also don’t consider stupid shit which is in no way foreshadowed or supported by the writing a “twist”. Not unfinishable, but a waste of my time.

Barbara Kingsolver: Demon Copperhead (2022, HarperCollins Publishers)

Set in the mountains of southern Appalachia, Demon Copperhead is the story of a boy …

A good read.

A loose retelling of David Copperfield set in 90s(?) Appalachia.

Well-written, and with a strong narrator, the Dickensian characters are easily recognisable, whilst still working after being updated to the modern setting. The abuses young Demon and his fellow children were subject to felt a little too Victorian, but perhaps they are anchored in some horrible reality. The endless sadness of drug abuse began to wear on me, and had I not previously read David Copperfield, I doubt I’d have enjoyed the book as much. Worth the read.

Han Kang: The Vegetarian (EBook, 2016, Hogarth)

Before the nightmare, Yeong-hye and her husband lived an ordinary life. But when splintering, blood-soaked …

Just absolutely not for me

I did not like this at all. Everything I don't enjoy in literary fiction shows up in this book. Tedious unpleasant people acting in bizarre, unfathomable ways while nothing much really happens, and the ending is supremely unsatisfactory.

I find these kinds of books utterly opaque, and I know it's not the book, it's my brain. Yet, I struggled through it, and actually finished, but I really shouldn't have, I despised every sentence.

Karen Brooks: Good Wife of Bath (2022, HarperCollins Publishers)

Goes great with KCD2

Chaucer’s “Wife of Bath” tale reimagined as being told by the good wife herself.

Had I previously read “The Canterbury Tales”, I’m sure I’d have enjoyed “The Good Wife of Bath” even more. My failing didn’t detract from how enjoyable the book was, however. It’s an interesting, nicely written novel grounded in historical detail, and was a sublime pairing to my concurrent play-through of “Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2”.

Some sections felt a little overlong for my tastes, making it harder for me to keep focus, but overall I found it an engaging read.

Guy Gavriel Kay: The Lions of Al-Rassan (Paperback, 2002, Earthlight)

The ruling Asharites of Al-Rassan have come from the desert sands, but over centuries, seduced …

Deliciously tragic

Though there are a handful of Kay’s books I abhor (The Fionavar Tapestry, Ysabel), I enjoy the vast majority a lot. Then there are the ones I simply adore, and The Lions of Al-Rassan is possibly the one I love the most. It was my first Kay novel, and I’ve read it multiple times since.

The setting, a fantasy version of Moorish Spain, the believable characters, and the lyrical prose all come together into a sublimely bittersweet book. I’m a huge sucker for the delicious anguish Kay writes so well, and I’ll no doubt re-read “Lions” again in a couple of years.

reviewed The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett (Shadow of the Leviathan, #1)

Robert Jackson Bennett: The Tainted Cup (2024, Del Rey)

An eccentric detective and her long-suffering assistant untangle a web of magic, deceit, and murder …

Quite liked it

A fantasy murder mystery served with a dollop of Pacific Rim, garnished with a hint of The Goblin Emperor, and a tiny sprig of romance. It was nicely written with interesting world-building and enjoyable characters; Ana, in particular, was a delight. The murder plot and its somewhat deflated resolution kept this at a 3-star rating for me. Though the opportunity is rarely afforded in fantasy whodunits, I like to follow along and solve crimes too! While it didn't guarantee a sequel a place on my to-read list, I might try more from this author.