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enne📚

picklish@books.theunseen.city

Joined 2 years, 1 month ago

I read largely sff, some romance and mystery, very little non-fiction. I'm trying to write at least a little review of everything I'm reading, but it's a little bit of an experiment in progress.

I'm @picklish@weirder.earth elsewhere.

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Don't Sleep with the Dead (Hardcover, 2025, Tordotcom) 3 stars

Nick Carraway―paper soldier and novelist―has found a life and a living watching the mad magical …

Don't Sleep with the Dead

3 stars

This book is a follow-up novella to Nghi Vo's The Chosen and the Beautiful which follows Nick Carraway after the events of the prior book (itself a retelling of The Great Gatsby).

Nghi Vo's writing (as always) is incredible here, and I love the horror-adjacent worldbuilding here of demons and wax women and paper soldiers on top of 1930's New York. This was a fun read, but in retrospect the story as a whole was too thin for me.

Adrift in Currents Clean and Clear (2025, Tor Publishing) 2 stars

Giant turtles, impossible ships, and tidal rivers ridden by a Drowned girl in search of …

Adrift in Currents Clean and Clear

2 stars

Seanan McGuire's Wayward Children series is always a bit hit or miss for me. Usually the non-ensemble books are more to my taste, but this one just didn't hang together for me.

(Sorry for mostly negative review, I'll try to keep this brief.)

This one is backstory for Nadya (who we've met in earlier books) and we get to see her water world of Belryyka that she falls into. I love the wild worldbuilding in all of the portal worlds of this series and this one didn't disappoint. However, plot-wise, (and it's possible that I am misremembering), it felt like the book set out some rules about how this world and doors worked and then violated them.

Sadly, the writing here leans heavy-handed and didactic to me. Yes, we get it, we know that Nadya does not have a right hand, but this book takes such pains to elaborate how …

Time's Agent (2024, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 4 stars

Pocket World–a geographically small, hidden offshoot of our own reality, sped up or slowed down …

Frutero drones call out recorded frutero songs from the beginning of the century, but instead of pulling donkey carts full of fruit collected from the outskirts of the city, now they lug retethered AgroWorld long-time PWs where farmers can indenture themselves for a year relative and come back the same day standard, before their kids even notice they left. Mangoes, bananas, cajuilitos solemán. You can lose your entire life that way, fifty years in just fifty days, working to feed the insatiable beast of humanity.

Time's Agent by 

Time's Agent (2024, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 4 stars

Pocket World–a geographically small, hidden offshoot of our own reality, sped up or slowed down …

Time's Agent

4 stars

This book was a potential book for the #SFFBookClub poll for a while, but I ended up reading anyway because it looked intriguing.

As a reader, it seems like a novella is a hard length to hit; it's hard to have the space for both pacing and sufficient worldbuilding, and it's also hard to have enough runway for the resolution to resonate and feel satisfying. The short of it is that I feel like this novella nailed it for me.

The worldbuilding here is brutal. The book kicks off with idyllic introduction of Raquel working for the Global Institute for the Scientific and Humanistic Study of Pocket Worlds. Pocket worlds are small offshoots of reality, much smaller than our own universe--maybe the size of a meadow or a room or a bag even--and they can run at different time rates to our own universe.

After the protagonist Raquel falls into …

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Wind and Truth (2024, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 5 stars

Dalinar Kholin challenged the evil god Odium to a contest of champions with the future …

Wind and Truth

4 stars

"Well now," Dieno said. "That's a finale."

Maybe it's childhood nostalgia, but every once in a while I get that urge to read a giant fantasy tome, and Brandon Sanderson's work always hits that mark for me. It's never going to be world shattering fiction for me, but it's fun to get lost in the adventure, intricate worldbuilding, and large cast of characters.

Overall, my feelings are that Wind and Truth is a quite solid final book for a five book fantasy series. It sticks the landing on major character arcs and themes, and hits quite satisfying expected (and unexpected) plot moments. One thing it does really well is touching back on previous moments to show new information, as plot points, or as a foil for character changes. On the negative side, this book is an incredibly hefty tome and while it feels like it had a lot of …

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reviewed Countess by Suzan Palumbo

Countess 3 stars

A queer, Caribbean, anti-colonial sci-fi novella, inspired by the Count of Monte Cristo, in which …

I wanted to like this book but it ultimately frustrated

2 stars

The concept is one I really want to like: a twist on the Count of Monte Cristo that recasts it to make racism the motivating factor of all the betrayals, and uses a future setting to make a point about the durability of colonialism. But the pacing is so off that it takes away the impact from most of its own story.

#SFFBookClub

Heavenly Tyrant (Hardcover, 2024, Tundra Books) 4 stars

After suffering devastating loss and making drastic decisions, Zetian finds herself at the seat of …

Heavenly Tyrant

4 stars

Overall feelings: the ideas were fun, the middle felt like it dragged on, and the politics often felt heavy handed

The part of this book that I enjoyed the most and felt like was the strongest was all of the interpersonal dynamics. The first book ends with waking up the legendary emperor Qin Zheng, who in this book takes control immediately. The triangle dynamics of Zetian, Shimin, and Yizhi from the first book are broken up, with Shimin hostaged, Yizhi becoming Qin Zheng's advisor, and Zetian becoming Qing Zheng's wife. There's a lot of good tension between the fact that Qin Zheng is an authoritarian tyrant that rules with violence, but also establishes some policies that try to address inequalities from the previous regime. Zetian loathes his controlling nature, but also finds that he listens and can be extremely reasonable when given policy advice. And, all in the background, the …

The marrow thieves (2017, Dancing Cat Books, an imprint of Cormorant Books Inc.) 3 stars

In a futuristic world ravaged by global warming, people have lost the ability to dream, …

The Marrow Thieves

3 stars

This book is off the #SFFBookClub backlog, and I saw it mentioned on Imperfect Speculation (a blog about disability in speculative fiction).

The novel is set in a post-apocalyptic near future world where most people have lost the ability to dream, and the only "cure" is through the exploitation of bone marrow from indigenous people who still can. The book follows Frenchie, a Métis boy who has lost everybody he cares about and travels with a found family trying to find safety and community. The metaphor here resonates directly with the horrors of Canada past, as armed "recruiters" capture anybody who looks indigenous to send them off to "schools" to extract their bone marrow.

I know this is a YA novel, but I wish some of the characters and the protagonist Frenchie had more depth. Maybe this would land better for somebody else, but I also don't have any room …