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36: When The Moon Hits Your Eye, by John Scalzi.
Not really a fan of this type of book. All disparate stories, tied together by the Moon turning to cheese. There were some good parts, and we did follow some characters through a few of the anecdotes, but largely speaking not enough to
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35: The Ending Writes Itself, by Evelyn Clarke.
Disappointed with this. The characters are fine, the premise and set-up is interesting, but it takes too long to get going and then everyone dies in a rush. And the ending(s) all felt a bit meh, especially as to why the killer did it.
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34: Murder at World’s End, by Ross Montgomery.
Interesting little murder-mystery. Made better by Decima’s endless swearing.
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33: The Pilgrims Of The Damned, hy Steve McHugh.
Nice readable adventure for Miles and Church. It does feel a little bit easy for Miles, with even a Dusk not proving a challenge for him, but an enjoyable read even so.
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32: First Hunt, by Steve McHugh.
Nice quick novella about Church’s first hunt. Slightly disappointed this wasn’t told from Church’s POV though.
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31: Exhausted, by Anna Katharina Shaffner.
Thought this would be some good insight into exhaustion/burnout, but was a rather bland shopping list of items that related to it. Lacked personality and analysis felt shallow rather than insightful.
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30: Strange Houses, by Uketsu.
A decent start, but then it meandered towards the absurd with the “explanation” and subsequent possible twist. An easy quick read for all that. So worth a try to see if you enjoy it.
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29: Men At Arms, by Terry Pratchett.
This was the first Discworld novel I ever owned. Hardly surprising it remains one of my favourites.
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28: Fevered Star, by Rebecca Roanhorse.
A Story wherein little of much import happens, and that which does makes little sense.
These are Broken Binding editions, so I tried to give these books a fair shout, but I think it’s time. This story isn’t for me.
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27: Lords And Ladies, by Terry Pratchett.
It’s Discworld, so there are some great bits in it, but overall I’ve never quite taken to this one. Not sure why.
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26: Small Gods, by Terry Pratchett.
One of my favourite Discworld novels, which says a lot, given how many great ones there are. The re-read continues. Only two years since the last one (whoops. Got distracted).
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25: Green And Deadly Things, by Jenn Lyons.
Enjoyable quick read, although the lack of explanation about what is going on does make it difficult to follow. Still don’t really understand the vines thing. Or the maze. Or the chaos/order. Or…
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24: Black Sun, by Rebecca Roanhorse.
Bit disappointing. It all feels a bit underdone. Serapio’s past needed more detail. Xiala’s past too. The ship journey felt needlessly rushed. The politics of the Sun Priest and crew needed a lot more info and explanation as to why Naranpah was so
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23: Strange Pictures, by Uketsu. (translated by Jim Rion).
A little bit odd, but an interesting story, with the way it all comes together at the end for the big reveal feeling quite satisfying.
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22: Operation Bounce House, by Matt Dinniman.
Didn’t take much away from this one. It’s all a bit lacklustre. The humour, the storyline, the twisty ending…
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21: Nettle and Bone, by T. Kingfisher.
Some good bits, but I didn’t enjoy it as much as last one.
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20: Little Red Death, by Alexandra Benedict.
It’s a twisty murder mystery with a very odd fantasy element to it. Interesting to read, but not sure it is that successful.
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19: Labyrinth’s Heart, by M A Carrick.
Glad this is done. I didn’t enjoy it much. Went on for 100 pages too long, with a load of “just one more thing”. So much of it remained unexplained. I get show, don’t tell. But this wasn’t so much show as endless bafflement. And the weird twist
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17&18: Deep Black and Whalesong by Miles Cameron
Decent sci-fi read, though struggled with the technical detail and the whys of certain events.
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#22
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
@tananarivedue.bsky.social ‘s first novel had me biting my nails and staying up way past my bedtime this week. A tense, highly original mind twister that delivered great characters, great writing, and some truly spooky moments. I loved it!
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#21
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
A solid, thought provoking collection by the late, great Octavia Butler. Every story was worth the time. Still woefully behind on my reading of her work; a task I should have taken on many moons ago, but I’ll definitely be making up for it all year long.
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#20
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Would have loved a little more meat and background on some of the more witchy bits teased throughout this very dark, very brief grief/folk horror story, but I still loved it! Angela Slatter has become a fast favorite and I plan on reading all of her books.
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#19
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
This was a reread, and I loved this sequel to The Shining so much more the second time around.
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#18
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
@keithrosson.bsky.social is now three for three with me, and I can’t wait to read everything he has out there. Coffin Moon is a cinematic, page turning , brilliantly written vampire masterpiece. One of the best I’ve read all year. This book seriously rocked!
📚📚📚
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16: Cabin, by Patrick Hutchison.
Enjoyed this fairly simple read about a guy and his adventures in cabin building. The writing style has some elements of Bill Bryson and, while I was hoping for a few more misadventures, overall was an interesting read.
Now, let’s go build a decking.
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#17
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Kind of like fairy tale Survivor meets the Bruce Lee film Game Of Death- only with a princess. Tamsyn Muir’s Princess Floralinda is a hilarious, gory and ultra violent creature filled dungeon crawl that turns the classic Rapunzel story on its head. And I loved the ending!
The Path Of Thorns by A.G. Slatter
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#16
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
My introduction to @angelaslatter.bsky.social ‘s work and I loved everything about this. A beautifully written gothic horror/fantasy mix, full of awesome characters and shocking surprises, all set in her ongoing “Sourdough” universe, and I can’t wait to read more!
📚📚📚
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15: A Judgement Of Powers, by Benedict Jacka.
Enjoyed this, but it does feel like the Verus playbook. Stephen, caught between two major powers. Wants to be neutral or free from both. Still, different enough to keep the interest.
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14: An Instruction In Shadow, by Benedict Jacka.
Second re-read book in the drucraft series, nice and quick to get through in advance of the latest book.
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13: An Inheritance Of Magic, by Benedict Jacka.
Re-read now I have the third book in the series. Enjoyable, easy read this one. Back learning about drucraft again.