Critiques et Commentaires

Llaverac

Llaverac@bookwyrm.social

A rejoint ce serveur il y a 3 années, 10 mois

Currently interested in queer books and obscure comics [he/him]

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Stéphane Piatzszek, Benoît Blary: L’Homme qui aimait les plantes (Hardcover, French language, 2023, Soleil)

Les plantes médicinales sont au cour des médecines traditionnelles et conventionnelles depuis deux millénaires. 80 …

L’Homme qui aimait les plantes

Evoque divers moments de la vie de Jacques Fleurentin, en effleurant beaucoup d'aspects de son étude des plantes médicinales mais sans les approfondir. La narration n'est pas un modèle de clarté non plus.

a terminé la lecture de Ramen Wolf and Curry Tiger Vol. 2 par Emboss (Ramen Wolf and Curry Tiger, #2)

Emboss: Ramen Wolf and Curry Tiger Vol. 2 (Paperback, 2023, Seven Seas Entertainment, LLC) Aucune note

Jiro, the "Ramen Wolf," is devoted to his appetite. Seeing how happily he eats his …

It's not the best manga ever: the pacing could be better for instance, and the way some chapters end feels wonky. I like it a lot anyway, because the art looks great, the titular ramen wolf is really cute and I love how INTENSE he is about the things he love (i.e. ramen). And I appreciate how earnest the story is, which makes me forget that the storytelling could be better.

a commenté All Systems Red par Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #1)

Martha Wells: All Systems Red (EBook, 2017, Tor.com)

"As a heartless killing machine, I was a complete failure."

In a corporate-dominated spacefaring future, …

I thought I would like it more, given its reputation? (I'd give it a: ★★★☆☆)

To be fair, it's not every day that you read a story about a murderbot with a dry sense of humor and whose aim is to half-ass its job as much as possible to watch serials in peace (but who gets attached to its human clients more than it thought it would). Maybe it just hit different after having being exposed to the concept of "quiet quitting" many many many times on social media.

a commenté Silver in the Wood par Emily Tesh (The Greenhollow Duology, #1)

Emily Tesh: Silver in the Wood (Paperback, 2019, Tom Doherty Associates) Aucune note

There is a Wild Man who lives in the deep quiet of Greenhollow, and he …

At the end of the free sample I thought that the setting was great but I sometimes had a hard time finding the behavior of the characters credible.

I finally read the whole thing for the aforementioned setting and my opinion stayed the same: I would read more stories about enchanted forests and faes, but it would be nice if I wasn't often wondering "why on Earth does he behave like that? that makes no sense??"

a commenté The Empress of Salt and Fortune par Nghi Vo (The Singing Hills Cycle, #1)

Nghi Vo: The Empress of Salt and Fortune (Paperback, 2020, Tor)

With the heart of an Atwood tale and the visuals of a classic Asian period …

I had a hard time really getting into the story: during the first half I was mostly pushing through, telling myself that it was only ~100 pages long and that, at least, it would be over soon.

BUT there's a very subtle story that unfolds slowly, and that gets very satisfying at the end. I was glad I didn't drop the book and will read the next one in the series!

Wolfe Lowenthal: There Are No Secrets (Paperback, 1993, North Atlantic Books) Aucune note

"Wolfe Lowenthal's quiet little memoir will with window-opening wisdom reinforce, I think, my view of …

Still deep into my Qigong / Taiji hyperfixation.

This one was easy to read, with some dated/questionable advice, but we're talking about a book published in the 90's, about a guy who was the author's taiji teacher in the 60-70's.

There were also some metaphors that I really liked, e.g. the passages about the cat-like alertness: being relaxed, but not slumped, and alert at the same time.

a commenté The God of Arepo par writing-prompt-s

writing-prompt-s, sadoeuphemist, stu-pot, ciiriianan, Reimena Yee: The God of Arepo (EBook, 2022)

Temples are built for gods. Knowing this a farmer builds a small temple to see …

It's a short read (52 pages), it's available for free and I wholeheartedly recommend it. The year is not over yet, but I'm sure The God of Arepo is going to be my favorite of 2022 ❤️ The original text was already beautiful, but I love how Reimena Yee turned it into a comic.