Critiques et Commentaires

David Bremner Compte verrouillé

bremner@book.dansmonorage.blue

A rejoint ce serveur il y a 2 ans, 4 mois

computer scientist, mathematician, photographer, human. Debian Developer, Notmuch Maintainer, scuba diver

Much of my "reading" these days is actually audiobooks while walking.

FediMain: bremner@mathstodon.xyz

bremner@bookwyrm.social is also me. Trying a smaller instance to see if the delays are less maddening.

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a publié une critique de Nettle & Bone par T. Kingfisher

T. Kingfisher: Nettle & Bone (Hardcover, 2022, Tor Books) 5 étoiles

After years of seeing her sisters suffer at the hands of an abusive prince, Marra—the …

Like a fairy tale that characters in a T. Kingfisher novel might tell each other.

4 étoiles

That's it, that's the whole review.

If you like T. Kingfisher, you will like this book. It starts off a bit grim, but by the end it felt like a cozy tale of cold blooded vengeance.

a publié une critique de Who Fears Death par Nnedi Okorafor

Nnedi Okorafor: Who Fears Death (Paperback, 2011, DAW) 5 étoiles

Born into post-apocalyptic Africa to a mother who was raped after the slaughter of her …

powerful and important

5 étoiles

I finished this some time ago, but I still can't really do it justice in a review. Some of the themes and world-building (and even one of the characters!) is shared with the later novel Noor, but this novel is somehow more elemental. For me the two most powerful themes were the codification of hatred as religion and how sex and reproductive biology inform politics (in the small).

Content warnings: pervasive misogyny, sexual violence, and racism play important roles in the plot.

a publié une critique de The Babylon Eye par Masha du Toit

Masha du Toit: The Babylon Eye (EBook, 2016, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform) 5 étoiles

Elke Veraart is in prison. She used to be an eco-terrorist, hunting down poachers to …

cyberpunk detective with a modern sensibility, plus dogs

4 étoiles

Somehow this reminds me of the "Recovery Man" books by Kristine Katherine Rusch. A lone detective fights for the underdog (literal dog in this case), fighting against corporate interests in a high tech setting with aliens. The aliens here are quite relatable, rather than implacable, but they still hold most of the cards. By modern sensibility I mean little things like the protagonist is lesbian, but nobody makes a big deal out of it, including her.