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ibk@bookwyrm.social

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Piranesi (2020, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc) 5 stars

Piranesi's house is no ordinary building; its rooms are infinite, its corridors endless, its walls …

Even better the second time

4 stars

Content warning Plot point

Grey Nomad (Paperback, Brio Books) 3 stars

Ok

3 stars

I wasn’t expecting much, and my expectations were met. The story is ok, the setting is ok, the characters are ok, the writing is ok. But none are more than ok. I found the intergalactic politics confusing and rather boring, but I know there are those who like that sort of thing. I was confused by the setting: notionally a decade into the future, but somehow the character of Joyce is from a decade (or more) in the past. The paucity of mentions of social media is baffling, especially at the denouement. The knitting motif is a bit hit and miss: sometimes it is the core of Joyce’s being, but then we’ll go for chapters with no mention. It could have been used more. It’s probably only 2 and a half stars really.

2061: Odyssey Three (1988) 3 stars

2061: Odyssey Three is a science-fiction novel by the British writer Arthur C. Clarke, published …

Ok

3 stars

I wasn’t expecting much from this, having been badly burned by reading one of the other “great ideas” authors in the form of Isaac Asimov (he may have had some great ideas, but his writing is third-rate and his characters are poorly drawn…) So I was pleasantly surprised by how easy Clarke is to read (as long as you can get over the inbuilt sexism and colonialism, and the curious devotion to Great Men of Science and Business). But not much happened, really. Short version: there is other life in the solar system, and the Monoliths are full of woo. Most of the book seemed to be setting up for a climax that never really arrived. Probably of interest to Odyssey completists, but there are better books out there.

2061: Odyssey Three (1988) 3 stars

2061: Odyssey Three is a science-fiction novel by the British writer Arthur C. Clarke, published …

Ok

3 stars

I wasn’t expecting much from this, having been badly burned by reading one of the other “great ideas” authors in the form of Isaac Asimov (he may have had some great ideas, but his writing is third-rate and his characters are poorly drawn…) So I was pleasantly surprised by how easy Clarke is to read (as long as you can get over the inbuilt sexism and colonialism, and the curious devotion to Great Men of Science and Business). But not much happened, really. Short version: there is other life in the solar system, and the Monoliths are full of woo. Most of the book seemed to be setting up for a climax that never really arrived. Probably of interest to Odyssey completists, but there are better books out there.

Limberlost (2023, Text Publishing Company) 3 stars

Evocative of Tasmania and the 20th century

3 stars

Content warning Minor plot points and minor theme mentioned

The Invisible Library (Paperback, 2016, Roc) 3 stars

ONE THING ANY LIBRARY WILL TELL YOU: THE TRUST IS MUCH STRANGER THAN FICTION...

Irene …

Not great

2 stars

Some ideas here, but in dire need of better editing. Too many meanderings, too much poor phrasing, too many stereotypes. The last chapter does nothing but set up for a sequel. Sigh. I finished it only because I fell for the Sunk Cost Fallacy (and I hoped it would get better).

This is the story of M. Francisco Fabrigas, explorer, philosopher, and heretical physicist, who took …

A wild ride, possibly in want of a little thinning down

3 stars

An action-and-idea-packed book, which certainly kept me reading. Probably a few too many ideas, to be honest: some of them could have done with a little more development. I would have given it 4 stars (which to me means "would recommend"), but had to deduct a bit. A very solid 3. Not as strong as Suddain's later book.