Fun sci-fi story as a group of hacker friends takes on a drug cartel.

Neil Gaiman makes an assortment of stories from mythology his own with his own telling. Very enjoyable, as if you are sitting around a fire and ask “Neil, tell me a story,” and he does.

Fascinating insight into an autistic mind. Poetic and kaleidoscopic.

An odd little tale of a seeming simpleton who is not stupid but is a pawn in a bizarre plot.

Well written, but short, a bit too heavy on “lucky coincidence”.

Brandon Sanderson reinvents his own world in clever ways.

Well written and great insight into apartheid and post-apartheid South Africa, as well as a portrait of his mother who worked around it.

An interesting examination of “historicity” and “authenticity” of artifacts, in the context of an alternate timeline where America lost WWII.

Ok, not as good as previous Freakanomics books. Felt rather short. Tries to go into methodology but doesn't go deep enough, instead more time is spent on stories.

Rife with typos and somewhat amateurish writing, but a great story and winning personality make it well worth a read. Illustrations are messed up in the Kindle version.

Aliens come to Earth, and seem to solve all humanity's problems... but what are their true motivations?

An interesting utopian vision, some very deep philosophical musings on the purpose of life, and an ending I found very moving.

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