

This was more of a memoir/tongue-in-cheek nonfiction about the reasons the author reads, with some bonus advice about how we can use her experiences to improve our own reading. It's basically a series of essays about various topics related to reading--everything from the author's early experiences in a library to how to read horror if you're a scared reader to teaching a classroom of students how to appreciate Lincoln in the Bardo to a lot more diverse topics.
Not a lot connects one essay to the next except the author's life and reading, but it was an interesting listen none-the-less. It was a great audiobook for me to listen to, as I feel like if I were reading it I would start getting bored of the meandering-ness of the book. I did get some things out of it, and really liked her approach to working in poetry that I might consider doing, but not a lot will stick with me now that it's done.
I do think the author has a great sense of humor and outlook on life though. It was an amusing book to listen to, if nothing else.
This was more of a memoir/tongue-in-cheek nonfiction about the reasons the author reads, with some bonus advice about how we can use her experiences to improve our own reading. It's basically a series of essays about various topics related to reading--everything from the author's early experiences in a library to how to read horror if you're a scared reader to teaching a classroom of students how to appreciate Lincoln in the Bardo to a lot more diverse topics.
Not a lot connects one essay to the next except the author's life and reading, but it was an interesting listen none-the-less. It was a great audiobook for me to listen to, as I feel like if I were reading it I would start getting bored of the meandering-ness of the book. I did get some things out of it, and really liked her approach to working in poetry that I might consider doing, but not a lot will stick with me now that it's done.
I do think the author has a great sense of humor and outlook on life though. It was an amusing book to listen to, if nothing else.

"You'd have to be a bold man to bet your life on what I'd dare. How bold are you?"
Now we're talking.
Despite having some issues with the first book being slow, the cast feeling a bit huge, and having no real idea where things were headed until the last third of the book, I still came away from it mostly enjoying the experience. I went into book two with some cautious optimism as a result, and I have to say this exceeded my expectations nicely.
Things pick up where the first book left off, with all the same character POVs, plot lines, and motivations intact. Because the first book spent so much time setting up the world, this is all flash and no filler. We have city sieges, an epic world-spanning journey, personal journeys of self discovery and realization, a budding romance(?), and more character defining moments than you can shake a Shanka at. I love that the author manages to make this book simultaneously dark and humorous, without it becoming too forced. Everything has a point and a purpose, and it took until book two for me to see that.
Just an excellent second book overall. I've already started on the third.
"You'd have to be a bold man to bet your life on what I'd dare. How bold are you?"
Now we're talking.
Despite having some issues with the first book being slow, the cast feeling a bit huge, and having no real idea where things were headed until the last third of the book, I still came away from it mostly enjoying the experience. I went into book two with some cautious optimism as a result, and I have to say this exceeded my expectations nicely.
Things pick up where the first book left off, with all the same character POVs, plot lines, and motivations intact. Because the first book spent so much time setting up the world, this is all flash and no filler. We have city sieges, an epic world-spanning journey, personal journeys of self discovery and realization, a budding romance(?), and more character defining moments than you can shake a Shanka at. I love that the author manages to make this book simultaneously dark and humorous, without it becoming too forced. Everything has a point and a purpose, and it took until book two for me to see that.
Just an excellent second book overall. I've already started on the third.

Added to listSci Fiwith 50 books.
Updated a reading goal:
Read 60 books in 2024
Progress so far: 25 / 60 41%

"The new beginning they had been looking for was the middle of someone else's story."
Man, this was a fun sci-fi story. It felt like someone put Mass Effect and Star Wars in a blender and made a delightful space opera smoothie out of it. Great story, great characters, a ton of world (universe?) building, it just felt a bit overwhelming at times.
So the idea here is that humanity back home is fighting a losing battle with itself. The planet is overcrowded, the resources are depleted, and it's either find a new home out amongst the stars or die a smothered, miserable death. Luckily for everyone involved, we have Alvera and her hand picked crew on hand to scout the stars and find a new place for us to live (and, y'know, start the cycle all over again, but nevermind that). Unfortunately, their first jaunt out into space runs them headlong into some uncomfortable truths about the universe, and also puts them right in the middle of a galactic conflict, a (maybe) impending universal threat, and a coup that breaks up her merry band. Life isn't easy out in the universe, evidently.
So, there's a lot going on in this book, which is what prevented me from really giving this the 5 stars I was considering. The author is really talented at crafting interesting, unique characters, worlds, and motivations, but the problem is she has too many good ideas at once so you're never really sure where to look. After the initial push into the universe, the crew breaks up into different stories all tangentially related to the main plot, but also containing their own side quests that sort of make the book feel like a short story compilation. Which isn't a bad thing! I quite enjoyed these different stories, and there's definitely enough main plot movement sprinkled throughout to not feel too bogged down. It just sometimes felt like a bit much.
But the characters were really well done and distinct, and I enjoyed them all basically equally. I think the Rivus/Tarvan friend/conflict story is my favorite thus far, but they're all pretty great. With a cast as large as what you find here, it's a delightful surprise to not have similar characters blending together or a POV or two that I didn't like. The writing is also pretty great, engaging, and I can honestly say that I'm not quite sure where the main story is headed yet.
I'm trying to make it this year's goal to actually finish series I start, so I've already started book two. Can't wait to see where this one goes.
"The new beginning they had been looking for was the middle of someone else's story."
Man, this was a fun sci-fi story. It felt like someone put Mass Effect and Star Wars in a blender and made a delightful space opera smoothie out of it. Great story, great characters, a ton of world (universe?) building, it just felt a bit overwhelming at times.
So the idea here is that humanity back home is fighting a losing battle with itself. The planet is overcrowded, the resources are depleted, and it's either find a new home out amongst the stars or die a smothered, miserable death. Luckily for everyone involved, we have Alvera and her hand picked crew on hand to scout the stars and find a new place for us to live (and, y'know, start the cycle all over again, but nevermind that). Unfortunately, their first jaunt out into space runs them headlong into some uncomfortable truths about the universe, and also puts them right in the middle of a galactic conflict, a (maybe) impending universal threat, and a coup that breaks up her merry band. Life isn't easy out in the universe, evidently.
So, there's a lot going on in this book, which is what prevented me from really giving this the 5 stars I was considering. The author is really talented at crafting interesting, unique characters, worlds, and motivations, but the problem is she has too many good ideas at once so you're never really sure where to look. After the initial push into the universe, the crew breaks up into different stories all tangentially related to the main plot, but also containing their own side quests that sort of make the book feel like a short story compilation. Which isn't a bad thing! I quite enjoyed these different stories, and there's definitely enough main plot movement sprinkled throughout to not feel too bogged down. It just sometimes felt like a bit much.
But the characters were really well done and distinct, and I enjoyed them all basically equally. I think the Rivus/Tarvan friend/conflict story is my favorite thus far, but they're all pretty great. With a cast as large as what you find here, it's a delightful surprise to not have similar characters blending together or a POV or two that I didn't like. The writing is also pretty great, engaging, and I can honestly say that I'm not quite sure where the main story is headed yet.
I'm trying to make it this year's goal to actually finish series I start, so I've already started book two. Can't wait to see where this one goes.