The Library Book

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It was pretty good, but some chapters dragged a bit. I'm fine that I spent my time reading it, but I probably wouldn't recommend it to any of my bookish friends.

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3 days ago

Roadside Picnic

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Absolutely loved this book. The way humanity reacts to The Visit is so realistic that it took my breath away, it felt like "Yes, that is us, that is exactly how we are." And I loved the writing style, how lots of stuff wasn't explained outright but rather bits and pieces dropped throughout and the reader gets to connect the dots for themselves. Often sci-fi and fantasy writers have to explain new worlds or beings to the reader, but having big chunks of texts that just plop it down in your lap, or monologues where one character explains everything to another character, is so clunky and artificial; it takes me out of the story. This book handles the problem with confidence and style, and is probably the best example of how to do it that I've read so far.


Highly recommend.

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4 days ago

Into the Wild

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When I watched the movie "Into the Wild" many years ago, I was very moved by Chris McCandless and his adventure-gone-wrong. He seemed earnest and moved by the beauty of nature and he fucked up just a little and the consequences were total. However, the Chris McCandless in the book is something completely different. While he still seems earnest and moved by the beauty of nature, he comes off as arrogant and insufferable, gazing at everyone from heights of self-righteousness; I loathe self-righteousness. Yet somehow everyone who met him (in the book) thought Chris was the greatest person ever. I would generally have guessed that the author had a general dislike for McCandless and that it came through in his writing, but over the course of the book it becomes very clear to the reader that this isn't the case at all, and I won't say more in case it borders on spoilers.

So, an interesting book for sure. And I quite like how Krakauer writes, and how he looks at things. I just didn't like Chris McCandless.

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11 days ago

Old Man's War

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The author lays it on a bit thick, but it's still a fun read.

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17 days ago

Dungeon Crawler Carl

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I'm not into video games and don't really know much about them, so if I hadn't been given this book as a Christmas present I never would have known about it. However, I was game (ha!) to give it a try.

In general, it was a fun read with a good mix of action and heart. It definitely will speak more to people who like video games because it is basically a book version of a video game, complete with loads of stats, loot boxes, and lots of gaming terms like NPC, debuff, grinding, and mob (it doesn't mean a group). The book's feeling is weird because it's kind of repetitive - fighting monsters, going through loot boxes & achievements, repeat - but it also has variety in the interactions and encounters Carl and Donut have aside from the monsters. The descriptions of the various loot and spells and monsters was a bit grating, and I started skipping over that stuff because they tell you about it again when the stuff gets used or when the fight with a monster gets going. One of the biggest weaknesses of the book is that it's the first in a series of 8 (as of 2026), which takes away any suspense about if they'll survive the battles they face in this first book.

So will I read the second book? Meh, probably not. Glad I read this first one, but the plot and characters just aren't compelling enough to make me come back for more.

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a month ago

When Books Went to War: The Stories That Helped Us Win World War II

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Somehow I had the idea that this book would be more of a portrait of a selection of books that American soldiers were reading during WWII, with anecdotes and information and quotes from soldiers about each selected book. I had planned to use it as a curated reading list, to be honest. Well that's not what this book is about at all, thankfully, because what it actually talks about is something that I would never have imagined: a program for getting books into the hands of every soldier, books of all types and all across the globe. It talks about how this program was seen as vital to the war effort, and the obstacles that had to be overcome to make it a success (and it was a runaway success).

This book was a real eye-opener for me on multiple facets of WWII, both for the soldiers and for those back home. And thanks to the handy appendix listing every single book that was part of this program, and the anecdotes about individual titles sprinkled throughout the book, I do have quite a nice reading list to dig into.

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a month ago