First half of this book is unequivocally great and everyone should read it. Pages 349-412 should be skimmed - badly edited, too dense and repetitive. Also skip the audiobook, this needs to be read in color.

This book weaves sci-fi, history, adventure, and philosophy in a way that is at once intensely relevant, intellectually stimulating, and soothingly fanciful.

Highly recommended, I found it hard to put down.

The usual Sanderson excellence. The lows in this book dragged a bit longer than I felt they had in the past, which meant I came away from several listening sessions more depressed than entertained! Still would recommend.

Gripping and fairly dark. Compelling characters and threads. Fascinating how Jemisin plays with concepts of personal freedom / self-determinism vs. manipulation and nature vs. nurture.

Read the previous edition which is free online. Generally stuff I was already familiar with, but good to be reminded and see some of the evidence and avoidance methods.

Everyone - especially every American in the current political climate - should read this. It changed the way I think about people and their morals.

There are amazing concepts in this book and the rest of the series, but the translation reads extremely slowly. After resorting to skimming this book, I enjoyed reading the Wikipedia summaries of the following two books.

Some really great hard sci-fi stuff in here, but it's extremely slow and preoccupied with politicking in a way that brings narcissism too close to the center of the story for me to enjoy it much.

didn't actually finish because it seemed like the book was just going to continue being more of the same.

Good hard sci-fi

Ugh. I regret reading this. Well written, insightful about the human condition, solid page-turner, but I wish I hadn't let that pull me in.

so good!
Listened to the audiobook - it kept me spellbound wanting to know what would happen next, even though I was simultaneously cringing knowing that Kvoth was about to do something stupid.

Amazing. It's like reading three novels worth of top-quality fiction, but it's real.

Maybe it's because I just finished the glacial The Time Ships, but this felt gripping and new.

Incredible, cheeky, funny writing and some true gems of New Zealand, some of them off the beaten path, some closer to it.

This heartfelt story unfortunately pivots on a logical fallacy - when an ideology purports to be all-important, does that mean you must embrace it?
Lewis' answer appears to be “yes”.

Moral of the story: Yes, a society can screw itself enough to not recover. ...And let that be a lesson to us.

Joyful, hilarious, vulnerable. Everything you expect from hyperbole and a half.

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