Subject: Any good books you guys have read lately?
Author:
Posted on: 2019-02-24 13:22:00 UTC
I stumbled across some real treasures this month while cleaning up my bookshelf, and I'm in the mood to talk books.
Subject: Any good books you guys have read lately?
Author:
Posted on: 2019-02-24 13:22:00 UTC
I stumbled across some real treasures this month while cleaning up my bookshelf, and I'm in the mood to talk books.
I've been reading through Berserk, and... yeah, it deserves its reputation. Right from the start, blood, gore, horror, brooding antihero, check.
However, said brooding antihero starts showing some signs of having actual right from the get-go. Now, coming up on the start of the Golden Age arc, I'm really excited to see where it's all going. It just seems generally a little bit better than its peers in the angsty edgy angst angst angst dark fantasy genre.
Lessee... what else? Oooh, ooh! Mogworld! Well, actually I read this one ages ago, but I quite liked it. It's about a bunch of characters in an MMO who have become sentient and are trying to find a way to die because everyone's become immortal. It's by Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw, otherwise known as "The Zero Punctuation Guy" which probably tells if you will or won't like it off the bat if you're familiar with his other work. I found it a very appreciable bit of dark comedy with an ending that is absolutely pitch-perfect. Then again, it's been a while. Maybe I'll hate it now. But I don't think so.
That was probably the first thing I ever had on my reading list, all back when I actually cared about videogames and watched reviews and Yahtzee and phewwww, I still have not gotten to it. I'm both not really sure if I still want to, but on that same note, I'm fairly sure it'll probably be better than I'm expecting.
It'll probably be a few more years yet 'til I ever hit it, if I ever do...
And then I just forgot about it somehow. Thank you for reminding me, though!
I reread it fairly recently, and it remains one of the most gorgeous reads I've ever had.
If you have not heard of it, it's sort of hard to describe. It's framed as a series of conversations between Marco Polo and an ageing Kublai Khan, who converses with various explorers in order to keep up to date with the cities in his constantly expanding empire, and who feels a strange, particular kinship with Marco.
In action, it's like a series of prose poems describing various fictitious cities, which tend to feel more like parables or so on or so forth, broken up by segments of Kublai and Marco talking.
It's absolutely fantastic, one of those books I feel a weird kinda warmth from reading. Also, a very short read!
I've heard a bunch of recommendations for Invisible Cities, and I like Calvino's style to begin with (we had to read works by him in a Comparative Lit course at university). I didn't know very much about the book itself, but this does sound gorgeous! Thanks for sharing.
Last week, I finished Nocturna, by Maya Motayne. It's the start of a new series, and the book will officially be released in both paper and hardback copies in early May. I believe you can pre-order it, if you're interested on Amazon. Anyways, about the actual book.
The book is set in a very Latinx inspired universe, following the Crown Prince Alfie, and a talented shapeshifter Finn. There's magic, some elements which could be called similar to JJBA's Stands, and much more. It was an interesting read, and the characters are extremely compelling, and feel real. There's some heavy subject matter which is discussed in book, fair warning, but a good book nonetheless.
I love Latinx inspired fantasy. I don't know if you've played the text-based romance game Affairs of the Court: Choice of Romance, but it's kind of similar, and there was a time when I was absolutely obsessed with it. And I think it's good for a book to have some heavy topics in it, as long as they're handled with respect.
Just finished binging the second of the three books out (Seven Surrenders, first is Too Like the Lightning) in less than 36 hours. (Not continuously, but close!)
It's emotionally/philosophically-heavy sci-fi, but I also want to hug almost every major character.
The only book I've ever read which sounds similar is Solaris, but only in that it's philosophical sci-fi and the main characters have a sad backstory. From what I've seen on Goodreads, the plots of the two books aren't really alike.