Reviews and Comments

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Magneticcrow@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 5Ā months, 2Ā weeks ago

I read a lot of SFF and horror, leaning toward the weird, and I adore a good translation (to English) and small press book. Iā€™m queer and I like to read books about queer people and by queer and otherwise marginalized authors. I tend to avoid things that are marketed strongly as YA.

Iā€™m a former bookseller and Iā€™ve never been able to let go on being way too aware of whatā€™s coming out, so my tbr list is a very active living document (and being realistic, highly aspirational).

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Last Exit (2022, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) No rating

Ten years ago, Zelda led a band of merry adventurers whose knacks let them travel ā€¦

Review of 'Last Exit' on 'Storygraph'

No rating

Iā€™m also a millennial, about a year off from Gladstoneā€™s age, so I get that this is a very personal and heartfelt outpouring of his feelings about Black Lives Matter, flowing from having been through the Occupy protests and electing Obama and feeling like maybe weā€™d done things right but then nothing was fixed and things stayed dark. I get that. 

But I also wish a brave editor had been willing to cut likeā€¦30% off the long internal monologues of each of the characters. Thereā€™s a lot thatā€™s good in this book, and a lot of wonderful ideas and images, butā€¦ itā€™s so bogged down and repetitive that itā€™s hard to enjoy the ride.   

Hospital (Hardcover, Amazon Crossing) No rating

Review of 'Hospital' on 'Storygraph'

No rating

This was extremely disjointed especially near the end, it really felt as if the author was making it up as he went. It had some interesting ideas packed in there, and I do like a non traditional narrative structure usually, but itā€™s hard to get around the sexism and like, the main character having sex with a teenager while envisioning his own preteen daughter. šŸ˜¬ yeah I finished it somehow but this is the end of the series for me 

Review of 'Coming of Joachim Stiller (Valancourt International)' on 'Storygraph'

No rating

Iā€™m a big fan of surrealism and weird fiction, so I was pretty disappointed here. The most interesting parts for me were the descriptions of historic Antwerp in 1957, and the protagonistā€™s recollections of being part of the resistance during WWII in his youth less than  12 years prior. 

<spoiler> Also it turns out to be about Jesus, which is the biggest disappointment to me. Ugh. </spoiler>

Station Eternity (Paperback, 2022, Penguin Publishing Group) 4 stars

Amateur detective Mallory Viridianā€™s talent for solving murders ruined her life on Earth and drove ā€¦

Review of 'Station Eternity' on 'Storygraph'

No rating

<spoiler> I almost never DNF but I just really wasnā€™t enjoying this. For something that was billed as a science fiction murder mystery series similar to Midsomer Murders (or if that wasnā€™t the intent, calling the series Midsolar Murders was a huge misstep) there was a distinct lack of on-page murder mystery solving or intrigue. Instead itā€™s just backstory, 1/3 of a book spent  freaking out about humans moving to the space station, and then after the halfway point new backstory for new point of view characters. It felt like the entire book was basically being used as setup for the intended series without including enough plot or forward movement to make me at all interested in continuing. Or even finishing it, obviously. 

The aliens really bothered me too, they kept making throwaway comments about how humans are fragile bags of water walking around and then themselves turning out to ā€¦

Review of 'Vita Nostra' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

This was not at all what I was expecting. It was like Alfred Kubinā€™s The Other Side took place at a magical school for terrified college students, all learning how to deconstruct their mental understanding of the physical world and themselves in order to do magic. I hope theyā€™re planning on translating the rest of this series!

Review of 'The Other City (Czech Literature Series)' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

The soldiers who spend months on end there among the coats themselves end up looking more like coats than people, and their thinking is more like the thinking of coats (for instance, they spend hours on end thinking about a city, where there are houses, monuments and streetlights on springs, and through whose streets there walks a solitary pony).


This book is absolutely as strange as I could possibly hope a book to be, and yet entirely comprehensible and with a strong plot and message. A+, will be reading it again and again in the future. 

A Half-Built Garden (EBook, 2022, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 4 stars

On a warm March night in 2083, Judy Wallach-Stevens wakes to a warning of unknown ā€¦

Review of 'A Half-Built Garden' on 'Storygraph'

No rating

I get so tired of the narrative that humans are always going to choose the worst and most selfish means of planet stewardship, and this book is tired of it too! Itā€™s one of those novels I put down and immediately begin longing for its vision of the futureā€™s so badly it feels like Iā€™ve lost something tangible. How much time do we have to get the watershed networks and dandelion networks underway and beat back the corporations? Iā€™m ready to meet some aliens.