User Profile

enne📚

picklish@books.theunseen.city

Joined 3 years ago

I read largely sff, some romance and mystery, very little non-fiction. I'm trying to write at least a little review of everything I'm reading. I love love love talking about books, and always appreciate replies or disagreements or bonus opinion comments on any book I'm reading or have talked about.

I'm @picklish@weirder.earth elsewhere, where I also send out the monthly poll for #SFFBookClub. See sffbookclub.eatgod.org/ for more details.

This link opens in a pop-up window

enne📚's books

Elizabeth Bear (duplicate): Machine (2020, Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers)

And that was how, after a rest period that I was surprised to spend deeply asleep without any self-interventions (and without interruptions from other members of the hospital staff), I wound up playing secret agent/detective/tour guide to a sexy robot. If that sounds like the sort of punishment that would be handed out in a particularly surrealist purgatory, congratulations. You’re not wrong.

Machine by  (36%)

Elizabeth Bear (duplicate): Machine (2020, Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers)

Machine

This book was not what I expected. It's got a different protagonist than the first book, and also steps a bit more into mystery and horror genres. It's also a second book in a series that I liked better than the first, if such a thing is possible.

I think this book starts off with a bit of almost space horror, with Dr. Jens investigating a ghost colony ship and trying to figure out what's gone wrong with its ancient crew that are now all in cryo. If I had to try to pin some genre on it, I'd say the bulk of the book feels like mystery/space politics with the start leaning horror and the end leaning action. It's a tasty blend for me, specifically.

What I liked the most about this book is how characterization and themes tied in so strongly to the plot. Dr. Jens …

@kingrat@sfba.club Yeah, it's deeply frustrating. I think the problem is that people just create a new book entry or the duplicate maybe gets imported from somewhere else? Ideally different editions should be on the same book, e.g. sfba.club/book/2692/editions?

My dream is that bookwyrm lets us merge duplicate authors and books together. I wish I had the energy to implement that myself. It doesn't seem like it's going anywhere: github.com/bookwyrm-social/bookwyrm/issues/1119

Elizabeth Bear (duplicate): Machine (2020, Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers)

One thing about the kind of pain I have is that it is so amorphous—so unlocalized—that it’s hard to describe and easy to ignore. You don’t even necessarily notice that it hurts, when it hurts. You just notice that you’re crabby and out of sorts and everything seems harder than it should. Not being able to describe it also tends to make other people take it less seriously. Like family members, and sometimes doctors, too.

Machine by  (11%)

Content warning full spoilers for Ancestral Night

Elizabeth Bear (duplicate): Ancestral Night (Hardcover, 2019, Gallery / Saga Press)

Ancestral Night

Ancestral Night is a snappy and grippy space adventure. The big "future idea" here is not faster than light travel or even arguably the alien artifacts from long-disappeared alien races (although these things appear in the book); it's instead that humanity has discovered "rightminding", or the ability to directly manipulate emotions and hormones such that they can get past tendencies towards hierarchy or antisocial behaviors and coexist peacefully with aliens.

Rightminding reminds me of the mood organ from Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep. However, instead of being a metaphor for the similarities of humans and androids (and also being a tiny side mention), here it's the meat of the story and gets at the line between brainwashing and merely adjusting your brain to get along better with others.

I love how talky this book is. Yeah, sure, there's stolen alien spaceships and sexy space pirates and giant …

avatar for picklish enne📚 boosted

commented on The Sea Eternal by Emery Robin (Empire Without End, #2)

Emery Robin: The Sea Eternal (Hardcover, 2025, Orbit) No rating

From one of the most original voices in science fiction comes the spectacular sequel to …

Finished creating a list of books from Reactor Magazine Reviewers’ Choice: The Best Books of 2025. There's some pretty good stuff here, including this book.

On SFBA.club, the list can be found here, and I made sure the books have high-res covers and descriptions. YMMV on other servers. However, a lot of the books hadn't been added anywhere yet, so there's a decent chance the data I entered is copied to servers where accounts follow me.

avatar for picklish enne📚 boosted
V. E. Schwab: Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil (Hardcover, 2025, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

This is a story about hunger. 1532. Santo Domingo de la Calzada. A young girl …

Lesbian Vampires … in Love!

I’m a fan of Schwab—she always delivers. Not sure why, but I was surprised this turned out to be a vampire novel. Lesbian vampires! Schwab makes some interesting tweaks to the lore, like how walking on graveyard soil is deadly to them. And explores how immortality affects them differently; the way some are less/more successful at hanging on to their humanity. A sad, hollow ending though. On the longer side, but unlike many of the other books I’ve read this year that should’ve been shorter, this (mostly) knew how to tell a good story.

avatar for picklish enne📚 boosted
K.M. Fajardo: Local Heavens (Hardcover, Zaffre)

A speculative romance reimagining of The Great Gatsby set in 2075 New York, perfect for …

Queer, cyberpunk Gatsby is everything

This novel absolutely broke my heart, and it's so perfect for that. I feel like every Gatsby retelling I read, the more I love the guy and all is quirky charms. I'm not sure what's not to love about queer, cyberpunk Gatsby, so like, just read the book.

In all seriousness, I wrote a full review on my website because I got this book for review from NetGalley. Check that out for more coherence. It's linked in my profile.