User Profile

enne📚

picklish@books.theunseen.city

Joined 3 years, 2 months 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.

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enne📚's books

T. Kingfisher: What Stalks the Deep (Hardcover, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

The next novella in the New York Times bestselling Sworn Soldier series, featuring Alex Easton …

Given the choice between explaining the reality to half the people I met or simply letting them assume that I was a man … no, there was no question. I wasn’t thrilled about it, but frankly, I had been tired of explaining matters a decade ago, and by now I had approached a kind of transcendent exhaustion.

What Stalks the Deep by  (Sworn Soldier, #3) (13%)

@Tak@reading.taks.garden I wish bookwyrm had better fields for editor / illustrator so that it didn't make it look like Litany for a Broken World was written by Karen Conlin

I guess I could re-add them all in a different order??

reviewed Dead Hand Rule by Max Gladstone (Craft Wars, #3)

Max Gladstone: Dead Hand Rule (EBook, Tor Books)

From the co-author of the viral New York Times bestseller This Is How You Lose …

Dead Hand Rule

Dead Hand Rule is third (of four) books in Max Gladstone's Craft Wars sequence. Interestingly to me, this book works a lot better for me than Wicked Problems did.

Their power might be vast, but it was bound, as surely as any djinn’s: to wield it they had to be themselves, and they could not act in ways unlike them. If we let them sit there growling at one another across conference tables, that’s all they’ll do, until the stars fall down.

I've seen Gladstone pitch this book as featuring "wizard Davos", which sounds like it shouldn't be good, but somehow works. The heart of this series is economics (via magic metaphor) and this book features large powers in the world coming together, but not actually able to work with each other to stop impending doom. The end of the world is coming, and they're all …

avatar for picklish enne📚 boosted
Max Gladstone: Dead Hand Rule (EBook, Tor Books)

From the co-author of the viral New York Times bestseller This Is How You Lose …

Small children behaved this way; then again, who could stop a world power from behaving like a small child? Once upon a time, questions like that had seemed purely rhetorical. Now she had a creeping dread that the answer was supposed to be: her.

Dead Hand Rule by  (Craft Wars, #3) (10%)

Kemi Ashing-Giwa: The King Must Die (S&S/Saga Press)

Fen’s world is crumbling. Newearth, a once-promising planet gifted by the all-powerful alien Makers, now …

The King Must Die

This book was not for me. Maybe I was in the wrong space for reading it, but it felt like YA (derogatory). Everything felt a little too thin and pulled along by a plot. Folks who are at odds with each other resolve those feelings too quickly or in ways that feel unearned. (Especially feelings around Alekhai and Sijara both.)

There were a lot (a lot) of fight scenes. To me a good fight scene is like a good sex scene--there needs to be some character development driving it or I'm going to be bored. Many of these fell flat for me, but positively I really liked the one where Fen meets Alekhai for the first time, because there's so much going on emotionally for her there.

The book has so much intriguing drive-by worldbuilding, but none of it feels connected to the whole. Declaration ceremonies for names …

reviewed A Mouthful of Dust by Nghi Vo (The Singing Hills Cycle, #6)

Nghi Vo: A Mouthful of Dust (EBook, 2025, Tordotcom)

Hunger makes monsters in this dark new tale in Nghi Vo's Hugo Award-winning Singing Hills …

A Mouthful of Dust

I always enjoy Nghi Vo's Singing Hills Cycle stories. There's something about the idea of monks going around and collecting knowledge and stories that manages to always be compelling.

A Mouthful of Dust is a short novella centered on food, survival, and secrets that don't want to be revealed. It did not dislodge Mammoths at the Gates as my favorite Singing Hills book, but it was still an enjoyable snack.

Thanks as always go to my agent, Diana Fox, who told me back in 2020 that maybe the world wasn’t ready for famine and eating babies. Then in 2024, she said, “Okay, they may be ready now,” and here we are.

Along with having a recipe for curry, I was amused at some of the author's notes at the end of the book.

quoted The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison (The Goblin Emperor, #1)

Katherine Addison: The Goblin Emperor (Hardcover, 2014, Tor)

A vividly imagined fantasy of court intrigue and dark magics in a steampunk-inflected world, by …

Even if he could have said, to those who whispered, that he did not wish to be emperor--and he could say no such thing, trapped as he was behind Edrehasivar's mask--he would not have been believed. No one in the Untheileneise Court would ever believe that one could wish not to be emperor. It was unthinkable.

The Goblin Emperor by  (The Goblin Emperor, #1) (47%)