User Profile

enne📚

picklish@books.theunseen.city

Joined 2 years, 11 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

Andrew Joseph White: You Weren't Meant to Be Human (2025, Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers)

Alien meets Midsommar in this chilling debut adult novel from award-winning author Andrew Joseph White …

She probably got the same spiel of well-meaning semi-misinformation when she started hormones. It destroys your fertility for good, it’s borderline castration, there’s time to rethink this permanent mistake, etcetera, etcetera. Turns out, one of the first Google results upon attempting to verify that information is a big all-caps THE DOCTORS DON’T KNOW SHIT. Crane feels deeply stupid.

You Weren't Meant to Be Human by  (16%)

Andrew Joseph White: You Weren't Meant to Be Human (2025, Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers)

Alien meets Midsommar in this chilling debut adult novel from award-winning author Andrew Joseph White …

You Weren't Meant to Be Human

This body horror pregnancy trans dysphoria story was... a lot, but it was also raw and real and quite good.

Crane is part of a local cult, run by a hive of sentient flies and worms, and when he gets pregnant the hive insists he carries the child to his utter distress and terror. It's visceral and disturbing--full of trauma and abuse, self-loathing and self-injury, and shitty choices in a shittier world.

quoted Queen Demon by Martha Wells (The Rising World, #2)

Martha Wells: Queen Demon (Hardcover, 2025, Tor Books)

From the breakout SFF superstar author of Murderbot comes the remarkable sequel to the USA …

He was a good Prince-heir, who knew how to listen to wiser heads and the people's wishes, when to embrace change, when to temper it with caution. It was why he probably thought he would make a good emperor for the Rising World. Not understanding there could never be any such thing as a good emperor.

Queen Demon by  (The Rising World, #2) (Page 111)

reviewed Queen Demon by Martha Wells (The Rising World, #2)

Martha Wells: Queen Demon (Hardcover, 2025, Tor Books)

From the breakout SFF superstar author of Murderbot comes the remarkable sequel to the USA …

Queen Demon

This review seems like a recapitulation of my feelings after Witch King: I was gripped by the world, have mixed feelings about the book as a whole, wish more characters had depth, and was disappointed by parts of the ending. It's not to say I didn't enjoy it (and maybe it's just that my expectations were too high) but overall it was "fine".

One thing I really enjoy here is that we get into some really good Martha Wells fantasy ruins. Witch King and Queen Demon both follow in the path of City of Bones (my favorite Martha Wells fantasy story) and some of the Raksura books as well. I'm not sure what makes these so appealing, but I think there's something about her use of dangerous and creepy structures full of unknown danger that she does a great job with.

This book continues with interleaved narratives …

Cassandra Khaw: Library at Hellebore (2025, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

A deeply dark academia novel from USA Today bestselling author Cassandra Khaw, perfect for fans …

When I woke up, my roommate, Johanna, was dead. This was neither the first time I’d come to with a body at my feet, nor was it even the first time I had returned to consciousness in a room transformed into a literal abattoir, but it was the first time I woke up relieved to be in a mess.

Library at Hellebore by  (Page 1)

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Ray Nayler: The Tusks of Extinction (Hardcover, Tordotcom)

When you bring back a long-extinct species, there’s more to success than the DNA.

…

An example of breathtaking cruelty

This book isn't even 100 pages long, so I finished it in a single sitting, and I don't regret doing that. I loved Ray Nayler's debut novel and this short novella was just as great, if not better in many ways.

He tackles so many serious issues with such sincerity and depth despite the length and the multiple character perspectives really highlight the positionality of different people in society and how it affects their views and what they care about and their memories. Obviously what can't be ignored about this book is the idea that you can bring back extinct species and the underlying current of the climate crisis and humans and destruction, but those issues weren't really at the forefront of my mind as I was reading--they only came later.

This book showcases breathtaking cruelty, but also a heartbreaking kind of kindness too. Very good. Will buy …

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Lee Mandelo: Feed Them Silence (2023, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

What does it mean to "be-in-kind" with a nonhuman animal? Or in Dr. Sean Kell-Luddon’s …

Devastating

How to review this without spoilers for things that it is definitely worth encountering at the speed they're written?

I found this a hard book to read, because so much of the plot is driven by the protagonist making decisions that are clearly bad in the moment they are made. I felt a bit like the stereotypical moviegoer wanting to shout "no, don't do it" at the screen. But I ultimately came to see it as a classic tragedy: a whole series of painful events driven by the hero's fatal flaw. And it is all aspects of the same flaw, and the flaw is one that's very recognisable looking around at society.

It's also a story of the right size for the novella format. Sometimes I get frustrated that novellas feel incomplete, rushing to an ending and/or leaving too few characters fleshed out. This one just felt tightly …

Georgi Gospodinov, Angela Rodel: Time Shelter - a Novel (2022, Liveright Publishing Corporation)

A 'clinic for the past' offers a promising treatment for Alzheimer's sufferers: each floor reproduces …

We are constantly producing the past. We are factories for the past. Living past-making machines, what else? We eat time and produce the past. Even death doesn’t put a stop to this. A person might be gone, but his past remains.

Time Shelter - a Novel by , (36%)

Georgi Gospodinov, Angela Rodel: Time Shelter - a Novel (2022, Liveright Publishing Corporation)

A 'clinic for the past' offers a promising treatment for Alzheimer's sufferers: each floor reproduces …

Time Shelter

Time Shelter was our #SFFBookClub October 2025 pick.

I have such mixed feelings about this book. Thematically and topically, it manages to be quite consistent, but it felt like there were too many ingredients in the soup. It feels like there could have been a much tighter and less rambling story or two (or three) assembled from the various pieces of this novel, but then it wouldn't have been this book, either.

There's a lot that I enjoyed about this book, in terms of its discussions about the weaponization and productionization of nostalgia and the past. But also the way that we produce and manufacture memory as well, in similar fashion. I liked the parallels of the national and personal with respect to the uncertainty of the future and wanting to dwell safely in the past. The slow collapse of the narrator during the final chapters.

Despite …

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Akwaeke Emezi: You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty (Hardcover, 2022, Atria Books)

Feyi Adekola wants to learn how to be alive again.

It’s been five years …

Finally, my first Akwaeke Emezi book. Not the one I'm most interested in, but one that sounded not too stressful. And it really wasn't – I was surprised by how fluffy, calm and cute this story is. It's about love and feeling safe with someone and deciding for that, even if it's the less expected choice, and one that some people disapprove of. The sonewhat stressful part of the story is this friend who has a crush on the main character and is not just upset when she gets together with his dad, but actually turns into a total asshole, violent and misogynist. There's a lot of difficult feelings and grief, but there's also a deep comedy to the whole thing: as a reader I know that these two people are so obviously good for each other, they're both very solidly adults, the side characters don't seem to mind so …

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Georgi Gospodinov, Angela Rodel: Time Shelter - a Novel (2022, Liveright Publishing Corporation)

A 'clinic for the past' offers a promising treatment for Alzheimer's sufferers: each floor reproduces …

An edit of this book could be amazing, but it does need the edit.

There's an excellent book in here. An engaging story about individual and collective self-delusion and amnesia, with some very clear political messages and a grim humour to it. But at times, especially in the second quarter or so of the book, the author seems unclear whether he's writing a novel or a NY Review Of Books essay about individual dementia, collective amnesia, and the selective remembering of nostalgia. It's clear that he could write a fine essay and I'd enjoy reading that too, but the hybrid is clunky. From the POV of a novel reader the essay portions make the plot drag slowly enough that I started to lose interest. From the POV of a creative nonfiction reader, the actually fiction parts are jarring and confusing.

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