User Profile

enne📚

picklish@books.theunseen.city

Joined 3 years, 4 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.

This link opens in a pop-up window

enne📚's books

Freya Marske: Cinder House (Hardcover, 2025, Tordotcom Publishing)

Sparks fly and lovers dance in this gorgeous, yearning Cinderella retelling from bestselling author Freya …

Cinder House

I am sometimes a grumpus about fairy tale retellings, because it's been done so many times in so many ways that it's hard to find anything fresh.

This book is Cinderella by way of: what if Cinderella dies in the first paragraph, becomes a ghost that is also a haunted house, and goes to the ball mostly to eat food. Honestly, delightful.

The final scenes come a little too quickly for my tastes, but there's only so much space in a novella. (Something something, I guess that's what fanfic is for.)

avatar for picklish enne📚 boosted
Ali Smith: Gliff (Hardcover, 2025, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group)

An uncertain near-future. A story of new boundaries drawn between people daily. A not-very brave …

Why did I myself really like having more than one name, as if I had more than one self? Why were my sister and I so careful and keen to evade when we told people our names? Evade what? Why did we so often naturally know to tell them names that weren’t our names at all, and why did doing this leave us reeling with happiness, and was any of this related to saying hello to a horse?

Gliff: A Novel by  (54%)

Ali Smith: Gliff (Hardcover, 2025, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group)

An uncertain near-future. A story of new boundaries drawn between people daily. A not-very brave …

Gliff

I quite enjoyed this book.

Was a horse more lost to the world, because of no words, or was the horse more found – or even founded – in the world because of no words?

Were we in our worded world the ones who were truly deluded about where and what we believed about all the things we had words for?

Gliff is a surveillance dystopia novel—thematically about words, borders, and questions about authentic reality.

The point of view in this book is a child being raised on the margins of a system; they're an unreliable narrator who doesn't quite understand everything enough about the world to lay it out explicitly for the reader.

Stylistically, the writing is a stream of consciousness in the narrator's head, relating the past. Sometimes not having quotation marks for speech can feel jarring for me as a …

reviewed Platform Decay by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #8)

Martha Wells: Platform Decay (Hardcover, 2026, Tor Books)

Everyone's favorite lethal SecUnit is back in the next installment in Martha Wells' bestselling and …

Platform Decay

New Murderbot! An action snack, but a bit shallow. It was fine—I will read every Murderbot until the end of time—but also, there just isn't enough here for me.

I said, “We’re not sacrificing anybody.” It just came out, I couldn’t help it.

(Emotion check: Apparently there is an easier way to do things, but I wouldn’t know. I like to do it the hard way, and take as much physical and emotional damage as possible.)

The new shtick this book is that Murderbot has installed a mental health module that checks in with it when its neural tissue generates "weird chemicals or whatever". Murderbot has to explicitly deal more with its feelings that normally it would ignore. Unfortunately, this narrative device doesn't feel like it has the same level of impact on the story as something like the trauma response in System Collapse.

Silvia Moreno-Garcia: The Bewitching (Hardcover, 2025, Del Rey)

Three women in three different eras encounter danger and witchcraft in this eerie multigenerational horror …

Now that the campus had been vacated, Minerva had intended to focus on her thesis. Realistically, she was probably going to spend twelve hours a day in bed, but she at least wanted to imagine she could achieve a modicum of efficiency if she was not bound to the needs of students.

The Bewitching by  (6%)

Silvia Moreno-Garcia: The Bewitching (Hardcover, 2025, Del Rey)

Three women in three different eras encounter danger and witchcraft in this eerie multigenerational horror …

The Bewitching

This was on the #SFFBookClub poll but never got picked.

The Bewitching is three intertwined stories that all revolve around witchcraft. In 1998, struggling grad student Minerva is researching Beatrice Tremblay who wrote a novel the Vanishing roughly based on the disappearance of her friend Virginia. The second thread is that Minerva gets a chance to read Beatrice's journals, and so we hear Beatrice's perspective of mysterious and traumatic events of 1934. The final thread is Minerva's great-grandmother Alba who tells Minerva a story on her deathbed about events from her childhood in 1908.

At night the three of them talked on ICQ about meaningless and profound topics.

I am a sucker for parallel stories, but I especially love how rooted each of these different narratives are in highly specific times and places.

As a horror story, the pacing reminded me a lot of …

replied to enne📚's status

Red Rising grumping, continued

Style

The style is a lot here, and I don't think it's doing the book any favors. Sentences are short. Fragmented. Deep in the head of the teenage protagonist. Maybe it's supposed to be gritty. Instead, it's choppy. Cheesy.

The book's newTechnology comboWord parade of shinyThings is exhausting: clawDrills, headTalks, godTrees, ionBlades, ghostCloaks, gravBoots, pulseShields, and recoilArmor. Occasionally, we also get PascalCase HellDivers, SchoolHouses, and ArchGovernors. Even more rarely also we get lowercase combo words like duroglass, durobags, and synthleather. (Pick one! Or zero!!)

I sometimes give Brandon Sanderson a hard time for writing systems and worlds that are so unambiguous that you could pin their corpse to a wiki. But, this book is more like a Calvinball match, where ideas are forgotten with less warning than with which they are introduced. To the book's credit, it can get minor points for …

reviewed Red Rising by Pierce Brown (Red Rising Saga, #1)

Pierce Brown: Red Rising (Hardcover, 2014, Del Rey)

Darrow is a Red, a member of the lowest caste in the color-coded society of …

Red Rising

Choppy prose, sloppy plotting, thin worldbuilding, poor pacing. Do not recommend.

If I were just going to write a review, I'd probably just leave it at the above. I don't like to hate read things. If I'm going to spend my time on a book, it's gotta be something I at least think I'm going to enjoy.

Sometimes though, a friend says: I read this book everybody told me was good, and I have a lot of feelings but I can't quite find the words. Maybe you should read this to have some context and we can have a book discussion. A book discussion, you say! I'm in.

And now, because several of my friends have read this for whatever reason and want to talk about it, now I have to think more about this book that wasn't for me. I am told that the later books …

reviewed The Everlasting by Alix E. Harrow

Alix E. Harrow: The Everlasting (2025, Tor Publishing)

From Alix E. Harrow, the New York Times bestselling author of Starling House, comes a …

The Everlasting

Catching up on the Hugo noms for this year, I picked up Alix Harrow's The Everlasting, a time loop-esque narrative about empires and the power of stories. Owen Mallory is a historian that has been researching Una the Everlasting who gets sent back to Una's time to write a good story about her to make the future country stronger.

One narrative issue with time loop stories is that they get repetitive in their structure. The reader has already seen the scenes, and something needs to shift to keep them fresh. (Sometimes you can lean into that discomfort for narrative reasons like In Stars and Time, but I think that would work less in a written format.) What works quite well for me in this book, is that the first time we see everything through Owen's perspective, who is coming in with his own biases about who Una is …