User Profile

enne📚

picklish@books.theunseen.city

Joined 3 years, 3 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

@Barbarius@outside.ofa.dog It might just be me, but I am willing to separate in my mind the llm airquotes ai of 2026 and the magical ai of science fiction. It may be the same word, but they don't occupy the same function and I also don't feel like there's a line between the two explicitly in this book (as compared to Counterweight).

quoted The Iron Garden Sutra by A.D. Sui (The Cosmic Wheel, #1)

A.D. Sui: The Iron Garden Sutra (Hardcover, 2026, Erewhon Books)

A monk joins a science team in exploring a long-lost spaceship, uncovering its dark and …

Maybe it was unethical to carry an AI in one’s mind after all, to deprive it of its own body, its own will, a means for it to act on the world. A station AI could boot you out of an airlock if it so pleased. Ship AI systems could fight, destroy entire planets if they so desired, if they were pushed to. What could VIFAI do if it was mistreated? Maybe Iris had been far crueler than he had ever realised.

The Iron Garden Sutra by  (The Cosmic Wheel, #1) (16%)

reviewed The Iron Garden Sutra by A.D. Sui (The Cosmic Wheel, #1)

A.D. Sui: The Iron Garden Sutra (Hardcover, 2026, Erewhon Books)

A monk joins a science team in exploring a long-lost spaceship, uncovering its dark and …

The Iron Garden Sutra

AD Sui's previous book The Dragonfly Gambit was quite good, so I was excited to read this next book by them.

The plot hook: Vessel Iris, a monk that specializes in laying to rest those who have died in space, is assigned to a lost generation ship that has suddenly appeared. Surprisingly, there is a team of researchers there already. And then people start dying. Dun dun dunnn.

Unsurprisingly, this book most reminded me of something like Ghost Station by SA Barnes. The part of Ghost Station that I most enjoyed was the ambiguity in the horror elements. What is actually going on? Who can be trusted? Can the narrator even be trusted? In Iron Garden Sutra, there is a little bit of early misdirection, but I didn't believe it for a second and the larger plot arc truth felt clearly foreshadowed. This knowledge caused it to lose …

Katherine Addison: The Orb of Cairado (EBook, 2025, Subterranean Press)

Set in the world of Hugo, Nebula, and World Fantasy Award nominee The Goblin Emperor, …

The Orb of Cairado

My bias is clear: I will read everything Katherine Addison writes, especially in the Goblin Emperor world. This is a short treasure-hunting novella backgrounded by elitist academia and complicated relationships. As always, her books are carried by her characters.

I love a book about treasure hunting where the titular treasure is found halfway through the book, but that's also not the end of the mystery.

I'm also going to steal this thought from one of my friends because I could not agree more: "I love the things that these books say about friendships, the different shapes both friendship and love can take (and that they're not mutually exclusive things; and that those two things can both exist in deeply healthy ways, absent sexual desire, etc. etc.)"

avatar for picklish enne📚 boosted
Dean Spade: Mutual Aid (2020, Verso)

Mutual aid is the radical act of caring for each other while working to change …

Superficial and disappointing

This book was really frustrating to listen to. It's very clear that the author wants people to embrace the concept of mutual aid and in in the last third of the book or so actually goes into a lot of strategies for running mutual aid groups and looking after your emotional well-being more generally and all of those things were really good actually.

Unfortunately the whole beginning of the book spends a lot of time vilifying any kind of aid that's done through mutual aid, talks about mutual aid as if it's The Solution, and pretty consistently has awkward undertones of ableism? I'm actually somewhat incredulous over the majority of the book was spent saying the same thing over and over again in very black and white terms, when social movement anything is definitely not black and white, and just being arrogantly pedantic for the majority of the book. …

@klara@wandering.shop oh heck yeah!!! I wasn't sure that was a real film, although there are so many real books referenced that I'm not terribly surprised. Thanks for sharing your review, I'll put this on my movie list for sure.

Moniquill Blackgoose: To Ride a Rising Storm (Paperback, Del Rey)

Anequs has not only survived her first year at Kuiper's Academy but exceeded all of …

To Ride a Rising Storm

To Ride a Rising Storm is the second book in Moniquill Blackgoose's Nampeshiweisit series, an indigenous story about dragons, colonizers, and fantasy dragon school. This was a lot of fun to read, but this felt like mostly open-ended setup for a future book rather than a cohesive story on its own. The ongoing threat in the first book is that if Anequs doesn't pass her classes then her dragon Kasaqua will be killed. The threat in the second book is... question mark??

This book is still a school story at its heart, but it gets a little bit more into larger politics of the world than the first book was able to. The Ravens of Joden are clearly the "hearken back to the whiter past" dissidents, but simultaneously the Jarl in power working against the Ravens is removing their representatives, adding surveillance and preventing free movement on Anequs's island, …

Hila Blum: How to Love Your Daughter (Paperback, 2023, Riverhead Books)

The seemingly inexplicable estrangement between a woman and her grown daughter opens up a troubling …

Throughout my life I've known only a handful of people who profess to have had a happy childhood; all the rest are survivors, everyone was given either too much or too little, life is always a long journey of healing from childhood.

How to Love Your Daughter by  (Page 125)

Hila Blum: How to Love Your Daughter (Paperback, 2023, Riverhead Books)

The seemingly inexplicable estrangement between a woman and her grown daughter opens up a troubling …

How to Love Your Daughter

I quite enjoyed this book that plumbs the emotional waters of an estrangement between the narrator Yoella and her daughter Leah. The writing (in translation from Hebrew) is delicious and full of meandering sentences. I love the way that Yoella reads a lot and so this book itself can explicitly reference other texts.

It's a book focusing on the relationship between Yoella and Leah, but it's also about motherhood and family in general--that motherhood is forgetting, what love actually means and can look like, and about constructing narratives of the past and of each other. Somehow Yoella manages to be utterly open in dissecting her feelings and her past, but simultaneously unreliable and self-deceiving.

But stories about mothers and daughters are always in media res, working backward to the beginning, even as there is no beginning. The path is simple yet crooked, the beginning slinks ever further …

I have a few more minor rambling thoughts about Litany for a Broken World too, which I'll separate out into this comment.

This is my own fault for coming into a book with expectations, but the blurb I read focuses on three strangers. I was thus a bit surprised that all nine major characters in the book (including the dog!) get their own point of view chapters, and this jumping around didn't quite work for me as a reader. It felt a bit unfocused to me, but maybe it worked well for some other reader. Additionally, Harnett getting his own chapter also removed some of the ambiguity around Jace and Corinne's conflict. It would have been more effective for me to have him be a bit of an enigma (and fill in his backstory later, if needed).

Jace and Corinne's conflict was really intriguing to me, but I …

reviewed Litany for a Broken World by Karen Conlin (Entangled Realities, #1)

Karen Conlin, Chris Howard, L. J. Cohen: Litany for a Broken World (2025, Interrobang Books)

A young girl's disastrous first foray through the multiverse cleaves her from her family and …

Litany for a Broken World

There's a lot of neat things going on in this book, but there's also a number of things that didn't quite land for me. I'm struggling to have a solid opinion, so here's a mishmash of drive-by thoughts.

I do love this book's thematic mantra of fixing broken things. It's clear that many characters in this book are broken (emotionally), and it's clear that the Boston timeline is broken (structurally, via capitalism largely), but it's less clear to me what sort of fixing is truly going on, especially in a multiverse sense.

Obviously Martin, Stirling, and Melissa are putting in work for their community, but the rest of it just seems like talk (or something a future book in the series will get to). I wish there was more clarity about how Jace had broken his oath to repair the broken parts of the universe, and what that …

Travis Baldree: Brigands and Breadknives (Paperback, 2025, Tor)

Return to the cozy fantasy world of the #1 New York Times bestselling Legends & …

“I wish it was that easy,” replied Fern. “It’s like I can see what I loved—still love?—about it, but it’s behind a thick windowpane. I can’t feel it or smell it or taste it, and I don’t know that I’ll ever be on the other side of that glass again.”

Brigands and Breadknives by  (Legends & Lattes, #2) (41%)

reviewed Brigands and Breadknives by Travis Baldree (Legends & Lattes, #2)

Travis Baldree: Brigands and Breadknives (Paperback, 2025, Tor)

Return to the cozy fantasy world of the #1 New York Times bestselling Legends & …

Brigands and Breadknives

Does anyone want a “cozy” story about the grief of disappointing your friends, and the agony of saying “no”?

Maybe it's my age, but I think I can always deeply appreciate a story centered on the idea of a change in life direction--there's a job that's consumed you to the point of you making it your identity and suddenly it's taken away from you (see: Bujold's Memory), or where a fulfilling job that your family and friends all expect you to do that has lost its luster, or when you've been doing the same job for hundreds of years and who would you even be if you weren't doing that. I am just a sucker for stories about new directions.

It's not that Viv wasn't changing her life in Legends & Lattes, but she wasn't really struggling against herself: she knew she wanted to hang …