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

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 …

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 …

What Stalks the Deep

Fun, short, quotable.

The first book in this series was a riff on the Fall of the House of Usher (that we read for #SFFBookClub), and the second book intersected quite well with Easton's war trauma. This third book reads like a monster of the week but without much else going on in terms of themes or character development. A good snack of a romp, but not very filling.

(Also, shaking my head that there's no Eugenia Potter in this one either. It does at least have Gallacian rock pronouns going for it though.)

James Islington: The Strength of the Few (2025, Text Publishing)

The Hierarchy still call me Vis Telimus. Still hail me as Catenicus. They still, as …

The Strength of the Few

The biggest feeling I come away from James Islington's Hierarchy series is that it seems like it should appeal to fans of Brandon Sanderson. If the first book was an introduction to the world and young protagonist, this second book is much happier to dish out worldbuilding details about what's going on in the larger world(s). It's a grippy action book, and the way the worldbuilding is slowly revealed is my favorite part of this book. The second book also manages to pull out its own big ending surprises to drive who knows what will happen in the next one.

My biggest complaint is that this is primarily a plot-driven book and the protagonist is a bit too special. If there is a competition or challenge of any sort, Vis is going to overcome it every single time, no matter the odds, and no matter if he's never fought …

Andy Weir: Project Hail Mary (Hardcover, 2021, Ballantine Books)

Ryland Grace is the sole survivor on a desperate, last-chance mission--and if he fails, humanity …

Project Hail Mary

The situation was terrifying, but the project itself was awesome.

A bunch of my friends were rereading this book before the movie came out, so I thought I'd join along. Project Hail Mary is another space engineering procedural with Andy Weir protagonist voice. The characters are pretty thin, but I think you're reading this for the science problem solving. I always appreciate interspersed flashbacks (especially here where there's a bit of a reason why Grace continues to remember more over time).

I also personally don't know that this book makes for especially great movie material, but what do I know. (On this reread, there was also some airquotes jokes that really didn't land for me along the lines of "wow it'd be bad if I were fatphobic/racist/a pedophile" and I'm throwing a few side eyes.)

James Islington: The Will of the Many (Hardcover, 2023, Saga Press Publishing)

The Catenan Republic – the Hierarchy – may rule the world now, but they do …

The Will of the Many

joke tagline: a secret former prince struggles to move up the ladder at magic school for future senators in post-apocalyptic fantasy Rome

It's grippy. It's bloody and violent at times. The fantasy worldbuilding was fun. I wouldn't quite say it's YA, but it is also a young protagonist in a school setting where some moments resonate with the Hunger Games. It was enjoyable in a childhood need for fantasy book with a young protagonist in a capitalist-metaphor magic dystopia sort of way.

What this book does especially well for me is how many different directions it pulls the main character in. He's keeping his past a secret and trying to follow his own goals while simultaneously investigating a mystery, being suborned by rebels, and trying to succeed at school. There's a lot of lying and sneaking that's delicious. Being overconstrained by external forces helps balance out the plot …

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 …