User Profile

ennešŸ“š

picklish@books.theunseen.city

Joined 3Ā years, 5Ā 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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ennešŸ“š's books

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Alaya Dawn Johnson: Library of Broken Worlds (2023, Little, Brown Book Group Limited)

It wasn't exactly that I thought Iemaja would kill me. It was that material gods are deeply inhuman, barely conscious on our own timescales. Iemaja could love me best of all her children and still leave me to die, broken, in my own excrement. I feared our gods every bit as much as I loved them.

Library of Broken Worlds by  (Page 14)

Nnedi Okorafor: Death of the Author (Hardcover, William Morrow)

The future of storytelling is here.

Disabled, disinclined to marry, and more interested in …

But when she finally just asked him what he believed the story meant, he’d said, ā€œWhy don’t you tell me? What I think of my own work doesn’t matter. The reader decides what it’s about, right? Isn’t that what you said ā€˜death of the author’ meant?ā€ Then he’d smiled a very annoying and smug smile.

Death of the Author by  (6%)

Nnedi Okorafor: Death of the Author (Hardcover, William Morrow)

The future of storytelling is here.

Disabled, disinclined to marry, and more interested in …

Death of the Author

This is an unexpected novel about disability and family and writing and fame and stories. Subjectively, I don't think it all cohered in the way I wanted. The story within a story felt particularly heavy-handed, and it weakened the impact of the titular theme's exploration. I can imagine it landing for other people, but it's all just a bit too loose for me.

There is a meta element near the end, which I think the reader can choose how to interpret, although the real answer feels besides the point. It feels there to reinforce the book's larger point about what death of the author means—Okorafor is stating here that "author, art, and audience [...] create a tissue, a web, a network". The fact that this is such a personal work for Okorafor along multiple dimensions only adds to this feeling, as they seem inseparable from the book itself.

…

reviewed Daughter of Crows by Mark Lawrence (The Academy of Kindness, #1)

Mark Lawrence: Daughter of Crows (Hardcover, 2026, Penguin Publishing Group)

The survivor of a brutal academy must exhume her own past in the first book …

Daughter of Crows

I have such mixed feelings about Daughter of Crows. It's a GRIMDARK (imagine a heavy metal font and growly voice saying this) fantasy story that centers around a school for assassins.

This book is driven by carefully deployed character reveals. It's told from the perspectives of the aging woman Rue (hiding her assassin past), the childhood of Eldest (in a gaslighting abusive childhood manor), and the violent assassin academy via Bek (100 girls enter! three leave!). It's not clear to the reader who all these perspectives are, or if they're the same person, or how they might be connected. This uncertainty gives the author space for surprises and concealing information and connections from the reader until the right moment. It's nothing I haven't seen before, but I think it's quite effective.

The shifting perspectives also help with the pacing. Maybe I'm a bit exhausted by magical school stories, …

Claire North: Slow Gods (Paperback, 2025, Orbit)

My name is Mawukana na-Vdnaze, and I am a very poor copy of myself.

…

Slow Gods

I found out about this book because I saw mcc talking about it.

Slow Gods is a weird little book. It's about space politics, focusing around an impending supernova event that is going to wipe out many planets. It's from the perspective of Mawukana, who is just a pilot and seemingly exists more on the edges of the story, and yet is also ultimately at the heart of things.

I wonder whether it is possible to exist as a person at all without measuring yourself against others. I wish sometimes that I was strong enough to be myself in company without company turning me into something else. I wonder who that person would be, and am sometimes grateful never to find out.

Maw is also an odd, monstrous protagonist. He is not particularly driven, and is affected strongly by the expectations of others. It's not …

Claire North: Slow Gods (Paperback, 2025, Orbit)

My name is Mawukana na-Vdnaze, and I am a very poor copy of myself.

…

The real conspiracies – the actual plots and plans that will shape whole worlds – are often far too vast and far too impersonal to really grasp, and when they are grasped, they are not called ā€œconspiraciesā€ at all, but rather ā€œpoliciesā€ or ā€œbusiness plansā€.

Slow Gods by  (49%)

reviewed Luminous by Silvia Park

Silvia Park: Luminous (Hardcover, 2025, Simon & Schuster)

This sweeping debut novel set in a unified Korea tells the story of three estranged …

Luminous

A messy but enjoyable book about robots, grief, and memory set in a post-war unified Korea.

The plot, pacing, and characters meandered a bit too much for my taste, but it was made up for by the texture in the world and its threads of philosophy. I do also love a story that is engaging with both disability and transness through the lens of robots and robotics.

#SFFBookClub

John Chu: The Subtle Art of Folding Space (EBook, 2026, Tor Books)

The Subtle Art of Folding Space is the exhilarating debut science fiction novel from Nebula …

No one has tried to kill her today—yet. Her sister, Chris, arranges something at random intervals. It's to keep Ellie sharp, Chris claims, because, occasionally, skunkworks isolations try. Not that Ellie believes Chris has her best interests at heart.

The Subtle Art of Folding Space by  (Page 1)