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.

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enne📚's books

Christopher Rowe: The Navigating Fox (2023, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) No rating

Quintus Shu'al is the world's only navigating fox. He's also in disgrace after leading an …

A faraway look came to the wiry man's eyes. "My most important role, good navigator, is to march to the entryway to the underworld, close the gates of Hell, and end death forever."

So, this time, he was to accompany me. This time he wanted me to take him to Hell.

The Navigating Fox by  (Page 36)

Christopher Rowe: The Navigating Fox (2023, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) No rating

Quintus Shu'al is the world's only navigating fox. He's also in disgrace after leading an …

"And where did Quintus Shu'al come from? Of all the foxes in the known world, he alone is knowledgeable? He could not have been born knowledgeable. So, someone gave him voice! But he has always refused to answer questions as regard to his origins!"

The Navigating Fox by  (Page 21)

Shelly Jay Shore: Rules for Ghosting (2024, Orion Publishing Group, Limited)

Ezra Friedman sees ghosts, which made growing up in a funeral home complicated. It might …

He never says a word to his parents. He thinks that some part of him knew, even as a child, that this would be one confession too many. He was queer when he was fourteen, a boy when he was twenty—adding Oh, and I see dead people, and did you know there are ghosts everywhere? would just be too much.

Rules for Ghosting by  (3%)

Shelly Jay Shore: Rules for Ghosting (2024, Orion Publishing Group, Limited)

Ezra Friedman sees ghosts, which made growing up in a funeral home complicated. It might …

Rules for Ghosting

I quite enjoyed Rules for Ghosting. I cry a lot but I don't normally cry at books--however, this one got me, several times. This is a romance/drama sort of book, if genre is important to you. Despite being about ghosts, they're honestly quite cozy and this isn't a horror book.

The protagonist of this book is Ezra, a Jewish trans man who has left his family's funeral business because he can see ghosts. Quickly on, Ezra develops a thing for his new housemate Jonathan, but unfortunately the ghost of Jonathan's dead husband starts speaking to him.

What's funny to me about this book is that the supernatural elements are not the most plot critical. This book is bursting (almost to its detriment) with family drama and trauma and relationship issues and other plot points. Ezra eventually does come out to his siblings about his psychic nature, and their …

Natasha Pulley: The Mars House (2024, Bloomsbury Publishing USA)

From the author of The Watchmaker of Filigree Street, a queer sci-fi novel about an …

The Mars House

This is my first Natasha Pulley book. I'd describe this one as a scifi romance with some wry comedic tones[1].

If there's a scale of hard scifi, this book is more grounded than Malka Older's Pleiti and Mossa books, but overall the science is very handwavy. The emphasis in this story is on the relationships and the politics (both interplanetary and local); it's set in a partially terraformed Mars (breathable but unliveably cold and dusty) whereas Earth is burning and sinking and many refugees are emigrating to Mars.

The big political issue of the day on Mars is the naturalization of Earthstrong people. Due to gravity differences, folks coming from earth are three times stronger than folks born on Mars and are thus extremely dangerous and must wear a titanium "cage" at all times that renders them much weaker. There is a process to "naturalize" to Mars gravity …

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Ryka Aoki: Light From Uncommon Stars (Hardcover, 2021, Tor Books)

Good Omens meets The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet in this defiantly joyful …

A peculiar mix

I expected more sci-fi elements going into this book. They did appear, but have ended up somewhat overshadowed by everything else.

The blurb describes the book as "Good Omens meets The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet", but the story brings in a bunch more. It's a story about being trans, about immigrants, about art, about legacy, about making authentic doughnuts.

I feel 3 things about this book:

  1. It's rooted in truth. It's that quality of a book to gut punch you, because you care about its characters, because they reflect a truth about the world.

  2. It's cute. This is where it feels closest to the Wayfarers series. It has kindness, and takes time to be silly.

  3. It's decidedly down to Earth. This is the part that has taken me aback. I expected more "space stuff", but got …

@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.)"

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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.