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dllh's reviews
696 reviews
How Beautiful We Were by Imbolo Mbue
3.5
I false started this one and put it aside for a while but recently finished and liked it.
Africa Risen: A New Era of Speculative Fiction by Zelda Knight, Sheree Renée Thomas, Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
3.5
Took me a while to finish this one, as often happens with anthologies, but I'm glad I read it. None of the stories knocked my socks off, but I enjoyed many of them, and it was pretty solid as athologies go.
The Underwater Welder by Jeff Lemire
3.5
I expected color based on the cover but grayscale sort of fit. I liked it well enough.
Contact by Carl Sagan
adventurous
3.5
I hadn't read this in many years and remembered many things from the movie that were not in the book. It's a good book.
The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin
4.0
I took my time with this one. It was very good but it felt pretty sluggish much of the time, and I often found myself preferring to do other things than to spend more time with Shevek.
Seveneves by Neal Stephenson
2.0
I wanted to like this, but it was terrible. The story was a neat idea, but Stephenson seems a lot more interested in showing off the things he knows than in writing a readable story. Characterization is god-awful, descriptions of fascinating-sounding devices and structures opaque, repetition frustrating. When it finally starts to get more interesting, it's suddenly over. Probably would make a pretty cool movie, though.
Utopia Avenue by David Mitchell
medium-paced
4.0
After The Bone Clocks, I was just about ready to write Mitchell off. This one was a good return to longer fiction, a well written story minus ham-handed thriller/fantasy elements that didn't work (I liked the thriller and fantasy bits in Cloud Atlas well enough. I was ok with the fantastical elements in this one too. Mitchell seems maybe to be back on the rails.
Shadow Speaker by Nnedi Okorafor
adventurous
fast-paced
3.5
This was a good read. I liked the premise of intersecting worlds and the varied cultures, even though some of the cultures felt sort of hand-wavy. I liked some of the trappings of Ginen (e.g. the idea behind the architecture) but also felt like these things didn't make much sense. That's ok to a point -- it's speculative, futurist literature -- but as world building, I felt it lacked depth and felt simply stated rather than established in a way that felt earned or real within the world of the story. Still, I enjoyed it and will read the follow-up. I've liked all of Okorafor's work so far.
A Memory of Light by Robert Jordan, Brandon Sanderson
3.0
Thank the ever-living Light I'm done with this series and this book in particular. I find war scenes to be pretty dull, and half or more of this long book was war. I know Jordan and Sanderson set up a bunch of dominoes that had to be toppled, but it was a lot. I read the series aloud to my family (so skimming quickly when things felt repetitive or dull wasn't a great option), and mostly I'm glad to be done. I liked the series overall and found Sanderson's writing to be less onerous to read overall than Jordan's. I think maybe eight or nine books would've been plenty.
The Lies of the Ajungo by Moses Ose Utomi
3.0
I enjoyed this one but it felt underdeveloped, sometimes making annoying leaps in story or logic that felt like sloppiness. Probably these would have been less evident in a longer story that permitted more full development of the material. The concept was neat.