Still reading Whispers Underground by Ben Aaronovitch. Book 3 of Rivers of London series.

Though, technically I hadn’t read anything last two weeks to it’s more of “got back to reading”.

It’s still book 3, but I found it interesting how different it is from Dresden Files. There is no forces of nature with personal enmity with the protagonist (yet), it’s just (magic) crimes being solved by (magic) police. More of a police procedural then whatever genre Dresden Files is 😀

What about all of you? What have you been reading or listening to lately?


For details on the c/Books bingo challenge that just restarted for the year, you can checkout the initial Book Bingo, and its Recommendation Post. Links are also present in our community sidebar.

  • Libb@piefed.social
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    22 days ago

    Almost finished ‘Les entretiens’ de Confucius (in French, because, well, I’m French). Started today: ‘Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave’.

    Work of fiction waiting to be started: Mary Shelley’s ‘Frankenstein’, J.M. Barrie ‘The complete Peter Pan’.

      • Libb@piefed.social
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        22 days ago

        Thx.

        Yep, a lot of classics indeed. Moving back to print from ebooks a little over a year ago was also an opportunity to (re)read a lot of them as they can be found for dirt cheap, on the used market.

        The Douglass one was annotated by the previous owner (I don’t mind that, provided that doesn’t make the page unreadable) and the funny thing is that their notes so far are really not focusing on what I’m getting out of this very unsettling text. In its own way, next to the text itself, this person’s notes are another enriching encounter.

    • PhobosAnomaly@feddit.uk
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      22 days ago

      My French is very limited - probably straddling the border of upper beginner or lower intermediate - but I read through Barjavel’s La Nuit Des Temps and it was fuckin awesome.

      I don’t know whether it’s because it made me spend more time on each word, or whether translating it made me put my own spin on the story and made it more personal to me. Who knows. Banger of a book.

      • Libb@piefed.social
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        22 days ago

        My French is very limited - probably straddling the border of upper beginner or lower intermediate - but I read through Barjavel’s La Nuit Des Temps and it was fuckin awesome.

        Nice! It is a great book and, if one excepts Jules Verne, it also was the very first French science fiction author I ever read. The book made a huge impression on me too. So much so that I then read all of what Barjavel wrote, SF or otherwise.

        BTW, I would not consider anyone capable of reading a novel in a foreign language a beginner, even a ‘upper’ one. That too is awesome, if I dare say so ;)

        • PhobosAnomaly@feddit.uk
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          22 days ago

          Cheers friend. I follow a lot of Olly Richards’ stuff - a British polyglot - and got the idea from him after he recommended some books for learners of the language. I’m still not great - the lack of opportunity means I can’t really sharpen my skills - but I’m getting there. I read the French version of Twenty Thousand Leagues to my young son at bedtimes - and told him the story in English. I’m not sure whether it was the fantastic story that sent him to sleep or the frequent “ummmm” and “errrr” while I thought of the same expressions in English!

          I’m rather hoping to pick up Le Grand Secret soon, I’m not really a SF person but his writing is very good!

          • Libb@piefed.social
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            21 days ago

            I read the French version of Twenty Thousand Leagues to my young son at bedtimes - and told him the story in English. I’m not sure whether it was the fantastic story that sent him to sleep or the frequent “ummmm” and “errrr” while I thought of the same expressions in English!

            That’s so great and nice :)

            You put a (happy) smile on my face for the rest of the day and it’s 8AM here.

  • UncleArthur@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    The Rivers of London books are fantastic, and keep getting better.

    I’ve literally just finished reading the latest one, Stone and Sky.

  • TheFerventLion@sh.itjust.works
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    21 days ago

    Nearly done with Project Hail Mary, Andy Weir! It’s quite good, and I’m glad I’d read somewhere here to go in with zero context. Would highly recommend.

    Continuing to listen my way through the Otherland series by Tad Williams. Currently in book two, River of Blue Fire. It seems to me that he wrote all four books as one book and was told that was ~3000 pages wouldn’t sell well. I’m very much enjoying it. Williams writes in a detailed pace, which can seem slow at times, but I love his use of 20th century literature as the basis of all the VR worlds. They’re never the same as their origin and are wonderfully permuted.

    • dresden@discuss.onlineOPM
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      9 days ago

      I went into Project Hail Mary blind too, and it was very interesting to see how things unfold.

      Someone else mentioned Otherland series in the same thread. Have never read it, but I remember loving Memory, Sorrow and Thorn (though I don’t remember a single thing from that), so will check it out.

      • TheFerventLion@sh.itjust.works
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        9 days ago

        I think I’m enjoying Otherland more than Memory, Sorrow and Thorn! They’re both following many of the main tropes of their own genre, cyberpunk, and fantasy respectively, but I think Otherland is more unique of an entry. MSaT possibly would have hit harder had I read it as a teenager.

        • dresden@discuss.onlineOPM
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          8 days ago

          I did read it as a teenager, maybe that’s why I remember liking it so much.

          Will add Otherland to my list, but I have his Shadowmarch series in my TBR pile, so will prefer to read that before getting anything else.

  • PugJesus@piefed.social
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    22 days ago

    About halfway through Roman Sexualities. I know the broad concepts, but the details elaborated on are fascinating.

    • PugJesus@piefed.social
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      21 days ago

      Finished Roman Sexualities, very good but typically dry and academic in prose; moving on to Thomas Sankara: A Revolutionary In Cold War Africa.

      • PugJesus@piefed.social
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        21 days ago

        Sure thing! It’s noted, for example, that scratching one’s head with one finger was considered a ‘dainty’ affectation and potentially indicating a passive homosexual - likely in relation to the connection Romans saw between vanity and passive homosexuality, with scratching one’s head with one finger being to minimize mussing one’s hair (Julius Caesar, famously handsome and vain, was noted by Cicero to scratch his head with one finger).

        Another is that Romans considered a man performing oral sex on a woman to be more degrading than a man performing oral sex on another man, or receiving anal sex from another man. This is largely because the Romans didn’t conceive of sexual relations in the form of their partner’s sex, but in what acts were performed on who. Some men in Roman history are noted as liking men or liking women, but what defines their sexuality is not that, but rather whether they ‘give’ or ‘receive’. The former is entirely normal for a RESPECTABLE citizen; the latter is proof of some inherent servility and disreputability.

        During the Principate, sexual and gender boundaries weakened with the rise of the autocracy of the Roman Emperor disrupting traditional social divisions. Part and parcel with this was a spike in concern from moralists about the decline of ‘traditional’ Roman morality. Nowadays, all the men are going down on girls, marrying boys, and worrying about their appearance! O TEMPORA! O MORES! 😭

        Regardless of whether that kvetching represented an actual increase in such behavior (it likely did, to some degree), it gives insight as to how the Romans perceived sexuality as part of the broader social structure, not just a private matter. It was not that transgressing it made you ‘bad’ or adhering to it made you ‘good’, unlike later Abrahamic notions of sexuality; it was that transgressing it was a challenge to the social order of inviolable citizens who could ‘defend’ their liberty and their self from ‘intrusion’ of others. The worrying, thus, was connected to the worry that the autocracy of the Roman Emperor was stripping Roman citizens of their liberty-oriented mindset, and creating a more ‘servile’ citizenry and social order.

  • InfiniteGlitch@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    22 days ago

    I just finished Fahrenheit 451. It was pretty decent but the ending was kind of a letdown.

    Now… I’m searching for a new book and don’t know what to read.

    • Libb@piefed.social
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      22 days ago

      The ending is kinda not amazing but it’s the rest of the book that’s worth so much. He was so spot on on so many things.

      Now… I’m searching for a new book and don’t know what to read.

      Also from Bradbury, have you read his Martian Chronicles? My favorite between the two ;)

    • Grimm@lemmy.zip
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      19 days ago

      I feel like Fahrenheit 451 and 1984 go hand-in-hand if you haven’t read it already.

      • InfiniteGlitch@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        19 days ago

        Yeah, I have read 1984 a while back ago. Was a really good book. I still think about Winston and o’Brain with the … scene.

        I freaking dislike how Lemmy does the spoiler tag. So I will avoid what, I wrote previously.

  • OmegaMouse@pawb.social
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    22 days ago

    I’m 90% of the way through The Master and the Margarita. It’s a completely surreal plotline and I think it’ll help if I do some reading into the background (both the setting and the author’s writing process) once I’ve finished. It’s made me laugh a couple of times though, in particular:

    spoiler

    the scene in which the theatre accountant is desperately trying to deposit some cash, only to witness a group of employees involuntarily bursting into a sea shanty.

  • pancake@sopuli.xyz
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    21 days ago

    I finished Grendel by John Gardner. There were some parts I really liked and some that were just ok. Overall a decent read.

    I’ve started rereading the Lady Astronaut books by Mary Robinette Kowal. They are just as gripping and bingeable as I remember them being. I finished the first one (The Calculating Stars) and am currently on book 2 (The Fated Sky).

      • pancake@sopuli.xyz
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        20 days ago

        So I’ve only read the first 3. The 4th just came out recently, hence my reread. Each of the books I’ve read had a non-cliffhangery ending and was self-contained enough that I’d be satisfied even if the series didn’t continue.

  • fievel@lemmy.zip
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    21 days ago

    I just finished my first ever audio book. Always thought this was not for me because I like reading, you know. Then I gave a try, and that’s indeed better than I thought. With audio book I can enjoy literacy while doing activities that never would allowed me to do so, like working (for stuff which do not require 100% concentration) or driving (especially in traffic jams). And I really enjoyed having a story told to me, you know a bit like a madeleine de Proust, something bringing you back to childhood.

    So for the first one I choose one in my native language, French. À retardement, by Franck Thilliez. This is a great thriller around topics on psychiatry, psychotic criminals and so on. I thought it was very well written and, knowing a bit of the topic through the stories of my psychologist partner, I think it’s very well documented about the illness and management of it in asylums (although there are parts that are pure fictional without any scientific veracity).

    I’m also reading to another French novel, Le signal, by Maxime Chattam. This is an horror story, maybe inspired by what Stephen King could have written (but as far as I’m in not as good as King - but ok it’s very difficult to reach). One interesting suggestion, in the introduction of the novel, the author suggests some music to listen while reading (horror movies soundtracks), never done that before and this is a very good idea (I don’t have the ability at each reading session but when I did it, indeed I enjoyed more the book).

  • Underwaterbob@sh.itjust.works
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    22 days ago

    Iain M. Banks’ Matter. It’s the second-last Culture novel and I’m sad because I’ll be done with them soon. It’s also been a pleasant surprise because it seems like a lot of people suggest that the novels drop off in quality, but I’ve really enjoyed the last couple and this one so far.

    • zout@fedia.io
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      22 days ago

      I actually read all Culture novels until Matter, but stopped reading that one after a few chapters. I couldn’t get into the story, it was too complex for me.

      • Underwaterbob@sh.itjust.works
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        21 days ago

        It gets a bit easier a few chapters in once you’ve got a few of the more annoyingly verbose names committed to memory. There is still one plot thread that throws me for a loop because it only comes up once every hundred pages or something and has no apparent ties to everything else going on, but still, I don’t think it’s any more complicated than say, Use of Weapons.

  • West_of_West@piefed.social
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    22 days ago

    I finished The Black Tongue Thief a few days ago so I’ve bounced around a few books. But I seem to have settled on Swords & Deviltry by Fritz Leiber and The Mosaic Effect by McGregor and Mitchell

      • West_of_West@piefed.social
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        21 days ago

        I enjoyed the light hearted narrator in a dark world aspect of Black Tongue Thief. And I would recommend it, if that is appealing.

        I think I’d caution some people on Leiber. He’s a good writer, and important in fantasy Canon. And I am enjoying him.

        But he is writing during the 1950s to 80s, so there is some inherent misogyny. He tries to make powerful women characters, but it doesn’t quite work. I think he was pushing boundaries in the 60s, but a modern reader with modern conceptions may not enjoy his work.

        The Mosaic Effect is about the CCP setting up an underground and parallel state in Vancouver/Canada. So if that’s your thing, yeah read it.