Reviews and Comments

Leaving_Marx

Leaving_Marx@wyrmsign.org

Joined 1 year, 11 months ago

Printer, anarchist, illustrator, & enthusiast of the printed word.

FediBanter: @Thundering@kolektiva.social

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ I want everyone to read it and think of it often ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great book, fun, and uncomplicated ⭐⭐⭐ Good, feel complicated about if I wasted my time ⭐⭐+⬇️ I hate read this

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reviewed System Collapse by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #7)

Martha Wells: System Collapse (Hardcover, 2023, Tordotcom) 4 stars

Am I making it worse? I think I'm making it worse.

Following the events in …

New adventures!

5 stars

Just finished the newest book in the murderbot series and it was awesome. Picking up where the last book left off it explores relationships with "lost" human colonies, and working to translate the cultural and social consequences of being reconnected to the corporate rim world's and the corporations and capitalism space feudal logics that entails. Really like this one alot, recommend it for anyone already in the series but hasn't picked it up yet.

John Scalzi, Elizabeth Bear, Karl Schroeder, Jay Lake, Tobias Buckell: Metatropolis (2009, Subterranean) 5 stars

" ... METAtropolis is the brainchild of five of science fiction's hottest writers ... who …

Finished the second last story: "Utere Nihil Non Extra Quiritationem Suis: Novella" by John Scalzi

This world has city states and autonomous regions, and then it has the wilds, outside of these self-sustaining spots. This is the only story looking at life inside these cities, which have a wealthy, better off vibe. Pretty cute in some respects, looks at working life, weird biotech and the best part is the relationship between the main character and his friend, a biohacked pig he named lunch.

John Scalzi, Elizabeth Bear, Karl Schroeder, Jay Lake, Tobias Buckell: Metatropolis (2009, Subterranean) 5 stars

" ... METAtropolis is the brainchild of five of science fiction's hottest writers ... who …

Just finished another story, "The Red in the Sky Is Our Blood: Novelette by Elizabeth Bear" this one was good. A little speculative look at underground scene of permaculturalists who function more like a clandestine org with antagonisms and guns. One that feels more action vibes and definitely feels like there is more meat on the other side of the story that may never be told.

Adrian Tchaikovsky: Children of Memory (2022, Macmillan Publishers Limited) 4 stars

The unmissable follow-up to the highly acclaimed Children of Time and Children of Ruin.

Earth …

Really interesting exploration of time, memory, and consciousness. Felt like it broke my brain a bit. But in the end it reminded me that I don't like the concept of AI, but if AI ever made it to the point of consciousness, I'd want to defend it's right to exist. I wouldn't want it to forced into labor and tasks other consciousness has deemed undesirable. I would want it to be a conscious worker with autonomy

John Scalzi, Elizabeth Bear, Karl Schroeder, Jay Lake, Tobias Buckell: Metatropolis (2009, Subterranean) 5 stars

" ... METAtropolis is the brainchild of five of science fiction's hottest writers ... who …

The second story in this collection is Stochasti-city: Novella by Tobias S. Buckell. Totally different vibe, late/post-capitalism Detroit, following a down and out vet in a city where mercenaries have replaced police, corporations wield considerable power and the equivalent of critical mass bike activism turned into asymmetrical warfare.

Every time I read it I think, this is like a fantasy of struggle written by someone who has done the research but lacks the social connections to green/left/anarchist organizing to create a story that feels like the logical leap from our current context into struggle as things get worse and further polarized (read:class). Really fun all the same, you can get caught up imagining the world's behind the characters and communities you meet and leaves me wanting to know more about this world. Probably the story that was most influence or more parallels Robert Evans toe dipping into fiction.

John Scalzi, Elizabeth Bear, Karl Schroeder, Jay Lake, Tobias Buckell: Metatropolis (2009, Subterranean) 5 stars

" ... METAtropolis is the brainchild of five of science fiction's hottest writers ... who …

I really liked this collection so have come back to it. Just finished the first story, "cascadia" about a post-fractured and collapsed global capitalism PNW and a community deep in the woods which is some kind of anarcho-communist/green-anarchist cyber punk community. It was very good for world building in the collection, but there is two other pieces in the book that had my imagination going wild and I am really excited to get to those.

All the stories in this book look at different anarchist communities in this world but is written by non-anarchists sci-fi authors (as far as I can tell). Great series.

Anne Boyer: The Undying (Paperback, 2020, Picador) 4 stars

A week after her forty-first birthday, the acclaimed poet Anne Boyer was diagnosed with highly …

Anne Boyer's honesty is sobering

No rating

Dealing with a close death of my own, I decided to dive into this book and consumed it in two days. sad, sobering, relatable I would be hesitant to recommend it to just anyone but if you are in the right mind state it is a beautiful written work. I really liked the seeming appreciation and hope afforded to friends when in hard places in the final chapter. Friends can make all the difference in hard times.