AFKBRBChocolate

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 14 hours ago

Unless restaurants are serving nitrous now, I think this is at a dentist's office.

[–] [email protected] 30 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

Oh, man, the risk of infection in a bone is SO high, and can easily be fatal. Very bad idea. He'd be better off yanking the tooth.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 18 hours ago
[–] [email protected] 15 points 2 days ago (1 children)

A lot of people read the comments without having read the article, so for them here's the bit you're taking about:

At one point, attorneys had to admit to Reyes that they had never read articles which were included as evidence. Reyes then said they had "cherry picked" and "egregiously misquoted" studies put forward by the Pentagon on transgender people decreasing the lethality of the military.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 2 days ago

But if you read the article, is not what we assumed. The boxes were being shipped from the German embassy in Japan to Argentina, and were marked as personal effects. The Argentinians did a spot check and found the propaganda, so they confiscated it because they were worried it could impact their neutrality. It went to the courts, up to their supreme court, though no one knows what action if any the court took. Obviously the Nazis didn't get the material back.

Argentina being a safe haven for Nazis didn't happen until after the war, if I understand things correctly.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

My brother has a pretty amazing memory for events when we were growing up, but he also wrote in a calendar every night, synopsizing the day's events. And he enjoyed reading those calendars regularly. Now, at almost 70 years old, he can still remember details of vacations we took when we were young, and I'm certain it's because of that journalling he did.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 days ago
[–] [email protected] 8 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Why is "dog" in a different font?

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 days ago

Where I am in SoCal, it barely buys you one.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 4 days ago (5 children)

Almost certainly. Having $1M is unremarkable these days. Technically a millionaire is someone with more than a million and less than a billion, but usually these days it refers to people with hundreds of millions.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Everything also makes sense if viewed from the point of view of benefiting Russia.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 4 days ago

That really sucks. I'm not sorry for Tesla, but I'm sorry for the workers caught up in the shit show.

 

I retired at the beginning of the year, and before leaving I saved all my personal email from my work account to a PST file. I had confirmed in advance that Microsoft has a free utility for converting PSTs to Gmail. What I didn't realize until I was gone is that the utility requires you to have outlook installed, and I don't have it at home.

I read that Thunderbird can import PSTs to MBOX with an add-on, but it doesn't seem to. There are a mess of conversation utilities, but they're all restricted to a small number of emails for the free versions.

I'll probably just give in and buy one, even though I only need it one time for one (huge) file, but I thought I'd ask if anyone had done it and has a better option.

 

A year ago, I made this post with notes I had kept on the books I'd read in the prior year. I wasn't sure anyone would be interested, but I had the notes and figured I might as well post them. I was stunned by the positive responses. Well, it's been another year, so here are my notes from the books I've read since then.

I've tried to write these such that any spoilers are of the kind you might find on the back cover: first chapter setup kinds of things. Also, the original list was just notes for myself to remind me of the books and if I liked them, but I've had friends ask to see them since, and ask for updates, so it's changed the way I write them slightly because I'm aware other people will read them.

Rule 34, Stross Somewhat of a sequel to Halting State, taking place a few years later. Spammers are being killed around the world, many at the same time. Story mostly follows a detective on the case, a psychopath involved, and a flunky who is unwittingly part of things. Interesting, though as with Halting State, the use of second person seems weird.

Consider Phlebas, Banks Both sides in a war raging across the galaxy are trying to get to an advanced artificial intelligence. Mostly told from the POV of a human variant who can change appearance. Banks’s first SF novel - pretty good though I didn't find the main character especially likable.

The Fifth Season, Jemison Fantasy - first book in the Broken Earth trilogy. Set in an earth where all the land is one big continent that goes through periods of big seismic/volcanic activity such that there's well-followed lore about how to get through them. There are “orogenes" who have a power to control the seismic activity to varying extents. The story alternates from the perspective of three female orogenes struggling with their respective situations. Very well crafted and structured. Good.

Never Let Me Go, Ishiguro This is an odd book. It's very slow paced, and not much actually happens. I think it's best to read it without knowing anything at all, so I'm going to avoid spoilers. It's a story told first person by a woman who attended a special boarding school. For a quarter of the book, there are barely even hints that there's anything unusual going on. We don't get an understanding of it until halfway, and even then not fully. I feel like this might have been better as a novella. That said, it was highly regarded and even made into a movie (that I never saw). The premise is really interesting, and the story moving, but for half the book we're just reading a woman reminiscing on her school days.

Home: Habitat, Range, Niche, Territory, Wells A short story in the Murderbot series, taking place between Exit Strategy and Fugitive Telemetry (but published well after). This one from the point of view of Dr. Mensah and the after effects of the ordeal in Exit Strategy. Would be good to read in between those books.

The Saint of Bright Doors, CHANDRASEKERA A boy is raised by his mother to kill his father (and others). He has no shadow, and has to work to keep from floating off the ground. He grows up and moves to a big, strange city to escape his mother's vision for him, but he has a strange destiny. An odd fantasy story, with odd bits of magic, odd characters, and an odd arc. Enjoyable.

The Player of Games, Banks Second in the Culture Wars series, set in the same universe as Consider Phlebas, but otherwise unrelated. A better book than the first. A man who is somewhat famous for his prowess at playing all sorts of games is recruited to go to a recently discovered empire that has a complicated game that's central to its culture and structure. Banks does well at creating multidimensional characters, and the story is compelling. The main characters in this book and in Phlebas seem to lack truly close relationships, which is odd.

Children of Ruin, Tchaikovsky Sequel to Children of Time, set not long after. Similar structure to Time, we follow another terraforming group contemporary with Kern, and a group from the world at the end of that book a thousand+ years later, but in this one, nothing in between. Very interesting, with multiple intelligent species in play, and communication between them difficult. If you liked Children of Time, you're sure to like this.

The Edge of Worlds, Wells Fourth Raksura book. Moon’s tribe goes with Groundlings to check out a city that may have been built by the same people who made the underwater city of the last story. This one is the first half of a two-part story, which explains why it felt like it got off to a slower start than the others.

17776, Bois Not really a novel, more of a multimedia story. The title is the year it's set, and since around our present day, people have stopped being born, getting old, or dying, and no one knows why. It's a society where the thing everyone has an abundance of is time. It's an interesting setting, explained in an especially interesting way. There isn't an awful lot of actual story, but it's fun. Free online at https://www.sbnation.com/a/17776-football/.

Echopraxia, Watts Sequel to Blindsight. A biologist gets roped into an expedition investigating alien signals. There's more about consciousness in this one, and commentary on religion. It somehow felt both more and less weird than Blindsight. Not at all an easy read, and will likely leave you scratching your head about what happens.

Dangerous Visions (anthology of short stories), Ellison (editor) I'll admit to being slightly disappointed by this anthology, though there are some good explanations for that. Dangerous Visions has a reputation for being a collection of stories that the authors would not have been able to sell to publishers at the time because of taboos and themes. I've read enough early SF to know that you have to read it with an understanding of the context of the time it was written, but I'll still admit that I expected more of the stories to be on themes that would be considered taboo today. For many of them, the taboo was atheism or similar religious commentary, which seems milquetoast today. There are also a number of stories that just don't seem that strong to me, and the book’s reputation made me expect more. There are a number of exceptions to both observations though, and it's well worth the time to read it if you keep the context in mind.

A Psalm for the Wild Built, Chambers Hundreds of years ago, in a civilization on a moon of a planet, the robots became sentient and decided to go off into the forest. Without their mechanical labor, people had to remake society differently. Now, these centuries later, a young person is searching for purpose, and while in the woods is approached by a robot for the first time in all those years. It's a cute little story - sweet - and not very long.

Kiln People, Brin Set a couple hundred years in the future, technology is ubiquitous that lets people make a living clay duplicate of themselves that has their memory and thoughts to the point they were created, lasts about a day, and whose memories can be reintegrated with the real person if desired. The duplicates are property, have no rights, and are used to do almost all work and to take any risks without risking the humans. A private detective and some of his duplicates gets pulled into an increasingly complex plot that could reshape society. This is a thoroughly enjoyable book, with lots of twists, and an interesting narrative as we follow copies who may or may not reintegrate with our detective.

The Harbors of the Sun, Wells Continuation of the story in The Edge of Worlds. If you liked that, you'll like this. Wells is a very consistent author, who writes a variety of likable heroes, detestable villains, and complicated others. The stories aren't especially deep, but they're interesting, moving, and satisfying. That's true of all of her books that I've read so far.

The Terminal Experiment, Sawyer A man is digitally scanned and three copies are made - essentially artificial intelligences - but two are modified. One of the three becomes a murderer. I had big problems with this book and nearly stopped reading it, which is something I rarely do. There are a number of things given “scientific" explanations that seem like Sawyer trying to give proof to religious views, and that seemed really weak (I looked him up after reading it and apparently he's agnostic but wanted to explore how people would react if there was proof of these things). Also, the way they decide to modify the copies, and the way they go about it, seem like a real reach. Still, overall it's an interesting premise and an interesting story.

The Last Policeman, Winters A newly promoted young detective is trying to solve what looks like a suicide, but he thinks is a murder. No one else seems all that interested in solving it, though, because in six months a giant asteroid is going to hit the earth. This is a straight murder mystery, except in an unusual setting as humanity deals with the looming catastrophe in their different ways. Well written, interesting characters.

Sleeping Giants, Neuvel A little girl falls down a deep hole in the woods and lands on a gigantic, glowing, metal hand that's thousands of years old. This is a wonderful alien artifact story with some interesting twists. I really enjoyed this book. Not exactly hard SF, but checks a lot of the boxes for me, including the wonder of discovery.

The Long Earth, Pratchett & Baxter Plans appear on the internet for an easily constructed device. When activated, the person is moved to the next in a series of alternate earths, each more or less different from the one we know, and none with indigenous people. This reminded me of other books that had exploration as the main plot point, like Rendezvous With Rama or 20,000 leagues under the sea. Good.

Old Man's War, Scalzi Humans are a minor race, fighting to get and keep additional planets for its colonies. Many of the soldiers are old folks from earth who are made young and trained to fight. I'm not generally a fan of military SF, but was told this wasn't like most of it. I suppose that's true, but it's still very much military SF. Scalzi is a good writer, and the story was engaging. I might read the sequel.

InterWorld, Gaiman, Reaves An infinite number of earths exist, some ruled by magic, some by science, and some in the middle. Variants of the same person on these earths are able to walk between them, and they fight to keep the balance between magic and science. I had read that this was a combination of science fiction and fantasy, but it's pure magical fantasy, with just a nod that science exists. It's a fun story, with an interesting premise, in no way deep or challenging.

The Left Hand of Darkness, Le Guin A coalition of human planets has sent the first envoy to an icy world where the people are gender neutral and sterile most of the time, but once a month become male or female (essentially randomly) and fertile. This is a classic, written in 1969, and my second reading - the first being in the late 80s. Le Guin creates an amazingly rich world, even with its harsh, frozen landscape. The characters grow to understand how gender impacts their cultures, and the biases they didn't know they had. It's also aged remarkably well for an SF book written 55 years ago. There's nothing about it that feels outdated.

The Peripheral, Gibson A computer server links the late 2020s to a time 70 years later, allowing communication and telepresence between the two times. A young woman in the earlier time witnesses a murder in the later time and gets sucked into a battle between powerful people in both times. This is a great book; I think I could have recognized it as Gibson's writing even if I hadn't known it in advance. Very interesting premise, engaging characters, and fun without feeling like fluff.

Agency, Gibson Sequel to The Peripheral. Many of the same characters, but dealing with a 2017 America in which Hillary won the election, Brexit failed, an incident between Turkey and Russia is driving the potential for an imminent nuclear war, and a newly conscious AI is figuring out a contentious situation. A good sequel, though some of the ground felt covered in the prior book. Trump and Hillary are never named. Will read the final in the trilogy when it comes out.

Children of Memory, Tchaikovsky Third in the series that starts with Children of Time. Not a cookie cutter sequel, and a somewhat challenging book. The first two in the series alternate between two linear stories set a long time apart. This one isn't told in a linear way. Many of the characters from the prior book go to one of the planets listed as a terraforming project of the original earth civilization and find a struggling town of people. I really like how Tchaikovsky wrestles with what the right thing to do is in complex situations. Good series all around.

Look to Windward, Banks Third in the Culture series - no characters in common. A famous composer from a predator-evolved race has renounced his citizenship over a caste system of that race and lives on a Culture ring orbital. Another of that race is sent to convince him to return, but there are layers to the story. Compared to the first two books, there's much less overt action, with the story being more character and emotion driven. Good.

Pattern Recognition, Gibson First of the “Blue Ant" trilogy. A woman with an allergy to logos, and an obsession for a mysterious viral film, gets hired to find the film's maker, and gets more than she bargained for. Very likable main character, with side characters that come in a spectrum of trustworthiness. Very Gibson, except set in the then-present of the early 2000s.

The Time Traveler's Wife, Niffenegger The story of man with a generic condition that causes him to travel in time without control, and the woman he falls in love with. They often struggle because of the unreliability of him staying in one time and place, but they also meet each other when each is at varying ages. The focus is really mostly on the love story, and it's only lightly SF. There were times, especially early on, when it felt like I was reading fan fiction - the writing didn't seem super strong and it felt more like a romance novel - but I liked the way the characters realistically grew and changed over the course of the book.

Coalescent, Baxter Going through his childhood home after his father's death, a man learns he has a twin sister who was sent off to live with a mysterious cult/organization, and he sets out to find her. The story is told mostly from his point of view and that of the woman who founded the organization in the fifth century, plus a few other scattered viewpoints. I spent half the book wondering how it was classified as SF, though that eventually became apparent. Good story, well told.

The Dispossessed, Le Guin Two worlds: an earth-like planet with earth-like countries, and its moon, a much more desolate environment settled a couple hundred years earlier by rebels from the planet who created a kind of non-government communist society. The two have had only minimal contact, based on trade, but now a leading physicist from the moon is going to the planet to try and bring down the walls between them. Written in 1974, the novel is another impressive Le Guin work that just seems timeless - it doesn't feel at all dated. I've read that many people think this is her greatest work, but I did enjoy The Left Hand Of Darkness more. In that book, Le Guin’s commentary is mostly embodied in the relationship between the main characters. Because she's making more political commentary in this one, there's a lot more verbiage given to explaining the differences in the societies, which is interesting, but feels less like storytelling. Still, a really great book.

Spook Country, Gibson Second in the Blue Ant series, really Bigend is the only character from that book of any significance. Three eventually interlocking story lines: Hollis, the singer from a defunct cult band, now a freelance writer doing a piece on locative art; Tito, a young Cuban Chinese guy whose family does support work for organized crime; and Milgram, a (Russian?) guy, addicted to an antianxiety drug, being held captive as a translator by an ex-military man tracking Tito and his family. All are intertwined with a mysterious shipping container. Probably the least “science fictiony" Gibson novel I've read. Written and set in 2006/2007, with things to say about the post-9/11 world. Enjoyable, but somehow more perfunctory feeling than his other novels.

The Ghost Brigades, Scalzi Sequel to Old Man's War. Main characters are mostly different, but it takes place shortly after the prior. I actually liked this one better; it's somewhat less military SF, with some interesting philosophical issues and interesting use of technology.

The Stand, King A couple of things about this book. The first is, it's long. Without realizing it, I grabbed a version that had 400 pages restored that had been cut in editing the original, which was notably large anyway, resulting in a total of 1,152 pages. That's like four times the size of many books on this list. The second is that I knew nothing about it going in other than it was on several lists of the best SF and fantasy, and I thought it was SF. It starts with the accidental release of an engineered bioweapon that wipes out much of humanity, but where it ends up is clearly in fantasy territory. All that said, it's a good book - fairly dark, as is to be expected from Stephen King. Very rich characters. Hard to say more without spoilers.

The Deep Enders, Reardon Dave Reardon is better known as the husband of Ann Reardon, who has the very popular “How To Cook That" YouTube channel. This, his first novel (though apparently he's ghostwritten some), isn't the kind I normally read (not at all SF or fantasy). It's a fictional story of friendship set in Australia around the time the Japanese bombed the northern coast, shortly after Pearl Harbor. The larger events are real, but the characters are fictional. It's a young adult novel about a teenager from Honolulu, sent to Australia to be safe after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, who strikes up a friendship with an aboriginal teen and a Japanese girl. Colorful, quick read.

The Fold, Clines A brilliant guy with an eidetic memory is asked by a DARPA friend to check out a secret teleportation project because, though it seems to work, something seems off. Pretty interesting story, though it goes a bit off the deep end in the closing acts, and it's pretty far from hard SF. It's apparently the second book set in “The Threshold Universe," though I didn't realize that when I started it. Not actually a sequel, just in the same universe. I'll probably read the first one, 14.

We Are Legion (Bobiverse book 1), Taylor A contemporary programmer dies in an accident and is revived as a digital image running on a computer 100+ years later. The story follows him and copies of him on various adventures. Heavy stuff happens, but it's a fun, lighthearted book. Not especially deep, and it suffers a bit from following so many storylines, with an end that feels abrupt. That's possibly just to set up the sequels though.

Waking Gods, Neuvel Sequel to Sleeping Giants (The Themis Files series). A bunch of the same kind of giant robot shows up on earth and the team has to figure out what to do. If you liked the first, you'll probably like the second, but it's shorter on the wonder of discovery and longer on the solving of a global problem.

Only Human, Neuvel Third in The Themis Files series (potentially the last). Rose, Vincent, the general, and Eva spend 9+ years on the planet where the giants were created, and get caught up in turmoil there before returning to turmoil on earth. Pretty satisfying conclusion, the whole series is enjoyable.

To Sleep in a Sea of Stars, Paoloni Kira, a xenobiologist in 2257, accidentally uncovers and gets merged with an ancient alien entity. An alien race starts attacking human settlements in the galaxy and Kira ends up in the middle of everything. There's an awful lot going on in this book, enough for multiple books - it manages to be both epic and fast paced. Very engrossing, I really enjoyed it.

Some Desperate Glory, Tesh A seventeen year old girl, the best of those trained since birth to be obiedient soldiers protecting the dregs of humanity fifty, years after the earth is destroyed in an alien war, leaves her assignment to save her brother from a suicide mission. Along the way she learns that things are not what she had been taught to believe. Good story, with an interesting development of the main character.

The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, Heinlein A revolution is taking place on Luna (the moon), which is used as a penal colony by earth and ruled by an earth agency to ensure cheap labor and food shipments. The revolution is helped by a sentient computer that runs almost everything on Luna. Lots of political commentary. Published in 1966, there are lots of liberal ideals for its time, but it's also sprinkled with racial and gender stereotypes of the time. Great story.

Living Next Door to the God of Love, Robson I write these blurbs so as to avoid spoilers, but I hadn't read the first book when I wrote the following and now that I have I realize even the most basic description of the second book will contain spoilers for the first book. Skip this one if you haven't read Natural History.

A loose sequel to Natural History, which I haven't read, taking place some thirty years later. Humans have encountered “Stuff," alien technology that is able to create whole worlds based on desires, and to reshape people themselves. They also encounter Unity, the alien sentience that can absorb living things that are then added to it and live on within it. In this story, several characters are trying to understand who they really are and how they're shaped by their world. That includes Jalaeka, who isn't human, but isn't quite Unity either. This is an oddly wonderful book that took me a bit by surprise somehow. I will for sure go back and read the first novel.

Made Things, Tchaikovsky A novella, and the first fantasy story I've read by Thcaikovsky, who is quickly becoming one of my favorite authors. Set in a place where a few people are Magelords that have a lot of magic, many people have a little magic, and some have none. A young orphan girl with a little magic and a knack for making puppets scrapes by with petty theft and the help of a couple tiny living dolls. A fun, quick read.

The Book of Koli, Carey Set hundreds of years after global ecological disasters and wars in the mid-21st century obliterated most of humanity. The remnants are clustered in small, scattered villages, scraping by with the help of the bits of technology that have survived and still function and are treated almost religiously. Koli is a teenager from one such village who makes some decisions for love and for status that prove to be very good and very bad.

Natural History, Robson A few hundred years in the future, the variety of the people of earth include the Forged, whose bodies (and to some extent, minds) were developed for specific purposes, including as ships. There's somewhat of a caste system, with the Forged lower down. A Forged exploration vessel/person encounters alien technology and an uninhabited alien world in deep space, and hopes to use both the technology and the world to help the Forged create a new home. I like the second book better, but read this one first if you intend to read Living Next Door to the God of Love.

Planetfall, Newman Suh is a woman who awakens from a coma with the coordinates for a planet in her head that she's certain are god calling her to go there. She convinces 1000 people to go with her, where they indeed find an alien structure they call the City of God. The story mainly takes place 20 years later, after Suh's death, and is told from the perspective of Ren, a woman who is a genius engineer, and who was in love with Suh. Ren has secrets and issues, and so do others. Very well worth reading, though the ending seems somehow slapped on.

Iron Council, Mieville Third in the Perdido Street Station series. Like the others, set in a sort of Victorian steampunk world with magic and a number of alien races. This one focuses on rebel factions fighting against the imperialist, militant leadership of the city. The story is told from three different viewpoints: Judah Low, who learns to animate lifeless materials into golems, and who becomes entwined with the people of a steam train, forging across the continent; Cutter, a friend and sometimes lover of Judah, trying to find him and protect him from the government militia; and Ori, who wants to fight against the government, but feels the various factions aren't doing enough. Like the first two in the series, this is an excellently written and crafted story/world, but also like them it's far from uplifting. There were times I picked up the book to escape the anxiety induced by reading the news, only to find myself more anxious by the story.

The Uplift War, Brin Third in the Uplift series, taking place about the same time as the prior book, Startide Rising. Humans have been granted lease to Garth, a world that was nearly destroyed fifty thousand years earlier, when a recently uplifted race started wiping out all life on the planet, starting with the largest, before they were stopped. The humans and their uplifted chimp clients/partners are working to restore ecological balance. With a number of galactic races pursuing the dolphin ship Streaker of the prior novel, an Avian race decides to capture and hold Garth hostage to get the humans to capitulate. Most of the humans are rounded up, and the remaining chimps on Garth have to defend their world against the much more powerful aliens, with a little help from a few humans and friendly aliens. This is a really great book, heartily recommended.

Ammonite, Griffith A planet has been discovered that has the remnants of a ship that landed there a couple hundred years prior. The powerful earth-based corporation that controls many things and is just called The Company had previously sent a ship of military and teachers down, but a virus killed all of the men and some of the women, so the remnants are quarantined. Into this, an anthropologist goes down, being paid to test a new vaccine, but personally wanting to study the completely female culture, and find out how they've continued to have kids for 200 years. I really enjoyed this book. It's interesting that I didn't find myself thinking about gender roles at all in a book where every character is female. I didn't think of it as a lesbian novel, even though there are love stories within it. It's just a story about cultures and people, some finding their way in new situations.

The Ministry for the Future, Stanley Robinson Starting about current day and moving forward, it's the story of the world on the heading towards complete ecological disaster, and efforts of a newly-created international ministry to reverse the problems. This is an unusually told story. Much of it is told third person from the perspective of Mary, the head of the ministry, and Frank, a survivor of a devastating heat wave that kills everyone in his town but him, which radicalizes him. But interleaving their chapters are various first person accounts from people who are never named and generally never reappear. For instance, one chapter is from the perspective of a woman kayaking the LA basin, helping to rescue people after an unprecedented flood. We never get her name nor hear more of her story, just that event. There's something odd about these one-off chapters being first person, which makes them seem more intimate, while the recurring characters are third person and less intimate. There's a lot of hard science here, mostly on ecological issues and geo engineering, and I kept feeling like it's an important book, but it also felt strangely unemotional, even when characters were experiencing traumatic events.

Six Wakes, Lafferty A generation starship with 2500 stored human cargo is on a 400 year journey, crewed by six clones. They are slated to live consecutive lives, being put into new bodies when one dies, until their destination is reached. They do this to get new starts, because each is a criminal, convicted of past crimes over their prior couple hundred years. The story begins as the six all become conscious in newly cloned bodies, while the murdered corpses of their prior bodies float around them, and they have no memories since the ship set sail. This is a murder mystery and a psychological thriller. It's entertaining and kept me turning the pages, though some of the medical technology seems strangely primitive given some of the advanced tech.

Blood Music, Bear A brilliant but reckless scientist creates intelligent cells and ends up injecting himself with them to sneak them out of the lab where he works. It doesn't go as planned. Written in 1985, I originally read it a few years later, and it's stuck with me since. It definitely gets weirder than I had expected when I first started it, but it's wonderfully imaginative - managing to be both apocalyptic and hopeful. Great book.

Autonomous, Newitz Set in the mid 2100s, human equivalent robots, and actual humans, can be owned as property. A newly activated military bot working for the Intellectual Property Coalition (IPC) and its human partner are sent to stop a woman who reverse engineers popular drugs and makes them available for cheap on the black market. She has learned that a popular drug that she's been selling was illegally designed to be highly addictive, and it's killing people. Interesting story, but I didn't find it especially engrossing (full disclosure: possibly because of distractions in my personal life). Some of the characters seemed a little superficially drawn, and there's a romance between a human and a bot that I think we're supposed to find romantic but to me just seemed creepy. Still, lots of interesting ideas, and there's a lot of commentary on property and the patent system.

Embassytown, Mieville On the planet Arieka, the native alien race speaks a language (only called Language) that requires two voices with one mind to speak it. They are incapable of understanding anything else - in fact, they don't recognize anything else as even being language. A city of humans lives adjacent to one of their cities, and the humans have created specially trained and augmented twins, called Ambassadors, who are capable of speaking Language, and have negotiated important trade with the native population. Now a new Ambassador is arriving from off-planet who will change everything. China Mieville has a knack for creating strange cities populated by various alien races that infuse his stories, and this one is no exception. I found it pretty interesting, but this is one of those books that I wouldn't recommend broadly. There are dense passages about the nature of communication, and most of the action is in the form of ideas more than events.

Spin, Wilson Tyler is an adolescent boy with his two friends, twin brother and sister, when the stars all go out and, soon after, all the satellites fall out of the sky. The earth has been surrounded by a black membrane, and time runs differently inside of it. The three of them deal with the impacts and uncertainties of this in different ways as they grow older and humanity adjusts to the ramifications, but their lives remain intertwined. This is a great book with an unusual premise. It's full of flawed characters, but it recognizes that flaws are just part of being human. Unlike the prior book, I would recommend this one broadly - I very much enjoyed it.

Brightness Reef, Brin This is the first book in the second Uplift trilogy. For a few hundred years, members of six galactic races (including humans) have made a somewhat primitive society on one small piece of Jijo, a planet designated to remain fallow for a millennia. Being on the planet is illegal, and word of it could have ramifications for each race in the broader galactic society, so there is lots of anxiety when a starship lands. But what race is on the ship, and what do they want? Excellent story. Unlike the prior books, this one does not stand alone. Apparently this trilogy is one long story with no gaps in the timeline. It would also be useful to have read the prior trilogy.

In Ascension, MacInnes A marine biologist participates on an expedition to a newly discovered thermal vent in the ocean with unusual properties, and it alters the arc of her life in profound ways. Her difficult childhood and relationships with her family permeates the story. This is an odd book, slowly paced, that feels like a melancholy dream. There are wondrous things happening, but they often feel like they're happening offstage, even when the characters are in the thick of them.

 

It's about the end of the year, and I know there will all sorts of lists of the best books published this year, so this is a different question: regardless of when published, which SF books that you personally read this year did you enjoy the most. I'm also asking which you enjoyed instead of which you thought were the best, so feel free to include fluff without shame.

I'll go first. Of the 60+ books I read this year, here are the ones I liked most. No significant spoilers, not in any order.

Children of Time, Adrian Tchaikovsky
  • A project to uplift monkeys on a terraformed world, at the peak of human civilization, is sabotaged by people who don't think humans should play god. There follows a human civil war that nearly destroys civilization. A couple thousand years later, an ark ship of human remnants leaving an uninhabitable earth is heading towards that terraformed planet. This is a great book, with lots to say on intelligence, the nature of people, and both the fragility and heartiness of life.
Kiln People, David Brin
  • Set a couple hundred years in the future, technology is ubiquitous that lets people make a living clay duplicate of themselves that has their memory and thoughts to the point they were created, lasts about a day, and whose memories can be reintegrated with the real person if desired. The duplicates are property, have no rights, and are used to do almost all work and to take any risks without risking the humans. A private detective and some of his duplicates gets pulled into an increasingly complex plot that could reshape society. This is a thoroughly enjoyable book, with lots of twists, and an interesting narrative as we follow copies who may or may not reintegrate with our detective.
Sleeping Giants, Sylvain Neuvel
  • A little girl falls down a deep hole in the woods and lands on a gigantic, glowing, metal hand that's thousands of years old. This is a wonderful alien artifact story with some interesting twists. I really enjoyed this book. Not exactly hard SF, but checks a lot of the boxes for me, including the wonder of discovery.
The Peripheral, William Gibson
  • A computer server links the late 2020s to a time 70 years later, allowing communication and telepresence between the two times. A young woman in the earlier time witnesses a murder in the later time and gets sucked into a battle between powerful people in both times. This is a great book; I think I could have recognized it as Gibson's writing even if I hadn't known it in advance. Very interesting premise, engaging characters, and fun without feeling like fluff.
The Left Hand of Darkness, Ursula K. Le Guin
  • A coalition of human planets has sent the first envoy to an icy world where the people are gender neutral and sterile most of the time, but once a month become male or female (essentially randomly) and fertile. This is a classic, written in 1969, and my second reading - the first being in the late 80s. Le Guin creates an amazingly rich world, even with its harsh, frozen landscape. The characters grow to understand how gender impacts their cultures, and the biases they didn't know they had. It's also aged remarkably well for an SF book written 55 years ago. There's nothing about it that feels outdated.

A couple notes:

  • If I hadn't stuck to my own "enjoyed" constraint, the list might have looked different. For instance, Perdido Street Station, by Meiville, is a really great book, but there's so much misery and sadness that it's hard to say I "enjoyed" it.

  • I hesitated to put The Left Hand Of Darkness on the list, simply because Le Guin is so widely recognized as a great master, and the book one of her greatest, that it seemed unfair. In the end, it seemed unfair to exclude it for such an artificial reason.

 

Pretty amazing considering the 2023 fiasco.

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submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Noticed this little girl on my shirt

 

This is an interesting list. It's missing some of the true great classics, like Frankenstein, and it has a number of unusual, less well known titles, but there's a lot to like on it. There's certainly a lot for people to disagree about, but it may well have your less often cited favorites, too. What do you think?

 

That The Knack/Ting Tings/Toni Basil mashup got me thinking about other great mashups, so I'm wondering what your favorites are. Here are a few of mine:

 

"I remember when I met with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un," she wrote in the book set to be released Tuesday. "I'm sure he underestimated me, having no clue about my experience staring down little tyrants (I'd been a children's pastor, after all)."

But Noem's spokesperson seemed to confirm to Politico and other news outlets that the story is not accurate and that the book will be corrected to remove it.

She sounds like the perfect Trump VP candidate: she just says whatever she thinks people will eat up and doesn't worry about whether it's true or not.

 

Below are books I've read over the last year, with notes about on what I thought of them. I started this list just to remind me what the books were about and if I thought they were worth reading. As the year went on, my notes became a little more substantial. The list was for me, but I thought I'd share in case it's useful to anyone. I recognize that it's very subjective.

Project Hail Mary, Weir Don't want to describe it even a little because spoilers would spoil; it's a book you should read without knowing anything. It's really good.

Fall, Stephenson Billionaire scanned into a digital world, and the people around him in the real world. Interesting and thought-provoking.

The Ocean at the End of the Lane, Gaiman Little boy stumbles upon old magic and an old evil. Really good.

The Ultimate Earth, Williamson Children on the moon are the latest in a long series of clones watching over the facility there, generations after the earth has all but forgotten them. A historian visits them.

The first four Discworld books, Pratchett Silly fun - disc-shaped world that sits atop four elephants that stand on a giant turtle riding through space. Each book is in the world, but separate stories with mostly separate characters. Lots of magic, lots of humor.

Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge, Resnick Long after humans are extinct, a group of alien archeologists uncover the origins and stories of mankind through the stories told by artifacts found in Olduvai gorge. Very unusual.

A Memory Called Empire, Martine Galactic empire space opera. Ambassador from a large space station to the central planet of the empire has an old copy of her predecessor implanted in her head - a technology user for generations by the station people but not known to the empire. She wants to solve the mystery of her predecessor's death. Character-driven discs opera.

A Desolation Called Peace, Martine Sequel to prior. Mahit Dzmare and Three Seagrass help the empire confront an alien that. Good.

The first six Murderbot Diaries books, Wells Security unit - sort of a cyborg combination of a robot and cloned human tissue - has hacked the part that forces it to comply. It mostly wants to watch soap operas, but finds itself rescuing humans. Surprisingly funny and heartwarming. Mostly novellas, so quick reads.

The Kingston Cycle trilogy, Polk Edwardian setting where magic is real but people are put in institutions for it if discovered. Each book from the vantage point of a different person, the first a psychologist who uses his powers to help his patients and seeks to discover why a witch was murdered. First is best, but all are good.

Ancillary Justice, Ancillary Sword & Ancillary Mercy (imperial radch trilogy), Leckie From the perspective of a warship AI dealing with a galactic empire. Feels like it could have been an inspiration for murderbot. Good.

Annihilation, Vandermeer A biologist is a member of a team trying to figure out what's happening in an area where investigative teams generally don't return from. Strangely paced, like a Lovecraft story. Wouldn't recommend to everyone. Very weird.

Gideon the Ninth, Muir Girl raised by necromancers sent to protect the head of her world as they try to unlock the secrets of an old world. Surprised by how much I liked it.

The Spare Man, Kowal The Thin Man in space - murder mystery on a space-going cruise ship. Not very deep, but enjoyable.

Piranesi, Clark Man Who lives in a world that is entirely a castle with endless halls and rooms, populated by just one other person, trying to understand his world. Interesting.

All Clear, Willis Sequel to Blackout - historians from Oxford in 2060 use time travel to see events surrounding WWII in person, but something is wrong. Not as light as some of her books, but very good.

Blind Lake, Wilson Reporters visiting a facility that uses incomprehensible AI-written systems to view life on a planet 50 light years away get caught in a lockdown that separates the people of the facility from the rest of the world. Very interesting.

Nettle and Bone, Kingfisher Fantasy - princess is sent to a convent, and eventually sets out to kill a powerful man who deserves it. Very enjoyable, and manages to be fun while also being dark.

Harrow the Ninth Sequel to Gideon the Ninth. First half is very confusing. Not an easy book to read, but well crafted and interesting.

WWW: Wake, Sawyer Blind teenage girl gets a computerized implant to restore her sight and ends up connected to a budding consciousness in webspace. Neat idea and an easy read but some parts felt unrealistic or cheesy.

The Graveyard Book, Gaiman Boy is raised in a graveyard by ghosts, protected by something else. Maybe written for teens, but wonderful regardless.

The Three Body Problem, Liu Strange things are happening in the scientific community in China. Interesting premise and an unusual book, but some things felt very unrealistic.

Saturn’s Children, Stross Humans built conscious robots to explore and develop the solar system, but they long outlast the now-extinct human race. Intrigue as one such robot gets in over her head.

The Anomaly, Le Tellier A plane from Paris to New York takes off in March and lands after severe turbulence. Then the same plane, with the same people, lands again in June. Thought provoking with well drawn characters.

The Daughter of Dr. Moreau, Moreno-Garcia Same/similar setting as The Island of, but focused on the daughter of the doctor as he conducts his experiments and his patron grows dissatisfied. Enjoyable.

Leviathan Wakes, Corey First book of The Expanse series. A war starting between people of earth, people who settled Mars, and people who settled the asteroid belt and stations. A missing person, and something strange happening. Really good.

Caliban’s War, Corey Second Expanse book. A protomolecule-based monster/soldier kills a bunch of other soldiers and everyone thinks some other government is responsible. Also very good.

Halting State, Stross A bank robbery inside an online game gets the attention of the cops - and a lot of other people. Written in 2007, set in 2017. Very interesting, even just for its take on technology.

Glasshouse, Stross In a distant future with ubiquitous wormhole technology, a man recovers from self-chosen radical memory deletion and joins a 30+ year experiment, but things aren't what they seem.

System Collapse, Wells 7th of the Murderbot Diaries. Starting basically where the 6th book ends, what to do with the colonists on the alien-infected planet, and what a rival company is trying to do.

2024

The Cloud Roads, Wells Fantasy about a loaner who can shape shift into a sort of dragon and doesn't know that he is. Enjoyable.

Passage, Willis A psychologist studying people who have had near death experiences joins a research project where they're induced, trying to figure out what they're for, what they mean. Good, but like a lot of Connie Willis books, there are too many people missing each other and too many misunderstandings. Still, very touching.

Gods of Risk, Corey Book 2.7 of The Expanse (novella). Bobby's nephew gets caught up in making drugs. Very short. Good.

Sundiver, Brin Written in 1980, the first of the Uplift series. Set in a time when humans have found there are many other intelligent, space-fairing beings in the galaxy, but nearly all were “uplifted" by another race. Everyone debates whether humans were uplifted and then abandoned by some unknown race, or are a very rare case of natural evolution. All this is the backdrop, or the fabric, of a story about the discovery of life in the sun.

Transition State, Leckie Set in the same universe as the Imperial Radch trilogy, with a couple minor characters from that as minor characters here. A guy is found abandoned on a ship as a baby, raised by adoptive parents, but is always strange (including urges to dissect people that he never acts on). Who he actually is might shake the empire, including the treaty that keeps aliens from destroying humans. Really good.

The Serpent Sea, Wells Second book of the Raksura series. The tribe (blanking on the word used internally) relocate to their ancestry home, a special giant tree, but it's dying because its seed was stolen. They go looking for it and get into trouble. Good.

Abaddon’s Gate, Corey Book 3 of The Expanse series. Rocinante crew gets hired to take a documentary crew to the ring made by the Venus protomolecule. All the other governments are sending ships too. Julie's sister Clarissa plots revenge for her father.

Hominids, Sawyer In an alternate universe, a neanderthal quantum physicist doing an experiment ends up marooned in our universe. A weird little bit of religion in the middle, but pretty interesting overall and fun to read about the speculative modern neanderthal society.

The Time Ships, Baxter Authorized sequel to “The Time Machine," by H.G. Wells. It's strange, in a way, because I of course read Wells’ work in the modern era, though it was written in 1914. Part of the charm was reading his notions of time and his commentary on class divides from this time a hundred years later, when the author has no knowledge of what happened in the intervening century. Baxter’s sequel is written from this modern era, but from the perspective of the same protagonist. Many of the advances in the sciences are captured, but it feels oddly artificial to have them observed by our early 1900s hero. Still, it's a very ambitious book, with a very broad scope, and much more commentary on the nature of man. Well worth reading.

Beggars in Spain, Kress People gene modified to no longer require sleep basically become a separate race of people. Lots of commentary on socialism, community, charity, racism, individuality, and more. Very thought provoking.

Humans, Sawyer Sequel to Hominids. A love story and a commentary on our world as seen through the eyes of a different version. Also more on the neanderthal version of it. As an ex Catholic, having a main character be matter of factly Catholic feels weird. Enjoyable sequel though.

Blindsight, Watts Strange first contact story with an enigmatic alien and a spectrum of technology-modified humans. A lot of it is an exploration of what it means to have consciousness or intelligence, and of how we're affected by language and communication. Not sure I'd call it enjoyable, but very interesting. Not a fluff piece by any means.

Startide Rising, Brin Sequel to Sundiver, set a couple hundred years later. A ship crewed by humans and dolphins has found something that could have major ramifications for the galactic races, so they're all fighting each other to get the earthlings. Very good, has aged well. Side note: I'm certain I read it when it came out in paperback, but I didn't remember it at all.

The Churn, Corey Book 3.5 of the Expanse series, a novella. Back story of Amos in Baltimore. It would have been a very different experience reading if I hadn't seen the series version - it couldn't disguise a main character because you actually see them. Semi-avoiding spoilers.

Leech, Ennes A doctor, one of many that share a group mind due to a parasite, finds its predecessor killed by a different type of parasite. Very strange, pretty dark. Thought provoking.

The Siren Depths, Wells Third book of the Raksura series. Moon’s birth court wants him back, against his will, and there's a danger facing everyone. Just as good as the prior books.

Starter Villain, Scalzi Down on his luck young man inherits his uncle's villain business. Quick, fun read. Funny!

The Host, Meyer Alien possession told from the POV of the compassionate alien. It turns out that I'm a little bit of a book snob because, as I opened the book on my Kindle and saw the blurb about it being by the author of the Twilight series (sparkly vampires), I almost abandoned it. I decided to at least start it and… I didn't hate it. The SF aspects of the story are actually pretty interesting and thought provoking. Given my understanding that Meyer is basically a romance novelist, I was surprised that the part I connected with the least well was the romance part - it's described as way overly physical (this body loves that person or could never love that other person).

Provenance, Leckie In the Imperial Radch series. Daughter in a scheming family tries a scheme of her own and gets mixed up in issues that span worlds and races. Interesting. Feels like a side story, which I guess it is.

Nona the Ninth, Muir Third of the Locked Tomb series, following Harrow the Ninth. I loved the first book, didn't love the second (challenging, interesting, not sure it was enjoyable), and liked this one better. Ending needed to be reread a couple times - confusing - but overall an interesting book.

Perdido Street Station, Meiville Elements of SF and fantasy. Set in a Victorian world (future earth, or maybe an alternate one) populated by humans and many races of aliens, some more alien than others, a scientist is hired by a bird person to give him back fight after his wings were removed as a punishment by his people. While working the problem, the scientist releases something truly horrible. It's a really evocative world and story, well imagined and well told. It brings up a lot of sadness, horror, and pity for its characters that didn't really stop, so not exactly a fun read. Long, but good.

The Watchmen, Moore Graphic novel about masked heroes being popular, then outlawed, then being systematically eliminated. Gritty, odd. It deals a lot with what constitutes the greater good and what compromises are reasonable.

How to live safely in a science fictional universe, Yu A time machine repair technician, hiding from life, tries to find his father who disappeared ten years prior, after almost inventing time travel. Amusing, short, quick read.

The City & The City, Mieville A murder victim is found in a European city that shares geography with another city. The cities aren't separated by physical borders, they overlay and are separated by more of a psychic border, and crossing from one to the other that way, breaching, is a serious crime. The detective investigating the murder uncovers things that could shake the fabric of both cities, and he has to work with a detective in the sister city to solve the crime. Very unusual and imaginative premise. Very compelling story.

The Sirens of Titan, Vonnegut It's Vonnegut, so it's hard to know where to start. The richest man in the world tries to avoid a life that's predicted for him. It doesn't go the way he envisioned either way. Lots of commentary on morality, friendship, religion, love. Not flattering commentary on any of those things.

Neptune's Brood, Stross Set in the same universe as Saturn’s Children. A banker/historian chasing down old debts finds much more than she bargained for and gets many factions out for her blood, including her mother. Lots of good speculation on a galactic society without FTL travel, composed of people who are fabricated, not Born.

The Scar, Meiville Following Perdido Street Station, but not in the city and with different characters. A translator fleeing the city gets pulled into a series of unfolding conflicts while she tries to find a way home, or at least to save it. Lots of layers, and commentary on trust and manipulation.

The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet, Chambers A clerk running away from family on Mars signs onto a ship that builds wormholes, and gets a new family in the process. After recently reading books by Meiville, Vonnegut, and others, this was a more hopeful, loving story. The explanation for why all the aliens look like various earth species felt kind of thin, but it's a good story with strong relationships.

Children of Time, Tchaikovsky A project to uplift monkeys on a terraformed world, at the peak of human civilization, is sabotaged by people who don't think humans should play god. There follows a human civil war that nearly destroys civilization. A couple thousand years later, an ark ship of human remnants leaving an uninhabitable earth is heading towards that terraformed planet. This is a great book, with lots to say on intelligence, the nature of people, and both the fragility and heartiness of life.

 

Some excerpts from the article below. I almost didn't post it when I saw it was funded by an egg company, but it's interesting.

Researchers randomly assigned people to eat either 12 fortified eggs per week or to eat fewer than two eggs of any kind per week. People could cook the eggs however they liked.

In the study, after following participants for four months, researchers did not see any adverse effects on cardiovascular health among people who ate 12 fortified eggs per week.

For example, blood cholesterol levels were similar between people who regularly ate fortified eggs and those who ate few or no eggs.

People in the fortified egg group also had a reduction in their total cholesterol level, insulin resistance scores, and high-sensitivity troponin (a marker of heart damage). They even saw an increase in their vitamin B levels.

In addition, “there were signals of potential benefits of eating fortified eggs that warrant further investigation in larger studies,” Nouhravesh said in the release.

In particular, there were possible benefits of eating fortified eggs among older adults and those with diabetes, including a rise in HDL (“good”) cholesterol and a decrease in LDL (“bad”) cholesterol.

The results of the study, which was funded by Eggland’s Best, have not been published yet in a peer-reviewed journal, so should be viewed with caution.

 

I recently finished Perdido Street Station, and one minor thing that bothered me is how many of the other races were either a humanoid version of earth life (cactus person, bird person) or a literal combination of a human and something (head of a bug, body of a person). That just seems so fantastically unlikely that I wonder if any of the other books in that setting explain it. Like, is it a future earth and the races are results of generic modification in some prior era?

I liked the book pretty well, through it's not exactly uplifting. Thought provoking though.

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