Funnily enough, I thought it would be up your alley, PC. Of course, I should know better than to guess at that stuff given the ultraviolent dreck I sometimes get recommended because I "like mysteries" ok, what's the most unfortunate book rec you ever got?
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I enjoyed it. I don't remember it at all, but I enjoyed it at the time.
I read Special Topics in Calamity Physics at about the same time (so they are forever linked in my brain for no real reason) and enjoyed it more. And remember it better.
what's the most unfortunate book rec you ever got?
My niece thought I might like the Left Behind series. To be fair, she was ~11 at the time.
Funnily enough, I thought it would be up your alley, PC.
Me too!
ok, what's the most unfortunate book rec you ever got?
Well, people did tell me to read the Dark Is Rising books...though maybe not in a direct, you-would-like-this way.
One of mine was, despite not fitting in the "Violent Misogyny" category mentioned previously, because, really, those just turn into a blur of "Who the hell do you think I am?" Those "The Cat Who..." books. I do love mysteries and cats, and we even had a little Siamese for a while, but somehow? THe books left me less than charmed.
GRRM "It Gets Better" - spoilery for Storm of Swords and beyond.
I love Tolkien's illustrations, they're so very Arts and Crafts.
I bought one of the "cat who" series for 50 cents at the hospital once. It did not take me long to put it down in favor of meditating on the patterns in the peeling wall paper and the various and the play of light and shadow between the IV tubes and various other pieces of medical equipment.
I read all the then-published Cat Who books while I was recovering from foot surgery back in 2005. They were addictive but oddly depressing. Once I was mobile again, I stopped reading them and gave them all away.
The first dozen of so Cat Who books were fun because I enjoyed the characters, but there are only so many permutations of Murder in a Small Town you can run through until you run into "The Hero's Best Friend who has supported him through 15 books is now a raging maniac"--which AFAIK hasn't happened in the Cat books, but the premise was starting to creak. Plus I kept thinking "Aren't those cats awfully old now?"