Excellent and immediate feedback.
How about Cat Valente's Space Opera? Anybody?
Willow ,'Conversations with Dead People'
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."
Excellent and immediate feedback.
How about Cat Valente's Space Opera? Anybody?
It's literally next on my reading list after my Ministry for the Future loan expires.
Space Opera is fun. Maybe a bit long, but it was an entertaining trip. You might appreciate it more if you read it between viewing videos of Eurovision song entries.
Space Opera is very fun. Read on Jess’s strong recommendation, as I recall
How about Cat Valente's Space Opera? Anybody?
I love Space Opera! It's fun and weird.
Cat Valente's Space Opera
So good in print and 10000x better on audio. (It has been a comfort listen playing on repeat for me since the pandemic started.)
OH AND IT IS GETTING A SEQUEL CALLED SPACE ODDITY [link]
So good in print and 10000x better on audio. (It has been a comfort listen playing on repeat for me since the pandemic started.)
I've been wanting to listen to the audiobook. Her husband narrates it.
I started reading T Kingfisher's The Seventh Bride last night, and I didn't put it down until a couple seconds before I fell asleep.
Glad you lasted until you finished it. (I occasionally wake up with a book on my stomach, my reading glasses sliding off my nose and the light still on.)
I can't deal with audiobooks ... not sure why, but they just don't work for me. I'm fine with e-books, so I keep my reader with me, which I take as a sign I'm not a total luddite.
I recently read "The Inheritance Games" - it's a YA book (got it on sale long enough ago I'd forgotten that) and it was very interesting. Basic plot is that a young girl who's grown up poor (as in having the electricity turned off when her mother couldn't pay the bills) and is suddenly made the major heir to a billionaire she didn't know and wasn't related to. He pretty much disinherits his two daughters and four grandsons; they take it about as well as you might imagine. The main character has to live in his huge house (many, many rooms, secret passages, hidden doors) and the daughters and grandsons can live in the house unless they do something that allows her to kick them out (like trying to kill her). I kept going trying to figure out what was going on; you DO find out what happened, why she was named heir, no cliffhanger, etc. (I do appreciate having the mysteries solved.)