-t, I want to read Starter Villain (the cat alone would tempt me). If you haven't, I can recommend The Kaiju Preservation Society.
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."
Thanks, I’ll look for that!
I'm going to Audible Starter Villain. Cool.
Kaiju Preservation Society
Wil Wheaton's narration in this one made me really dislike the main character, FWIW, but it's a fun listen if you can get past how obnoxiously bro-y he is.
Good to know, I will brace myself for that
I was able to forgive a lot knowing that KPS was Scalzi's 2020 "I can't make any progress on this serious work I started before the pandemic, here is some lighthearted bullshit I wrote over a long weekend" novel. It's bonkers and over the top, but in a fun pandemic-catharsis way.
(I wonder how many authors have books in this extremely niche genre. I know Scalzi has this one, and KJ Charles has Gentle Art of Fortune Hunting, but I'm sure they weren't the only ones to break through pandemic writer's block by just giving up and writing a completely different book that year!)
Scalzi's Redshirts was a lot of fun.
However, his version of Little Fuzzy made me angry. That series was a favorite of mine as a young teen, and he changed the protagonist from someone I wanted on my side, or on who's team I wanted to be, to someone I wouldn't want to be on the same planet with, while hoping he might never even learn I existed. It was different, and clever, and well-written, and I didn't like it at all.
I don't like audio books, so the characters and narration sound like I want them to. It may make some hard copy books more palatable.
David Duchovny wrote a pandemic novella, too,
I'm sure they weren't the only ones to break through pandemic writer's block by just giving up and writing a completely different book that year!
Not books, but Fall Out Boy and Pink both released blatantly influenced-by-the-pandemic albums.