One of the things I love about e-books (aside from the fact that I can carry bunches of them without physically straining anything) is that no one can tell what I'm reading. I will check out covers of books on Metro, but don't usually judge and never comment , but I'm more comfortable with a non-obvious book. I did once have someone read over my shoulder when I was still reading hard copy books on public transit and ask me about a plot point, but that's less likely with an e-book.
'Conviction (1)'
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."
In a movie(or to keep it on topic) certain kinds of chick lit, that person would be your bestie or a new date. In real life, though, I can see why you might not be into it.
I once volunteered to take a separate car to Thanksgiving (with all the food in it and no room for passengers) so I could finish listening to Queer Principles of Kit Webb, so...
Excellent planning!
It's weird. I guess I'm super desensitized about people getting busy in books, so I'll read whatever, wherever (although I would probably keep the audio versions out of public areas, just because my fun isn't everyone else's fun). But I picked up a book on assassinations (I was wondering about the history and after effects thereof after reading about Franz Ferdinand's assassination in Danubia ). And I felt kind of . . . dirty, I guess? Actual, factual violence bothers me a lot more than fictional sexy times.
I had to avoid reading true crime fiction after I started a book that was about the murder/murderer of a girl I knew in college.
I will check out covers of books on Metro, but don't usually judge and never comment , but I'm more comfortable with a non-obvious book
Every time there's a post somewhere extolling the virtues of the classic 70s-80s painted bodice ripper covers and they need to make a return, at least a few of The Kids Today freak out because ewwww, imagine someone looking at you reading a book like that! And then The Old Ones explain about book wrappers you can slip your book into. The Kids Today remain baffled.
I once read a book in which a woman - an FBI agent - said that she carried one of those bodice-ripper books in case she was surveiling someone and needed to make sure no one looked at her. She'd whip it out, open it, and NO ONE would look at her.
While I did enjoy some of the old covers, sometimes the sheer ridiculousness of them bothered me (as in a "highlander" standing on a windy crag wearing a mini-kilt and no shirt).
Listening to Fugitive Telemetry as I copy-paste from excel to google sheets, thinking about MurderBot watching 7 minutes of an episode while waiting for something terrible to happen (or something to be ready to deploy, I forget exactly what was going on)
Random observation - this time, every time Murderbot mentions it's "normal human face" or the like (I don't think it actually does that very often, but really after hearing that once every mention of "human skin" or even organic parts did it) I immediately thought of Jackie Daytona. Having those two characters in my head at the same time is weird.
My brain is broken, trying to imagine Murderbot and Jackie Daytona in the same space.
It doesn't feel right in my brain
So, when I started reading the sample chapter of System Collapse whenever that came out I decided pretty fast I needed to reread Network Effect, and it was a short step from there to rereading all of Murderbot in chronological order (not very different from publication order, but worth it to me). I didn’t time it quite right to be ready for System Collapse when it was first available, but now that I’m current I am pretty happy with my choices.
I love these characters so much, and each story/novella/novel is excellent but I am just more and more impressed as it goes on at how good the series is as a series.