Rezensionen und Kommentare

LeseLeguan

LeseLeguan@bookwyrm.de

Beitritt 4 Monate, 1 Woche her

Mostly Fantasy and a lot of Brandon Sanderson.

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Simon Clark: Firmament (Hardcover, 2022, Hodder & Stoughton)

A thin, invisible layer of air surrounds the Earth, sustaining all known life on the …

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First time I read a YouTuber's book so expectations were mixed. But it was a good read for understanding the science behind climate and weather. It answered some questions I didn't even know I had and was still entertaining and easy to read. But a lot of the content already appeared in Simon's videos, in most cases I didn't mind that too much though.

T. E. Lawrence: Seven Pillars of Wisdom (1991)

Seven Pillars of Wisdom is the autobiographical account of the experiences of British Army Colonel …

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Probably the longest I have taken to read a book I quite enjoyed, I kind of had to learn not to be attention to every detailed because that way it is in parts a chore to read.

But overall it is a great book and not comparable to anything I've read so far. It is a biography, an adventure, sometimes a study of humanity and the author himself. It is about war. About its brutality and its senselessness. But less so then other books of the War to End all Wars. It also shows how people can carry on even after the most dreadful events. How people can have fun and be human, be cruel or kind, selfish or selfless in the most distressing moments of their life. Besides that with the knowledge of a hundred years after the story ends, it is astonishing what has changed, what is still …

Stephen Fry: Mythos (Paperback, 2017, Penguin Books, Limited)

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Fry's writing style is, as expected, quite entertaining. I really like the first half of the book. The second half was still enjoyable and far from boring, but I'm not sure I remember any of the stories after reading them.

Yumi comes from a land of gardens, meditation, and spirits, while Painter lives in a …

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"Things only have the value we give to them. And likewise, actions can be worth whatever we decide them to be worth."

After a slow start this turned out to be an amazing story. Told by the best storytelling furniture a noodle shop owned by a piece of god could have, it is still a very different Sanderson book that should work even without knowing the rest of the books. Very sweet and emotional :)

Also maybe a critique generative AI?

Mark Lawrence: Red Sister (Book of the Ancestor, #1) (2017)

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As a fantasy story it is kind of average. It deals with the main characters "school" time which allows for decently paced worldbuilding. I think the weakest part, and what makes it a bit meh, are the characters. They aren't really bad or boring but just not written in a way that made me care about any of them. But what made the book enjoyable for me was the allusions to scifi elements in the worlds past. So I kind of want to read the rest of the trilogy just so I can feel smart about getting the authors hints on orbital mechanics.