Curious to see what the Lemmings are reading this year.
I’ll say my favorite this year was “The People of the Deer” by Farley Mowat, a novelization of the authors time spent in the Canadian North.
An incredible read with some wonderful prose.
three body problem trilogy hands down. It’s one of my new autistic special interests now. Along with my other special interests like warhammer 40k, speaking of which, eye of terror is a close second to three body problem, followed by various other 40k books probably which is what ive mostly read this year aside from three body and various non-fiction books on my non-fictional special interests.
Ann Patchett continues to impress, both Bel Canto and The Dutch House were excellent. Loved Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel. Also discovered T. Kingfisher; read Thornhedge and Nettle & Bone, and definitely want to read more of her stuff.
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern!
I’ll remember that book like a treasured gourmet meal forever.
Even if I later forget the details, the silken blessing of her prose and how close I grew to her characters while living in their world will linger.
I really enjoyed **The Kaiju Preservation Society ** by John Scalzi. Very fun read and how a group of scientists would interact on an everyday basis is very on point.
I read The Locked Tomb series this year and I got really into it. I’m currently listening to the audio books now. I’m also reading the first book in the Wayfarers series at the recommendation of my husband and so far it’s really fun too.
Red rising, it’s been so long since I read a book like ender’s game but I do always enjoy the story of youth in a violent world coming to terms with the society they live in, but this one had so much more than I was expecting.
I was worried it was going to be some pale imitation of ender’s game but instead it was an entirely new story that ended up providing a more brutal look into the viscera of a sick society.
Honorable mention: Logan’s run which I finally read a couple days ago. Brief but wildly exciting.
Red Rising had some excellent world building and I really enjoyed the early books. The further along it went, the less I enjoyed, but that may be me. I found myself lost a few times and Brown keeps on chugging.
The further along you went just in that book, or in the series?
That is interesting, I was pretty captivated the whole time and read it in a few days basically when I had any free time, but two of those times were walking around drunk during back to back snow storms listening to the audiobook, so if a particular scene was slow I may have missed that hahaha.
In the series. I hit a struggle after the first half of book 3 and 5 was a slog for me.
The first two books are thrilling!
Oh okay. I stopped at four. The first trilogy was pretty satisfying for me and I don’t think 6 was out yet, so I’m taking a break from then for now
4 was worst. I think because he changed his style.
5 was better because I expected it to be different but the story moves better.
6 was like reading 1-3 again. He even said as he winds down the series he’ll be writing in more the style of the first trilogy
Cool, thanks for letting me know. I actually did read a couple chapters of number four, but I put it down and took a break. It’s good to know you enjoyed six so that I can give the second trilogy another whirl.
Something felt weird about book four, but I didn’t analyze it at all. What changed with his style?
I watched an interview with him at a Comic-Con a year or so ago. I think it was the multiple perspective that he took on it. Plus he had to figure out how to create new momentum within the book after everything had changed. Book four I feel like he was trying to figure out where he wanted the rest of this to go. Initially it was supposed to be a six book series with it being really too trilogies. But now it’s going to be seven books. Four five and six get progressively better as you go and sex feels more like the original trilogy 👍🏻