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weirdwriter ,

I know I'm in the minority, but I just don't understand the appeal of listening to a 7 or even 12 hour generated audiobook. Never bought one, and I never will, but people keep buying these things so shrug I guess. https://goodereader.com/blog/audiobooks/how-leeanna-morgan-utilizes-ai-for-effortless-audiobook-creation @bookstodon

Rhube ,
@Rhube@wandering.shop avatar

@beecycling @weirdwriter @bookstodon The environmental cost is too much even if the work is public domain. And the 'AI' will always have been trained on stolen content.

weirdwriter OP ,

For that, Librivox exists, and I think the readers are fantastic! https://librivox.org/ @beecycling @bookstodon

ChrisMayLA6 ,
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

RIP Ismail Kadare.

If you've not heard of Ismail Kadare, then have a read of Alberto Manguel's quick assessment, and if you're tempted perhaps pick up a copy of The File on H, or The Successor.

@bookstodon

https://www.theguardian.com/books/article/2024/jul/01/an-ancient-shadow-permeates-his-work-alberto-manguel-on-the-genius-of-ismail-kadare

fkamiah17 ,
@fkamiah17@syzito.xyz avatar

@ChrisMayLA6 @bookstodon I'd recommend Broken April and Chronicle in Stone too 👍

MonadicBlurbs ,
@MonadicBlurbs@universeodon.com avatar

Hey there!

I thought it would be a cool idea to try to do a 31 Days of Quotes event for July! Here's the first one, from chapter one of my novel!


Below the Heavens is a high fantasy indie book series inspired by East Asian mythology and culture.

Available for free in webnovel form on RoyalRoad, via their webpage or mobile app, found in my bio!

@bookstodon

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  • KrisBock ,
    @KrisBock@mastodon.social avatar

    Christmas Cookies at the Cat Café, a sweet romance, is on sale for only 2.99 for "Christmas in July"! Readers say: “It really was a joy to read.”
    “Absolutely loved this book.”
    "an engaging, feel-good read"
    At all ebook retailers:
    https://storyoriginapp.com/collections/6eb320a9-c5ab-45f9-ba44-46a902be614e
    @bookstodon

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  • Sophie ,
    @Sophie@glammr.us avatar

    Finished “How We Named The Stars”

    Not really my fav genre, but I appreciate how the fear of coming out is captured.

    “The night played out like my biggest fear.. It wasn't that I assumed my parents would disown me, or my grandfather would stop loving me, or my friendships would crumble. I feared the unknown stranger, their angry judgment, the silence of a gaggle of witnesses.”

    @bookstodon

    judeinthestars ,
    @judeinthestars@mastodon.social avatar
    pivic ,
    @pivic@kolektiva.social avatar
    MarianHellema , Dutch
    @MarianHellema@mastodon.nl avatar

    @bookstodon

    Twenty Years Later
    by
    Charlie Donlea

    I was in a bit of a reading slump where nothing appealed to me, but this book got me out again. It has everything I want from a thriller: complicated plot with unexpected twists, terrific characters and very good writing.

    jarulf ,
    @jarulf@mstdn.social avatar

    I'd never read anything by but because of the Kickstarter running currently, I am now.
    Finished the short story earlier and am four chapters into
    Really enjoying this. Unfortunately I have to go fix dinner now.
    @bookstodon

    oarditi ,
    @oarditi@mastodon.social avatar

    Finally got around to reading David J. Peterson’s ‘The Art of Language Invention’, and found a ton of inspiration for my next conlanging project.

    https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/6516879009

    @bookstodon

    moopet ,
    @moopet@toot.cafe avatar

    Book meme: 20 books that have had an impact on who you are. One book a day for 20 days. No explanations, no reviews, just book covers. Alt text!

    Day 6/20

    The Design of Everyday Things by Donald A. Norman


    @bookstodon

    patchworkbunny ,
    @patchworkbunny@ellie.social avatar

    Books read in June:

    The Undermining of Twyla and Frank by Megan Bannen*
    Private Rites by Julia Armfield
    Daughter of the Merciful Deep by Leslye Penelope*
    Funny Story by Emily Henry
    This is Why We Lied by Karin Slaughter*
    The Cautious Traveller's Guide to the Wastelands by Sarah Brooks*
    Leave No Trace by Jo Callaghan
    The Stars Too Fondly by Emily Hamilton*

    *review copy provided by publisher

    @bookstodon

    NerdsofaFeather ,
    @NerdsofaFeather@wandering.shop avatar

    The Wheel of Time Reread: Crossroads of Twilight

    Our senior editor @joesherry.bsky.social continues his dive into the Robert Jordan series.

    http://www.nerds-feather.com/2024/07/the-wheel-of-time-reread-crossroads-of.html


    @bookstodon

    camilla_hoel ,
    @camilla_hoel@hcommons.social avatar

    Books read in January:
    Strong Poison -- Dorothy L. Sayers
    Have His Carcase -- Dorothy L. Sayers
    Et liv i redningsvest: Dagboksopptegnelser om norsk rasisme -- Sumaya Jirde Ali
    Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable -- Judith Butler
    Strengt fortrolig: Norges hemmelige forsøk på å stanse krigen i Libya -- Henrik Thune
    Gaudy Night -- Dorothy L. Sayers
    An Unkindness of Ghosts -- Rivers Solomon
    Busman's Honeymoon -- Dorothy L. Sayers
    Driftglass -- Samuel R. Delany
    Roboten er løs! -- Philip Newth
    I, Robot -- Isaac Asimov
    Palestine -- Joe Sacco
    All Systems Red -- Martha Wells
    @bookstodon

    camilla_hoel OP ,
    @camilla_hoel@hcommons.social avatar

    @bookstodon Books read in May:

    The Russo-Ukrainian War -- Serhii Plokhy
    System Collapse -- Martha Wells
    The Immortal King Rao -- Vauhini Vara
    Peace Has Come -- Parismita Singh
    The Hands of the Emperor -- Victoria Goddard

    camilla_hoel OP ,
    @camilla_hoel@hcommons.social avatar

    @bookstodon Books read in June:

    I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem -- Maryse Condé
    If/Then: How the Simulmatics Corporation Invented the Future -- Jill Lepore
    Tusen dager med Taliban -- Ayesha Wolasmal
    At the Feet of the Sun -- Victoria Goddard
    I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings -- Maya Angelou
    They Called Us Enemy -- George Takei, Justin Eisinger, Steven Scott & Harmony Becker
    The Time Regulation Institute -- Ahmet Hamdi Tanpinar

    FrancescaJ ,
    @FrancescaJ@mastodon.nz avatar

    I mostly keep track of books on so I was a little surprised after finishing All The Light We Cannot See by that of all the people who answered ‘Flaws of characters a main focus’ only 38% said Yes 🤔 I mean Werner is a complex sympathetic character but the ways he is complicit in Nazism is a major driver of the plot. If that ain’t a character flaw I don’t know what is! Nevertheless that complexity is part of why it’s a great book that avoids cliche @bookstodon

    The cover of All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr. A boy runs down a cobbled alley, wearing black leather shoes & a grey coat - clothing from the WW2 era. The alley is narrow & grey but the end of it creates a vertical plane of light in the picture. The boy is running towards the light

    FrancescaJ OP ,
    @FrancescaJ@mastodon.nz avatar

    @bookstodon @diazona I 100% agree with you on both. That question could be interpreted many ways. Werner’s unease over his actions as a member of the German army is absolutely the driving force of his section of the novel though!
    As to other ways character flaws can drive a novel: I just read The Prestige which has an unreliable narrator and 91% said flaws are a main driver of plot. Plus it is a great book.

    diazona ,
    @diazona@techhub.social avatar

    @FrancescaJ @bookstodon Oh interesting, I'll have to check that one out, thanks!

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