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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

kimlockhartga ,
@kimlockhartga@beige.party avatar

Since I can't sleep, let's do a June reading recap. @bookstodon What did you read in June that you are excited to recommend to others?

These were the most affecting stories I read in June (all graphic format):

Monstrous: A Transracial Adoption Story, Sarah Myer (touching memoir)

Bad Dream: A Dreamer Story, Nicole Maines, Rye Hickman (origin story of the first trans superhero)

The Waiting, Keum Suk Gendry-Kim, Janet Hong (Heartbreaking story of a divided Korea, and families separated)

lunalein ,
@lunalein@federatedfandom.net avatar

@kimlockhartga @bookstodon joe do you feel about mom/baby stuff? if you’re yo for that subject matter, Soldier, Sailor by Claire Kilroy is very good

lunalein ,
@lunalein@federatedfandom.net avatar

@kimlockhartga @bookstodon how do you feel about mom/baby stuff? if you’re yo for that subject matter, Soldier, Sailor by Claire Kilroy is very good

willaful ,
@willaful@romancelandia.club avatar

Sad to say I was very disappointed in "Most Ardently: a Pride and Prejudice Remix." I'm not sure if it's the fault of the author or if it was the requirements of the series publisher that spoiled it, but the excellent premise ("Elizabeth Bennet" is actually a trans boy) was not given the care it deserved. The language is all over the place, and teenage heartthrob Mr. Darcy is just too weird.

Not sure now I want to read McLemore's Gatsby 😔

@bookstodon



willaful OP ,
@willaful@romancelandia.club avatar

@jendefer That lends some credence to the "publishers requirements" theory. @bookstodon

Starry1086 ,

@willaful @bookstodon Ah cool! Sadly, graphic novels don't work for me.

kimlockhartga ,
@kimlockhartga@beige.party avatar

@bookstodon presented for :

Probertd8 ,
@Probertd8@mastodonapp.uk avatar
wendinoakland ,
@wendinoakland@mastodon.social avatar

@kimlockhartga @Probertd8 @bookstodon oooh, I 🩷 these!

Schnuckster ,
@Schnuckster@beige.party avatar

People actually write whole books on a single profile from that Myers-Briggs bollocks. Amazing. @bookstodon

alicemcalicepants ,
@alicemcalicepants@ohai.social avatar

@Schnuckster @bookstodon is it about surviving as an ENFP, or surviving someone who proclaims to be one 🤔

RenewedRebecca ,
@RenewedRebecca@oldbytes.space avatar

@Schnuckster @bookstodon This anti-scientific snake oil is such complete BS.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go back to writing my essay, “A Melancholic’s Guide to Living in a Sanguine’s World.”

kimlockhartga ,
@kimlockhartga@beige.party avatar

@bookstodon You know I love graphic novels, especially new and unusual ones. Are there 2024 graphic novels you've read which we should not miss? Thx.

tylerzonia ,
@tylerzonia@zirk.us avatar

@kimlockhartga @bookstodon
💬Victory Parade by Leela Corman is a masterwork
💬Gender Studies: True Confessions of an Accidental Outlaw by Ajuan Mance
💬All My Bicycles by Powerpaola
💬Malarky by November Garcia
💬Heavyweight by Solomon Brager
💬Here I am, I am me—a guide to mental health by Cara Bean
(Not a novel, a short story by myself: 💬Feather by Tyler Cohen)

kimlockhartga OP ,
@kimlockhartga@beige.party avatar

@tylerzonia @bookstodon Ah, nice list. I really enjoyed Victory Parade, Hravyweight, and Tender. I will look up the others. Thank you!

oarditi ,
@oarditi@mastodon.social avatar

I’m reading the first 3 volumes of this by way of preparation for China Miéville’s(!) forthcoming contribution to the IP. Pretty good writing for a Hollywood actor, I thought, and brilliant art, but basically pretty pedestrian.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/6621372763

@bookstodon

RanaldClouston ,
@RanaldClouston@fediscience.org avatar
Rhube ,
@Rhube@wandering.shop avatar
GrahamDowns ,
@GrahamDowns@mastodon.africa avatar

Fantasy . In form. Can you tell who's who? @bookstodon

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  • kjellbastian ,
    @kjellbastian@mastodon.social avatar

    @GrahamDowns @bookstodon left to right, Pratchett, Rowling, Martin and Tolkien.

    Though I thought JKR had brown hair

    FiveSeventeen ,
    @FiveSeventeen@bahn.social avatar

    @kjellbastian @GrahamDowns @bookstodon

    "She" has clearly TRANSformed "herself".

    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!

    zkrisher ,
    @zkrisher@tweesecake.social avatar

    I've finished: In Ascension by Martin MacInnes

    As a science-fiction reader I had a little trouble with in ascension

    At first I was happy to read a big dumb object book that focuses on the psychology of the characters more than on the science.

    But as I went on reading I had more and more trouble with the lack of scientific curiosity and engineering prowess in a book about scientists and astronauts.

    In Ascension is the opposite of a competence porn novel. The protagonists are cogs in a machine they don't control. While this is more true to life, it is less true to the lives of scientists, engineers and astronauts.

    The scientific information peppered throughout the book is given as exposition, and while it's worth paying attention to and is the best way to try and figour out what's going on, it has little to do with the characters thoughts and behavior. The only people who try to find anything out, who actually do research, are relatives trying to figure out what happened.

    For example, after an inexplicable incident the crew finds that everything is covered in a layer of dust. What do they do? Do they attempt to find out what it's made of? No. They make an effort to clean things up and that's it.

    Where is the curiosity and sence of wonder of people that worked so hard to go beyond where man has gone before?

    I understand that living with our impotence when facing large systems that don't care about us as individuals is what this novel is about. But it is hard for me to relinquish the illusion of control the scientific method gives us.

    https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/3234c562-26c2-48ba-888f-7c60eea00559

    @bookstodon

    zkrisher OP ,
    @zkrisher@tweesecake.social avatar
    Enema_Cowboy ,
    @Enema_Cowboy@dotnet.social avatar

    @hundertsieben

    @zkrisher @bookstodon

    Check out this book on Goodreads: The City We Became

    The City We Became (Great Cities, #1)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/43558961-the-city-we-became

    > In Manhattan, a young grad student gets off the train a…

    sbattey ,
    @sbattey@pnw.zone avatar

    Project Hail Mary is fucking good. Someone online, maybe here, maybe elsewhere, said it was boring. Idk how someone thought that. I’m enjoying this book thoroughly. @bookstodon

    TimBondy ,
    @TimBondy@mstdn.social avatar

    @sbattey @bookstodon
    Thanks for the review. I've been delaying and pushing back, adding "Project Hail Mary" to my want to read list. It goes on that list today.

    pseudonymsupreme ,
    @pseudonymsupreme@pnw.zone avatar

    @sbattey @bookstodon Fully agree. I loved Project Hail Mary. I also saw the negative review and was baffled.

    SuzyShearer ,
    @SuzyShearer@mastodon.au avatar

    Years ago I got my rights back from my previous publisher for all 17 books I had with them.
    Five of them I revised, tweaked, deleted bits, moved others, and generally reworked them, and submitted them to my wonderful publisher @evernightpublishing
    They accepted them!
    I'm so happy and excited. That will mean I have traditionally published 35 books!

    @bookstodon @bookstodon

    KristinaWKelly ,
    @KristinaWKelly@sunny.garden avatar

    @bookstodon @bookstodon @SuzyShearer that’s awesome news!

    SuzyShearer OP ,
    @SuzyShearer@mastodon.au avatar

    @KristinaWKelly @bookstodon @bookstodon Thank you, Kristina 😊

    rdviii ,
    @rdviii@famichiki.jp avatar

    @bookstodon just finished Robert Kagan's The Jungle Grows Back, as an audiobook.

    Well written, it presents the conventional view of post-WWII history, with America as The Essential Nation. All our interventions were well intentioned, though many of them were flawed. It doesn't go into, say, the CIA manipulation of the Italian election. It argues strongly for the need for continuing vigilance and the American role as ballast and keel for the liberal world order.

    rdviii OP ,
    @rdviii@famichiki.jp avatar

    @bookstodon it would make an interesting curriculum to start with this and explore backwards and sideways to see how well it holds up. (Spoiler alert: imperfectly, at best, even if you buy the fundamental premise.)

    oddhack ,
    @oddhack@mstdn.social avatar

    @rdviii @bookstodon it will briefly interesting to live in a world where every nuclear-armed state is a right-wing dictatorship / kleptocracy. Will also answer the Fermi Paradox locally.

    rdviii ,
    @rdviii@famichiki.jp avatar

    @bookstodon
    A very, very good book, nuanced and thoughtful. To my eye, its explanation of how we got where we are is spot on, but then, he is a member of the elite talking to another member of the elite (by education, if not income; I have a PhD).

    But in the end his policy pronunciations seem...timid, given the scope of the problems we face.

    janus ,
    @janus@mastodon.janusweb.org avatar

    @rdviii @bookstodon His online course on justice is also very good

    rdviii OP ,
    @rdviii@famichiki.jp avatar

    @janus @bookstodon I read the book back close to when it came out, and watched some of the videos. Yes, very good stuff.

    factolvictor ,
    @factolvictor@dice.camp avatar
    cassidy ,
    @cassidy@blaede.family avatar

    @factolvictor @bookstodon ooooh, that's pretty

    factolvictor OP ,
    @factolvictor@dice.camp avatar

    @cassidy @bookstodon It was such a great work they did. I bought several of this publisher, because they're really beautiful.

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