NickEast , to reading group
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jPod
I would recommend this book to anyone who has ever worked in IT. Especially, executives and managers.
Also, to anyone who has parents that are incompetent mosters (Incompemonsters TM) and need YOU to fix THEIR problems 😂

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https://ramblingreaders.org/book/266333/s/jpod

Uair ,
@Uair@autistics.life avatar

@NickEast @reading @bookstodon @bookreviews

One of my favorites. Coupeland's best, IMO.

DejahEntendu , to bookstodon group
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Where Peace Is Lost by Valerie Valdes.

Very different from her series starting with Chilling Effect, Where Peace Is Lost is much more serious. It reads as a quest to save a world, a journey or personal forgiveness, romance, and anti-capitalist philosophy. That's a lot to cram into 12 hours. It's all well done though, not seeming patchwork at all. Thus I zoomed through the story in two days.

1/2

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DejahEntendu OP ,
@DejahEntendu@dice.camp avatar

Valdes delivers a solid book, perhaps leading us to "the further adventure of..."

Rebeccsa Mozo, the narrator, had a handful of mispronouciations that should have been caught by someone. Not enough to be ruinous, but distracting nonetheless. ☹️ Pronouncing buffet as the noun form, for instance, when it was used as the verb form.

LGBTQIA+ positive

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Kay ,
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@DejahEntendu @bookstodon I loved Where Peace Is Lost by Valerie Valdes. I've read her previous and they're enjoyable but for me not as gripping as Peace Lost. I very much hope for sequels!

DejahEntendu , to bookstodon group
@DejahEntendu@dice.camp avatar

Moon of the Turning Leaves by Waubgeshig Rice.

Rice weaves a gorgeous follow-up to Moon of the Crusted Snow. About 12 years have passed since the power went out, and the Anishinaabe in what was the northern Ontario province are in need of a new home as local resources are dwindling. Moon of the Turning Leaves follows a group south and east as they search for a better place, preferably in their ancestral lands.

1/2

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DejahEntendu OP ,
@DejahEntendu@dice.camp avatar

Along the way, they learn more of their world, both past and present. I felt that the characters learning they were big fish in a little pond was a nice touch, as many times lead characters are practically infallible.

Rice's prose is lyric, and his characters are rounded out. As soon as I saw he'd written another book in this world, I knew I had to read it. Billy Merasty, the narrator, adds to the immersion of the story.

2/2

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NickEast , to reading group
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I The Road to Somewhere.
It tries to explain the rise of populisim perticluarly in
While I don't agree with everything in the book, it is pretty interesting.
It works hard to avoid blaming the affluent (and never saying rich like it's a four letter word).
But even while not saying the quite part out loud, it implies that both rich liberals and conservative are leaving the young and the poor behind. Which historically has not had the best results.

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