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Read Those Beyond The Wall (2024) by Micaiah Johnson.

An indirect sequel to her debut, The Space Between Worlds (2020). Definitely one of the best science fiction writers out there right now. Heavy on social commentary, great use of language and intriguing stories.

This is one of the finest books I've read.
 
Finished The Lost Metal by Brandon Sanderson yesterday. It's the final book in the Mistborn Era 2 series.

Though I think he nailed the character work (Wayne is the best) and ultimately stuck the landing, it feels like he's trying to make his works the MCU (pulling in characters from other series in to magically save the day and overpower people). I honestly couldn't have cared less about any of the chapters involving characters from other books with which I am unfamiliar (Stormlight Archive, I think).

I doubt I'll be reading any more Sanderson.
 
Read Cage of Souls (2019) by Adrian Tchaikovsky.

A dying Earth science-fiction novel, written like a fictional memoir. Riffs on (I'm not sure Tchaikovsky would use this word) everything within the subgenre from H.G. Wells and onwards - personally I found it very reminiscent of China Miéville's Bas-Lag-novels - and a whole lot of other fiction. Dark and atmospheric, great tone and narrative style (though not so thesaurus-heavy as Miéville). Up for some almost steampunk-ish/fantasy far future SF? Read it.
 
Just finished ‘The Volunteer: The True Story of the Resistance Hero who Infiltrated Auschwitz’. It is a really interesting read for those who want to know what life was like for prisoners of the Nazi regime.
 
Halfway Superman Silver Age omnibus, some nice stories so far!
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Decided to leave the other half of it for some later time and started, mainly after watching The Dark Knight Rises:
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Read The Future (2023) by Naomi Alderman.

A dystopian thriller about the approaching end of the world and how the leaders of the biggest tech-companies (not so covertly parodized verions of Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos etc.). plan their survival while our main character, a survival influencer, is drawn into the events unknowingly. I enjoyed this - despite most attempts at anything like this falling flat by just stating the obvious and becoming annoying - after all, reality is already crazy enough.

Currently reading The Shards (2023) by Bret Easton Ellis.

(I only read twelve books last year, so with this finished I pass that already before the end of Februrary.)
 
The Dark Tower Series. Book 3 : The Waste Lands (Stephen King)

Plot: Five weeks after the events of the previous book, Roland, Susannah, and Eddie have moved east from the shore of the Western Sea, and into the woods of Out-World. After an encounter with Shardik, a gigantic cyborgbear, they discover one of the six mystical Beams that hold the world together. The three gunslingers follow the Path of the Beam inland to Mid-World.

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The Dark Tower Series. Book 3 : The Waste Lands (Stephen King)

Plot: Five weeks after the events of the previous book, Roland, Susannah, and Eddie have moved east from the shore of the Western Sea, and into the woods of Out-World. After an encounter with Shardik, a gigantic cyborgbear, they discover one of the six mystical Beams that hold the world together. The three gunslingers follow the Path of the Beam inland to Mid-World.

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That cover makes me want to read the book
 
I have read first four The Dark Tower series books. The last being The Dark Tower IV: Wizard and Glass. It was long ago and I quite enjoyed it. Subsequent books were not released in my country. Now I can't say that i really want to read them. I do not consider this series as King's Magnum Opus. I really like Dead Zone, Shining, Mist, Salem's Lot, Green Mile, Shawshank Redemption, Misery, Bag of Bones, etc.. I consider most of King's post 2000 novels as not so great, to say it mildly.
 
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This summer, I read Cuckoo’s Calling by Robert Galbraith, which is a pen name for J.K. Rowling. It’s the first book in a series about a private detective named Cormoran Strike. I loved Rowling’s writing style back when I read the Harry Potter books (though I only read the first four in elementary school, since that’s all that was translated into Croatian by 2001). She’s still great at creating a vivid atmosphere and memorable characters. But in this book, she crammed in so many overused private detective clichés that it spoiled the whole thing for me. I’m done with that series - no more for me.

I also ordered three autobiographies this summer by these fine gentlemen: Patrick Stewart, Rob Halford, and Jerry Seinfeld. I’d heard Halford’s was way better than Stewart’s, and I think that’s probably true. I gave up on Stewart’s halfway through because:
a) He went on and on about his theater work, which was too much for me.
b) I got distracted by another author, Ryan Holiday.

Someone recommended Holiday’s book Ego Is the Enemy. I know the title sounds a bit cheesy, like something you’d see on a self-help shelf, but it actually helped me with a personal detail I’d been dealing with. After that, I kept reading his stuff—not so much for self-help, but because I enjoyed the short, interesting stories. His books fall into a category marked “159.9” in libraries, which is popular psychology. I sometimes find authors there whose work is easy to read but still sticks with you—like Jorge Bucay, for example.

Over the past few months, I’ve read four of Holiday’s books: Ego Is the Enemy, Discipline Is Destiny, Courage Is Calling, and The Obstacle Is the Way. I’d recommend them to anyone. Each chapter is short - only 3-4 pages, about 10 minutes to read - and dives into a cool psychological insight about a historical figure, from Marc Antony to Florence Nightingale.

Still, I felt bad for ditching capt. Jean-Luc Picard so I picked Stewart's autobiography back up, starting at the chapter where he talks about starring in Dune. I’m hoping there’ll be fewer theater stories and more about his movie and TV career from here on. After that, I got The Fury by Alex Michaelides as a gift, and I’m planning to read Rob Halford’s biography next - unless something else sidetracks me again.
 
Read The Shards (2023) by Bret Easton Ellis and found it excellent. Beautifully executed, proper literature.

Also read The Last One at the Wedding (2024) by Jason Rekulak, a book I found to a quick read and an okay thriller but nothing more.

Currently reading The Kaiju Preservation Society (2022) by John Scalzi, my 14th book for 2025 - hoping to hit (at least) 52 by the end of the year.
 
So I'm not currently reading anything, BUT hear me out. While here in Tucson I went to one of our buy/sell new and used books (and anything under the sun) stores. My brother wanted me to get one of The Expanse books for him and in browsing for that I found the Michael Crichton section. Decided to pick up The Great Train Robbery for myself as it is the only fiction book of his I haven't read. Then I noticed a couple of things. Two new books by him and some other authors. The first, about an eruption was billed as by Michael Crichton and James Patterson. The jacket said that his wife, Sherri Crichton, held on to the manuscript knowing how important it was to him and waited for the right author to finish it.

The other was an Andromeda Strain sequel which had HIS name nice and big at the top of the cover and then in much smaller print "By so and so" at the bottom. So... NOT "With so and so" or "AND so and so." just.... written BY so and so." Which means this isn't based on any "new" outline, notes or manuscript by Crichton, this other fucker wrote it of his own volition and they are using Crichton's name to move units. This.... PISSED ME OFF. The man's dead, let him be, it's fucking disgusting they still use his name to sell new books. I HATE when some other author is brought on to "finish" a book, because how the fuck do they know that's the way it was going to play out? more importantly, I want to read Michael Crichton, his prose, his style, not someone else's. Fucking sick.

They did this immediately after he died too, forget what book was finished by someone else, but it was back in '08 or '09. I do remember picking up Pirate Latitudes, his supposedly finished manuscript. Man, you can tell it needed a couple more rewrites, the first half of the book doesn't even read like him, the second half is classic Crichton.

At any rate, hope to start reading this on the flight home and be hooked enough to finish it since I haven't read a book cover to cover in years. All goes well this will jump start my love for it again.
 
Two new books by him and some other authors. The first, about an eruption was billed as by Michael Crichton and James Patterson.

Tom Clancy is like that too. Seems there is at least a new book every year even though he has been dead since 2013. Of course, he allegedly used ghostwriters when he was alive and his name is just a brand by now, but come on. Same for James Patterson (still alive though).

The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan was finished by Brandon Sanderson after Jordan's death etc.

There's been J.R.R. Tolkien books published fairly recently! (Dead since 1973.) And while I don't know what I believe, Christopher Tolkien could have made these up all by himself. Who the hell is going to know how finished these supposedly "found manuscripts" actually were?

And going further back, Dumas used ghostwriters extensively, and while extremely talented, he was also like a popular brand author at the time. The Count of Monte Cristo is believed to be written by Dumas himself, but the plot outline is by Auguste Maquet.

It's not a new thing. And it's not going to disappear anytime soon.
 
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