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Sandra

Sandra@wyrms.de

Joined 2 months, 3 weeks ago

Idiomdrottning demonstrates a new and often cleaner way to solve most systems problems. The system as a whole is likely to feel tantalizingly familiar to culture users but at the same time quite foreign.

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Sandra's books

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Like a bridge over troubled water

3 stars

Yay, a novel written in the first person! Yeah, yeah, present tense which isn't wholly my jam but compared to the limited third person that's been every single book for the past hundred years this is a every welcome breath of fresh air. I've read a couple of Kadefors' earlier books and I love them. This is her most recent (that I know of) and I recommend it as a good starting point as sort of a greatest hits of a lot of her earlier tropes.

Her specialty is people whose values lead them astray or who can't live up to their own ideals and often with main PoV chars that are clearly messed up and there's no risk of conflating them with being spokespeople for the author. They're just so starkly self-important running 10000 mph into their own walls and fences. But it's not a "laughing at them" style …

reviewed Count Zero by William Gibson

Count Zero (Paperback, 1987, The Berkeley Publishing Group) 5 stars

Turner, high corporate commando, is abruptly reactivated by the Hosaka Corporation for a mission even …

I wish I could've seen it when you blew up your television

5 stars

Content warning Fulls spoilers for Count Zero because I just love talking about this book! + CW mild body horror

Moominpappa at Sea (Paperback, Puffin) 5 stars

Feeling his family's life is too safe and fixed, Moominpappa moves them to a lighthouse …

I live by the ocean and during the night

5 stars

Content warning Moominpappa at Sea: premise revealed + resolution vaguely hinted at. No plot points discussed

I will watch the last sunrise

3 stars

Content warning The Drought: vague arc spoilers + strong thematic and mood spoilers. CW: body horror & kyriarchy

Isle of 100,000 Graves (2011) 3 stars

Jason's worst still awesome

3 stars

Content warning Spoilers: Isle of 100,000 Graves premise reveal

I'm Glad My Mom Died (Paperback, 2022, Simon & Schuster Audio and Blackstone Publishing) 4 stars

A heartbreaking and hilarious memoir by iCarly and Sam & Cat star Jennette McCurdy about …

Real life horror novel

3 stars

This book was so great but also absolutely horrifying. Well written and paced with a gutpunching twist after every chapter. It made me sad, it made me yell out in anguish. The translation (to Swedish, by Julia Gillberg) was good too; a few mistakes but a strong command of contemporary, casual, natural Swedish that reads like talking to a friend. I loved this book.

I never saw any of her shows so this book was my first introduction to this writer. I'm kind of out of touch with pop culture sometimes.

reviewed Money Hungry by Suzi Yee

I love this premise, I wonder why it's so underuse– oh. I see.

1 star

Content warning Money Hungry (Salt Mine) arc structure and mood spoilers. And comparisons with Tordyveln, Dresden Files, Preacher, Askerserien,and X-Files

reviewed Marionetterna by Ingrid Carlberg

Stay with me, marionette, 'til the wolves are away

2 stars

As a journalistic work this book is a strong reco (don't got confused by how the author's name is similar to a far right writer. It's one of those Naomi Klein or Naomi Wolf situations) I never read the back cover copy of books but this time that decision burned me since it'd've made clearer the throughline of this book as not only a larger essay on bot farms and propaganda machines but also synecdochically a biography of Willi Münzenberg.

The prose is hard to read with many ambiguously counterpunctual sentences, triply negated predicates, and skewedly applied similes. And politically I can get frustrated with Carlberg's initially trusting view of institutions like NATO.

But it's worth pushing through because the main point is great. How it sucks that there's so much secret propaganda and how the cure for that is never to fight fire with same but to instead stick …

Expedition : My Love Story   Expeditionen (Hardcover) 5 stars

Only one of the best books of all time

5 stars

This is a book that has gotten a lot of hype here in Sweden and inexplicably it was published in two editions; one a text-only edition and the other a richly illustrated and cleverly laid out bigger hard cover. The latter version is so amazingly good. This is such a passion project for the author Bea Uusma. I usually do not like non-fiction but this on eis hard to review substaially without just heaping on the superlatives. It's poetic it's sad it's thought-through it's a deep dive into a failed 1897 North Pole expedition. This was a re-read for me. I don't remember when I first bought it; I have the third printing of the first (2013) edition. I remember kicking myself for not buying it when it was available then finding it again in a bookstore a few months (or maybe years? My 2010s area blur) later and reading …

The Star Diaries (Paperback, 1990, Mandarin) 4 stars

The Star Diaries is a series of short stories of the adventures of space traveller …

Now I know where Futurama stole all its jokes from

5 stars

This started out as a bunch of gags that must've been fresh as heck back then but we've seen redone to death since. But as it went on it became very thought-provoking and nuanced. A treat. The twenty-first voyage was especially sublime.

City (2008) 3 stars

City is a 1952 science fiction fix-up novel by American writer Clifford D. Simak. The …

I've wrestled an idea and threw it in a box

3 stars

I'm gonna land on this: City is a great book worth reading but it was like sifting for priceless gems through cruft. I had a hard time getting into it and couldn't wait for it to be over. Along the way there were occasional glimpses of awe.

Asker vs the McPoyles

3 stars

Content warning Rostskogen; general structure and thematic comments

Third Girl (Hercule Poirot Mysteries) (Paperback, 1992, HarperCollins Publishers) 3 stars

Three young women share a London flat. The first is a coolly efficient personal secretary; …

Hercule Poirot among the hippies

3 stars

Now this one was a treat! One of Christie's finest and I didn't know this before I read it but it was published right before my very fave of hers, Endless Night. And almost thirty years after the one I most recently read, Murder is Easy, which was also great. What a career!

This one has a hippie chick with memory issues, bohemian artists, spies, jealousy, of course a big mansion but also London flats. Just great.

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