Personally, it's more that anything I read is sort of forced, whether fiction or non-fiction. Though non-fiction inevitably makes my blood boil.
I think I've just been trying to read fiction outside my typical genre preferences, and that's been tough to escape to new genres with the world burning around us. So I go back to sci-fi/fantasy.
definitely, and maybe it just feels eerily applicable to the present based on the book's description of the climate collapse/religious fundamentalists wreaking havoc in the name of MAGA/etc but all that could probably be applied more or less to any era in the U.S.
That's fair. I haven't read Good Omens yet, but I do like Gaiman. I got into Pratchett late, as an adult, so I'm just now on Equal Rites. The first two books were good and fun, so I will likely stick with Discworld for a bit before venturing into other Pratchett worlds. He is like a British fanstasy Kurt Vonnegut, but with worldbuilding.
He has a good sarcastic wit, clearly is a humanist, and trusts the reader to get the joke.
I need to keep going with Discworld after I finish the Dispossessed.
It's been a long time since I've enjoyed reading.
staring angrily into books, name a more leftist hobby
deleted by creator
lol
Personally, it's more that anything I read is sort of forced, whether fiction or non-fiction. Though non-fiction inevitably makes my blood boil.
I think I've just been trying to read fiction outside my typical genre preferences, and that's been tough to escape to new genres with the world burning around us. So I go back to sci-fi/fantasy.
deleted by creator
i'm accidentally reading them out of order, the sequel (parable of the talents) is pretty good so far, she predicted the MAGA grift in the 90s
deleted by creator
definitely, and maybe it just feels eerily applicable to the present based on the book's description of the climate collapse/religious fundamentalists wreaking havoc in the name of MAGA/etc but all that could probably be applied more or less to any era in the U.S.
Thanks for the rec! I may check it out after the next book I finish.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
That's fair. I haven't read Good Omens yet, but I do like Gaiman. I got into Pratchett late, as an adult, so I'm just now on Equal Rites. The first two books were good and fun, so I will likely stick with Discworld for a bit before venturing into other Pratchett worlds. He is like a British fanstasy Kurt Vonnegut, but with worldbuilding.
He has a good sarcastic wit, clearly is a humanist, and trusts the reader to get the joke.
deleted by creator