Simbelmynë
Well-Known Member
I read just under half of The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers towards the end of March and decided to give up on it. The characters hadn’t yet proved themselves as anything much more than safe and inoffensive, and as it had the feel of a novel largely concerned with characterisation and the relationships between those characters, I didn’t feel compelled to keep going. Beneath the aesthetic of a multi-species space opera the genuine SF elements were few and far between, and while there might have been a good plot there, I didn’t manage to find more than a very slow beginning. There were a few parts of it I did enjoy - a ship which runs on algae, a crewmember (was it the pilot?) with a dual personality resulting from an illness unique to that character’s species - but not enough to feel that the second half of the book held much promise.
Flowers for Algernon was waiting for me on my shelf, and needing something I thought I’d likely enjoy I picked this one up. I raced through this novel. If you haven’t already read it then I highly recommend it, easy to see why it’s considered a classic. Clever, unique, expertly penned, and genuinely heart felt, this one will stay with me.
I then picked up The Dancers at the End of Time by Michael Moorcock. Having a couple of conversations on here about MM reminded me that I had the Eternal Champion omnibus edition sitting on my shelf, and I’m glad I finally got round to it. Hugely imaginative, fast paced, very philosophical and even quite funny. Moorcock’s style of prose can be a tad challenging at times, expecting you to keep up with his goliath imagination, but I kind of enjoy having to draw on my own sense of fantasy to paint a picture in my mind’s eye, and the sometimes spare descriptions and minimal stream of consciousness leave ample opportunity for this. A gorgeous trilogy, one of the author’s best.
Flowers for Algernon was waiting for me on my shelf, and needing something I thought I’d likely enjoy I picked this one up. I raced through this novel. If you haven’t already read it then I highly recommend it, easy to see why it’s considered a classic. Clever, unique, expertly penned, and genuinely heart felt, this one will stay with me.
I then picked up The Dancers at the End of Time by Michael Moorcock. Having a couple of conversations on here about MM reminded me that I had the Eternal Champion omnibus edition sitting on my shelf, and I’m glad I finally got round to it. Hugely imaginative, fast paced, very philosophical and even quite funny. Moorcock’s style of prose can be a tad challenging at times, expecting you to keep up with his goliath imagination, but I kind of enjoy having to draw on my own sense of fantasy to paint a picture in my mind’s eye, and the sometimes spare descriptions and minimal stream of consciousness leave ample opportunity for this. A gorgeous trilogy, one of the author’s best.