overgeeked
Open-World Sandbox
What made you feel manipulated?However by the time I noped out of the Murder Womens' club, I felt manipulated in the extreme. I've got no desire to read any more Patterson
What made you feel manipulated?However by the time I noped out of the Murder Womens' club, I felt manipulated in the extreme. I've got no desire to read any more Patterson
Just the formula for the chapters - it creates a "false" sense of suspense. Or maybe more accurately enhances the suspense (because fictionally there is also suspense) using a formal technique as opposed to a narrative techniqueWhat made you feel manipulated?
Finally finished this one. I found it frustrating and thought-provoking, ambitious but ultimately unsuccessful. The narratives about Frank, May, and the titular Ministry worked better for me than the vignettes did -- the latter often felt superficial and sometimes unpleasantly polemical. I often had the feeling of being lectured, which was a bit grating, especially as I generally agree with the arguments that were presented. Oh well.Started The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson last night. I picked up the Three Californias omnibus when I moved to California and loved it, so I thought I'd try something else by him. I have the Mars Trilogy, too, but I wanted a standalone novel for now.
Vlad Taltos books by Brust?Some good recommendations here. I've read the Gentleman Bastards books - they're fun! I liked Strange and Norell, too. Dune is a classic and I read the series when I was a teenager. I've read most everything by Gaiman. The rest, I'll have to check out!
About a quarter of the way in, it starts to get odd. Halfway through, you realise that there may be something wrong with Ed James, because this is batshit. The real plot, when it emerges, is kind of grand guignol in its conceptual grotesquerie and hysteria. I was not expecting that. Nor was I expecting the arc of character development in Fenchurch, which – not to spoil it, but — does the thing these books never do. It brings some warm peace to the Single Terrible Thing and takes away its defining power over his personality. I was impressed by that.
It was fine, a page-turner, good on the procedural end of things. I don't regret reading it, but I don't know that I'll be back for the next eight books — this was published in 2020, so that's, uh, quite the pace. Also, the summaries for the next five books start like this (from his website):Trying something a bit different: The Hope That Kills by Ed James, the first of the DI Fenchurch series. I'm about ten percent in so far, and it's pretty paint-by-numbers right now, but I expect I won't really know if it's any good until it's over. There's a lot of time for it to get weird or interesting.