What are you reading in 2025?

I like quite a lot of Wexler’s books but would agree that characterisation (and dialogue) is not his strongest suit - he’s better at atmosphere (mostly grim) and certain sorts of world-building. FWIW I’ve read his Forbidden Library, Wells of Sorcery, and Dark Lord Davi books, and also Hard Reboot, which I probably liked most. He’s good at making you feel that you’re playing a certain sort of computer RPG, if you like that sort of thing. I wouldn’t have thought that he’d be at his best writing in someone else’s setting, though of course he is a gamer and has played plenty of D&D.
 

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Just finished Perry Rhodan #5, Twilight of the Gods. Perry Rhodan and Co get a brain upgrade from alien super science, evolving them and giving them mutant powers. Perry Rhodan gets a subtle hypnotic gaze. There’s no mention of what Reginald Bell gets. There’s a long side plot introducing four other mutants. A telepath, a telekinetic, and a prescient. The human alliance builds a tunnel under Perry Rhodan’s camp and is going to detonate a hydrogen bomb. A second teleporter happens to sympathize with Perry Rhodan and bamfs into the camp to warn them. Alien super science solves the trouble in the press of a button.

In a weird twist, Reginald Bell objects to having his mind read when he meets the telepath. Complaining about his privacy being violated. This is the same Bell who gleefully used mind control in the last four stories. When he meets a teleporter, Bell want to learn teleportation to spy on women changing clothes. Ah, the 1960s.

And apparently half the named characters in the series so far that have been presented as villains are all secretly on Perry Rhodan’s side.

The stories are written by a team of writers but these first few are one guy. His writing ticks are shining through. Lots of “as you know, Bob” dialogue, exclamation point whispers, and long retellings of the current situation when the characters are in immediate and imminent danger.
 

Just finished The Shattering Peace, John Scalzi’s latest and the first Old Man’s War book in a while. As such, with him building on the established lore from his earlier books, it’s rather more substantial than his recent standalones but still very readable.
 

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