What are you reading in 2025?

I’m past halfway through The Darkness That Comes Before and I’ve got a two-part reaction to get off my chest.

Part 1. The story is overall interesting and I’m continuing to read with satisfaction. Overall,!I find the aristocrats less interesting - they’re more typical, with clear inspirations from the Julio-Claudians, the Hapsburg, and others. There’s a matter of fastness about just how messed up dynasty tend to be that kind of refreshing: if chivalry is the stories made up to make knights happy (and it is), this is much more the reality of what those guys were doing before and after story time.

On the whole,!though, I find the lower-ranking characters more personable and sympathetic. I imagine a bunch of these folks are doomed. But we’ll see.

The worldbuilding has a lot to commend it, but here’s the other reaction I have.

Part 2. This is not a complaint about Bakker at all, but about a bunch of his fans. People, get some damn clues. Bakker is indeed very good. But he is not a successor to Suetonius and Thucydides. If you’ve never seen a world like this, you need to read some history the way Bakker clearly has. And while Bakker is very good…if you don’t know The Dragon Waiting and The School of Night, you need to meet John M. Ford, and so on for Gene Wolfe, and a bunch of others.

I do realize this is horribly arrogant. But I get buggles by little circles of enthusiasm. Like I said, not the author’s fault.
 

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Just finished Strong Female Character by Fern Brady. It’s a memoir of her life as an undiagnosed autistic woman. Time in a mental hospital, time as a stripper, and time on Taskmaster. If you want a bit of insight into Fern Brady or autism, this is the book for you. Short, quick read that’s well written in a nice conversational style. Lots of seemingly random jumps in time and space.
 


I’m taking a few days off - the general site level of irony and cynicism got me down, and I need my emotions free for other things. I expect to be back before the end of the year for wrap-up thoughts and seeing what the rest of y’all got up to.
Best of luck, mate, have a great few days off and look after yourself.
 

My mother sent me a novel my cousin wrote set in Armenia during the war with Azerbaijan in the 90s. It's called Mountains on Fire. It's pretty good so far. (I am most of the way through.)
 


While trying to find a reasonable priced copy of the textbook Characteristics of Games (George Skaff Elias, Richard Garfield & K. Robert Gutschera) on the back of a talk referencing it that left me very interested, I ran into Games: Agency As Art by C. Thi Nguyen and I have never been more immediately hooked by a nonfiction book.

Nguyen, in the introduction alone, has more completely and correctly laid out what games are, are for, and how we should evaluate them than any other work in the field I've read.
 

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