This was interesting; I found the relationships compelling and I’m fascinated with the idea of plague and the Black Death in particular. I read the book on a recommendation and it wasn’t until after I started it that I realized I had already read a book by Buehlman. I’m kind of glad about that because I don’t know if I would have picked up the book if I had realized before I started. When thinking about this book and his other book I read, The Lesser Dead, the first word that comes to mind to describe the books is vulgar. And I don’t necessarily mean that as a criticism because I think the vulgarity does serve the themes of the books pretty well, but I did feel kind of icky after finishing both books and I think it was a main contributor to my feeling like that. I think that Buehlman is a good writer, but I don't think his books are for me.
It wasn’t awful, but to be honest if I wasn’t listening to it on audiobook there’s a good chance I wouldn’t have finished it. It was interesting, especially when it became clear pretty quickly it had a twist I wasn’t expecting going into it, but I don’t know that I really liked it either.
My mom recommended this one a while ago and it’s been sitting on my “books to try when I don’t know what I want to read” list ever since. Honestly, I loved it. I loved the perspective of making a documentary, it felt like I was watching a horror movie in a way I can’t really describe. Having so much of the story being told from that lens was just so interesting, especially with the added aspect of the narrator being an outsider to that group of people. Things like the main character referring to people with descriptive nicknames because they didn’t know their names made it feel more realistic and was one of a dozen little details that added to the atmosphere of disquiet. I’ll be rereading this one for sure.
I’m finally rereading this series so I can read the newest Percy Jackson book. It’s not the best of the series, but I enjoy it. I still viscerally remember my frustration at having Rick Riordan announce more demigod books only for Percy not be in the first one. I can’t wait to reread the others.
I know this doesn’t make a whole lot of sense, but the book felt formulaic (not in a bad way) and yet I never seemed to be able to guess what would happen next. I expected there to be a lot of tension and misunderstanding between the two main characters and there really just wasn’t. It felt like a breath of fresh air, I loved it. I really liked the world the author brought to life. This is the 2nd book of hers I’ve read and I think I need to read all the rest.
This was a random one that I thought looked good, but I wasn’t really expecting much. And then I read it in one day, practically one sitting as I listened to a lot of it on a long drive home. I had a great time, the world intrigued me.
Apparently this book happens chronologically before book #5 so I decided to read this one first. I was interesting to see Murderbot in a more stable environment, trying to establish some kind of roots. Murderbot makes me laugh so much, it’s so petulant about dealing with humans but every critique it has I’m like yeah a dumb human would do that, I would do that.