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dozens

dozens@bookwyrm.tilde.zone

Joined 2 years ago

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dozens's books

Currently Reading (View all 8)

John Boehner: On the House (Hardcover, 2021, St. Martin's Press) 4 stars

John Boehner's largely political autobigraphy of his time in the U.S. Congress from 1991 to …

Review of 'On the House' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

It was good.

## Why I Picked It Up ##

Mel had checked it out and finished it up, so I decided to read it real quick before it was due.

## What I Liked About It ##

I didn't really know anything about Boehner before reading this besides that he was speaker of the house.

I like that hatred for Ted Cruz is apparently universal and without end. It's the one thing you can really count on to bring up all together.

## What I want to remember ##

I didn't know about his anti-corruption crusade upon joining the house. That was neat.

He alleges he got his start in politics by serving on his Home Owners Association. And then.. poof! Speaker of the House!

## What I didn't like about it ##

The whole chapter about high school sports. Nobody cares that you played football in high school, …

Suzanne Redfearn: In an Instant (2020, Amazon Publishing) 4 stars

Review of 'In an Instant' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Why I picked it up ##

Mel told me I should read it!

## What I liked about it ##

Super fast read. The chapters are short. The book is short. The whole thing seems engineered to read in a single weekend.

The story was suspenseful and interesting. I really liked how it showed that you can't really know a person, or how they'll react in a crisis, and how everybody has a tiny bit of bad in them, and everybody processes trauma in their own way.

Made me feel strong feelings of disgust toward the "bad guys."

Also, it somehow immediately established a cast of up to 12 main characters, with two or three auxiliary characters on the side, in such a way that I had no trouble at all remembering who was who.

## What I didn't like about it ##

Finn as a narrator worked 90% of …

N. K. Jemisin: City We Became (2021, Little, Brown Book Group Limited) 4 stars

In Manhattan, a young grad student gets off the train and realizes he doesn't remember …

Review of 'City We Became' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I think that if I lived in New York, or if I had even been there once, I would have considered it great. As it is, this was as fictional a setting as any other.

The ending might have been the best ending for the story Jemisin was telling, but it felt very sudden and rushed and glossed over to me.

## Why I Picked It Up ##

Read all of the Fifth Season books and Jemisin instantly became one of my favorite authors. I was excited to see what she did with some more realistic, urban fantasy.

## What I Liked ##

I like the premise of sort of modern gods, living embodiments of the Great Cities.

## What I Didn't Like ##

Aislyn was creepy. I never could tell whether she was despicable or sympathetic. Maybe this should go under What I Liked. She was an interesting character. …

Kiley Reid: Such a Fun Age (Paperback, 2019, Random House Large Print) 4 stars

Review of 'Such a Fun Age' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Everybody's the hero of their own story.

## Why I picked it up ##

Mel told me she liked it, and wanted to talk to me about it

## What I liked about it ##

Nuance of character. Alix maintained a little bit of likability and sympathy right up to the very end.

Briar was cute as hell. I usually don't like the precocious kid trope but I guess it worked well here because she wasn't especially precocious. She was just a normal 3 year old.

## One thing I want to remember ##

The feeling of great sadness at the end when Emira spelled out why everybody in this book was miserable: "And some days, Emira would carry the dread that if Briar ever struggled to find herself, she'd probably just hire someone to do it for her."

Kelly relied on black people and black culture to define himself. …

Review of "A Lapsed Anarchist's Approach to Managing Ourselves" on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Incredibly eclectic. In the guise of a business book, Ari expounds on politics, philosophy, religion, food and recipes, friendship and loss, and, yes, business.

His partner Paul once told Ari that his talent is drawing meaningful connections between any two topics, and that talent is on display here in full force.

This volume feels like a glimpse into Ari's personal notebooks, in which he journals religiously every day, and in which he must create and fine tune these cross references and connections.

Indeed, one of the chapters consisted of recalling and reapplying some of the "secrets" from a previous volume to the central theme of this volume, self-management.

The end result is an encyclopedic almanac. Very holistic, and almost self-help in nature given the core theme.

Garth Ennis: The Boys Vol. 1 (Paperback, 2007, Dynamite Entertainment) 3 stars

Review of 'The Boys Vol. 1' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Switched from watching the show on Prime to reading the book, and I'm really glad I did.

I hated the show. Too much real violence against real people. Way too actually misogynistic.

The book though, is good. The violence is still there but it's almost a little more slapstick, and definitely takes a back seat to the parody and satire of the superhero genre. The transparent cameos are funnier. There are still some really awful, squeamish parts. It's prime Garth, and in some ways it quickly out Preachers Preacher with the shock factor. But it also seems a little bit tongue in cheek.

Garth Ennis, Darick Robertson: The Boys, Vol. 2 (Paperback, 2008, Dynamite Entertainment) 2 stars

Review of 'The Boys, Vol. 2' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

A high four stars for the first book, with the batman parody and Stan Lee stand-in and a kinda/sorta nuanced take on homophobia, and hooooo boy the final scene with T.K. and the asteroid!

A low two stars for the second book with the Russian mafia. Totally out of place. Felt like filler, and nothing but an excuse for a bunch of dick jokes.

Actually, this whole volume was really an extravagant amount of dick jokes.

Edit: I'm docking this a star because I'm still thinking days later about how much I hate the way Little Nina is written. Literally her only character trait--besides being small and angry--is her sexuality, which is only ever presented as though it is comedic or grotesque, and I think was only in the story in the first place so that it could be the vehicle for her ultimate destruction at the hand of The …

Daniel Sell, Jarrett Crader, Dirk Detweiler Leichty, Sam Mameli, Jeremy Duncan: Troika! Numinous Edition (Hardcover, 2019, Melsonian Arts Council) 4 stars

Review of 'Troika! Numinous Edition' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Why I picked it up

It was included in that huge itch.io bundle for social justice

## What I liked about it

The art is whimsical really fun. There are a lot of novel mechanical aspects like the "luck of the draw" initiative system, and bidirectional combat rounds, and the Luck mechanic.

The entirety of the "setting" if there is one, and indeed the lion's share of the whole book, is its huge list of character backgrounds.

Overall, I find the whole thing very intriguing and entertaining, and would love to try out the included adventure scenario with my gaming group soon.