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13 votes
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This is How You Lose the Time War - I loved it but I understand why some hate it
After giving This is How You Lose the Time War a five star review, I started scrolling through other reviews and I found thoughtful, well reasoned arguments for the other side. This is a...
After giving This is How You Lose the Time War a five star review, I started scrolling through other reviews and I found thoughtful, well reasoned arguments for the other side. This is a thoroughly crafted well written book that is not going to be to everyone's taste.
The premise is two opposing secret agents, saboteurs, time and history manipulators who work for conflicting civilizations become aware of each other and start to exchange letters. It becomes a love story.
The nature of the work each main character does to manipulate history across many centuries and many parallel universes makes the narrative confusing. I can't imagine it done effectively any other way, but I also like other confusing time shifting stories where the story starts to make sense later.
The characters only meet through their letters with a couple of exceptions, so some say the love story is unbelievable. For me, it reflects the extreme isolation and loneliness of their work and how even minimal tenuous companionship of a peer would satisfy a gaping need.
The writing includes extravagant romantic feelings and poetic literary allusions to go with the science fiction and time travel aspect. I appreciated it, but people who like romance and poetry don't always like science fiction and time travel and vice versa.
The authors lean into the epistolary format. It's not exclusively letters but a significant percentage of the writing is the letters these two characters exchange.
The creative forms the letters take were fun for me and seemed like a valid extrapolation of actual historical spycraft if you assumed much greater ability to manipulate matter. However some people find them over the top.
It is an exuberant, enthusiastic book that is fun if you like it and possibly cringy if you don't
22 votes -
The Murderbot Diaries Book 7 - System Collapse just got released
28 votes -
The Wolves of Eternity by Karl Ove Knausgård, review – long-lost siblings are linked across time and space in this expansive novel
7 votes -
Lisica - A Scientist Soap Opera ... Looking for beta readers for the first draft of my four volume series!
As an author who normally writes a lot of thrillers with dark subjects, I found at the outset of last year that I just couldn't add any more darkness to the world. Lisica is a story I've been...
As an author who normally writes a lot of thrillers with dark subjects, I found at the outset of last year that I just couldn't add any more darkness to the world. Lisica is a story I've been incubating for over 20 years, about a fictional island 1600 km off the coast of Oregon in the middle of the Pacific. I've just finished the series and it needs a new set of eyes to take it to the next level.
It is pure escapism, a love story about eleven researchers who are sent to Lisica for eight weeks to categorize the island's life before a new global satellite agreement comes into force and the USAF has to reveal the island to the wider world. The novels are equal parts scientific discovery, (with special emphases on data science, field biology, geology, meteorology, marine science, archaeology, and linguistics) and equal parts torrid romance between all these beautiful people. In many ways it is a utopian story, about people in paradise doing valuable work who can also love without hurting others. There is no toxic masculinity or bullying on this island, no sophomoric communication problems, no jealousy nor regret. It is my belief that natural challenges such as storms and cliffs and the mystery of the unknown is enough. This isn't Lost. There is magical realism here but it is more realism than magic.
I'm hoping to find a few qualified beta readers who have a background in these sciences, to help me make sure I present them correctly. But it's a lot to ask, for sure. Each of the four volumes is 15 chapters of exactly 26 pages each. 1560 pages in all. 425,000 words. If anyone knows a retired biology teacher with plenty of time on their hands, that's basically who I need at this stage.
My next step is to turn each chapter into audio episodes. As well as an author, I'm an Audible narrator and professional character actor. It is why each chapter is exactly 26 pages long. They make for sixty 42 minute audio episodes. I will eventually release the series week by week for free on my literary podcast over the next year.
Hopefully, this scratches someone's itch. Thanks for reading!
11 votes -
Strike and Robin return – but JK Rowling really needs an editor
6 votes -
Debut novel by Millie Bobby Brown reignites debate over ghostwritten celebrity books
16 votes -
Alan Moore interview: ‘I’m giving all my screen royalties to Black Lives Matter’
20 votes -
Olga Ravn on her new hybrid novel about maternal ambivalence, her debt to Doris Lessing, and attempting to read Freud aged ten
5 votes -
‘It's time the Girl With the Dragon Tattoo grew up’ – Karin Smirnoff on her shocking sequel
13 votes -
American Psycho: The musical that got chopped too soon
4 votes -
Terry Pratchett was fantasy fiction’s Kurt Vonnegut, not its Douglas Adams
47 votes -
The Summer Book (1972) – Tove Jansson's novel about love, family and nature, will make you nostalgic for your own childhood
5 votes -
Anyone enjoy Don Quixote of la mancha series ?
13 votes -
My Favorite Thing is Monsters: Book Two has a date, April 9, 2024!
3 votes -
Maus: How to design a comic book page
9 votes -
Scissor Sister's Scott Hoffman reveals the comics that inspired his new cyberpunk series, Nostalgia
5 votes -
What are some overlooked comic books or graphic novels that you think deserve more attention?
Comic books and graphics novels are a frequently overlooked form of story telling. We often see well written stories transcend the medium and retold in movies or television where they gain...
Comic books and graphics novels are a frequently overlooked form of story telling. We often see well written stories transcend the medium and retold in movies or television where they gain popularity. What are some of your favorite overlooked or under appreciated comic book or graphic novel stories that you think other people should experience? Obviously 'overlooked or under appreciated' is subjective, but offer some recommendations anyway.
I thought The Many Deaths of Laila Starr by Filipe Andrade and Ram V was good. His work on Gravity's Wall and Swamp Thing Becoming was also great.
20 votes -
Space and time in comics | Hedra
6 votes -
Roald Dahl books rewritten to remove language deemed offensive
14 votes -
The ten best comics of 2022
4 votes -
Karin Smirnoff pens new Dragon Tattoo novel – picks up from David Lagercrantz in filling out the late Stieg Larsson's vision for a ten-book sequence
5 votes -
Let’s talk visual novels
(Inspired by this conversation thread) Any and all thoughts on visual novels are welcome. Some potential questions for jumping off points: What are your thoughts on the VN genre/format? What are...
(Inspired by this conversation thread)
Any and all thoughts on visual novels are welcome. Some potential questions for jumping off points:
What are your thoughts on the VN genre/format?
What are some of the best VNs you’ve played/read?
What would you recommend to someone who’s new to VNs and wants to try one out?
How do you think VNs compare to games, literature, and other interactive fiction?
14 votes -
JK Rowling's new book, about a transphobe who faces wrath online, raises eyebrows
19 votes -
Lore animation for 'GodSlap', a graphic novel by Charles White Jr (aka Cr1TiKaL, aka penguinz0)
2 votes -
Gizmodo on the Comixology platform retool
4 votes -
A story about living in nature and the value of culture captures the spirit of Finland – Lizzie Enfield explores the remarkable legacy of 'Seitsemän veljestä'
9 votes -
An understanding of Orwell's 1984 from someone who has never read it
6 votes -
“Would you be willing to ask Siri how to assassinate Donald Trump?” - excerpt from Shelter in Place
6 votes -
A small collection of novels — some great, some not so great — appeared in just the right form at just the right moment to effect lasting changes
5 votes -
Novel idea: The Apartment
Just finished (re-)watching the Friends TV series ... End of the last episode, sitting in the empty apartment (Joey: "Has it always been purple?" Phoebe: "Do you realize that at one time or...
Just finished (re-)watching the Friends TV series ... End of the last episode, sitting in the empty apartment (Joey: "Has it always been purple?" Phoebe: "Do you realize that at one time or another, we've all lived in this apartment?")
Got me thinking, more as a plot contrivance than the actual plot, a story about an apartment, spanning a century or more, and the various people that lived in it, jumping back and forth across time, linking them together through history ... perhaps even, a la "Ship of Theseus", spanning multiple centuries and multiple homes/dwellings that occupied the same space.
So specifically, I'm wondering if anyone can think of any novels that adopt this idea, or anything similar, as a primary vehicle for their storytelling?
I have a vague recollection of a short story or novella in 2ndary school, about the life of a redwood, and the various people and animals that lived in and around it over the centuries ... and also I recall reading "A Winter Tale" by Mark Helperin -- a semi-fantastical novel about the city of New York ... oh look, apparently, they made it into a movie, too.
But those two are the only examples I can think of that come close to this idea.
PS: I love to write fiction, and someday I may even finish a novel ... but generally, I get about halfway through, figure out how it's going to end, and then lose interest ... so if anyone with more ambition likes the idea, you're welcome to it.
ETA: I'm not looking for the 10,000 variations of "oooh, haunted by the ghost of a person that died here 20 years ago". Broader, covering a longer timeframe, multiple substories interwoven into the same living space, you get the idea.
10 votes -
Raide, the artist and director of Katawa Shoujo, Analogue: A Hate Story and other VNs, dies
14 votes -
Necrobarista | Launch trailer
6 votes -
Now is a great time to start reading Gunnerkrigg Court
5 votes -
“The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy” turns 42
10 votes -
Jo Nesbø: ‘We should talk about violence against women’
4 votes -
Murder By Numbers | Announcement trailer
3 votes -
AI: The Somnium Files | Release trailer
5 votes -
Eliza review: Startup culture meets sci-fi in a touching, fascinating tale
7 votes -
Despite being a best-selling author, Jane Austen was paid very little
6 votes -
Are today’s young readers turning on The Catcher in the Rye?
9 votes -
Jo Nesbø, master of Norway noir, returns with his creepiest yet
5 votes -
AI: The Somnium Files | Official gameplay trailer (September 2019 release)
4 votes -
Nothing but the truth: The legacy of George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four
5 votes -
Necrobarista | Gameplay trailer - PC release on August 8, 2019
6 votes -
Project Sakura Wars announced for PS4
4 votes -
Things to consider with visual novels
Not sure if this the right place to post this but here goes... I'm writing a story and I'm trying to figure out the best medium to tell it. I'm strongly leaning toward visual novels. I like anime...
Not sure if this the right place to post this but here goes... I'm writing a story and I'm trying to figure out the best medium to tell it. I'm strongly leaning toward visual novels. I like anime and I want the story to have a similar look and feel. Maybe someday it will even become an anime. Who knows?
That said, does anyone here have any thoughts on the pros/cons of taking the visual novel approach as opposed to a traditional novel or light novel?
7 votes -
Five emerging Australian authors talk about writing their breakthrough novels
7 votes -
What are some good short novels?
I've read a few novels, I think an excellent short novel is Elevation by Stephen King. It's not what you'd expect from a Stephen King novel (no horror elements), but it's a great read. I can't say...
I've read a few novels, I think an excellent short novel is Elevation by Stephen King. It's not what you'd expect from a Stephen King novel (no horror elements), but it's a great read. I can't say too much without spoiling it, but here's the blurb:
The latest from legendary master storyteller Stephen King, a riveting, extraordinarily eerie, and moving story about a man whose mysterious affliction brings a small town together—a timely, upbeat tale about finding common ground despite deep-rooted differences.
It starts off a little slow, but give it a little bit of time. It's readable in an afternoon, I think I spent 5 or so hours reading it.
7 votes -
If you were a sack of cumin
7 votes