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dillekant, to fiction in On the False Promise of Climate Fiction

Putting aside apocalyptic cli-fi, Solarpunk specifically and optimistic cli-fi is meant to keep the same space as hard sci-fi, the kind of imaginative work which spurs budding scientists with new ideas, just as cyberpunk did for computers or space sci-fi did for space research. There was optimism about a possible future world, and we largely built it.

I just think the “direct action” the writer talks about is fighting against something, not fighting towards something, and the latter is what we need.

Tenthrow, to sciencefiction in What do you think of the 2023 Hugo award winners?
@Tenthrow@lemmy.world avatar

The Children of Time series is amazing. Although I didn’t like the last book as much as the first 2.

Mbourgon, to sciencefiction in What do you think of the 2023 Hugo award winners?

Heck, let’s break this up!

Best Novel

  • Nettle & Bone, by T. Kingfisher (Tor Books)
  • The Daughter of Doctor Moreau, by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (Del Rey)
  • The Kaiju Preservation Society, by John Scalzi (Tor Books)
  • Legends & Lattes, by Travis Baldree (Tor Books)
  • Nona the Ninth, by Tamsyn Muir (Tordotcom)
  • The Spare Man, by Mary Robinette Kowal (Tor Books)

I’ve only read two of these and bounced hard on the post-Gideon “Ninth” books. (Gideon was absolutely astonishingly good, but Harrow just never clicked - so I guess I need to try Nona) Glad I have several more books to go read!

Legends and Lattes - the podcast “Stories from Among the Stars” just serialized the audiobook. It was quite enjoyable. I think the term is “cottage core”. Low stakes, just a cozy, enjoyable low fantasy story with some entertaining bits, some fun characters, and coffee.

The Spare Man - someone said “The Thin Man movies, but in space”, and I had bought and was reading it 2 minutes later. Not deep, but a really solid murder mystery, IN SPAAAAAACE. Definitely The Thin Man (movies!!) with a lovely couple and their dog. It reminded me a bit of John Varley’s “The Golden Globe”, as the character’s backstory grows over the course of the novel, it was quippy and FUN. Lots of suspects, Kowal is really good with the page - I’ve read 1 or 2 other books of hers, but this book I’d buy 15 more of.

AFKBRBChocolate,

I just finished Spare Man the day before yesterday, and enjoyed it pretty well. It feels more like a murder mystery in a futuristic setting than a science fiction story about a murder somehow, but it was fun and light.

I’m halfway through Gideon the Ninth now, and it’s really good. Fun, interesting, and unusual. I’ll for sure give the rest of the series a try.

The others are on my reading list.

Thrashy, (edited )

I’ve read both Nettle and Bone and Nona the Ninth, and while Nettle and Bone was a fun read at no point while reading it did I think “hey, this is Hugo Award material!” It’s firmly in Kingfisher’s romantic fantasy wheelhouse, and hits all the tropes that subgenre is known for. I’d say the romance is more subtly threaded through the main plot than in her Saints of Steel series, but I came away from it with the sense that it was just a very good piece of genre fiction.

In contrast, Tamsyn Muir’s Locked Tomb series (of which Nona is the third entry) has been such a delightful, genre-bending romp that I would put it well ahead of most anything else I’ve read in the last few years. It remains to be seen if Muir can land the plane with Alecto, but (while I admit it’s a challenging read at first) Harrow the Ninth in particular is just so masterful at spinning an arch-gothic space opera tale through the eyes of a very unconventional and insanely unreliable narrator, and it’s peppered with mad twists to boot. I’ll grant that it was up against stiff competition from Arkady Martine’s Teixcalaan novels in the last couple years, but I personally would still have given Nona the Ninth the nod over Nettle and Bone this year.

NovaPrime, to books in Men Who Don’t Know Women: On Unlearning the Lessons of “Dick Lit”
@NovaPrime@lemmy.ml avatar

Wow, what a refreshing read. I know nothing about the author herself but her approach toward and takedown of so called “dick lit” definitely has me interested in Jonathan Abernathy You Are Kind.

benjhm, to biodiversity in How the Banana Came To Be—And How It Could Disappear

Isn’t it rather, that our most popular variety could disappear, but there are others to develop? Seems my son survives on bananas …

GlennMagusHarvey, to biodiversity in How the Banana Came To Be—And How It Could Disappear
@GlennMagusHarvey@mander.xyz avatar

I clicked on it expecting just a simple “they’re genetic clones and they’re susceptible this same disease”, but this is quite a bit more depth about things. Thanks for sharing!

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