Book 2 was just released last week. I sat down this morning to read and as of this evening I am about 200 pages in. It really sucked me in.
Disclaimer. I am the father of the author. But when she was younger I would read something she wrote and if she asked for my reaction I was honest. I would say, it is really good for a 14 year old. That would drive her crazy. But I would tell her I will always give you my honest reaction.
When she was picked up by a publisher in her early 20s, she was kind of bashful about me reading her work. It was so gratifying to be able to walk in about 2/3 of the way through that first published novel and tell her that even though it wasn't my preferred genre I had started to care about the characters and the plot and I had to finish.
I feel like each book has gotten better. This latest book captured my attention within the first few pages and I spent way more time reading it today than I originally intended.
Sorry if anyone is offended at me promoting my daughter's work.
The Witcher Saga by Sapkowski. For the first time in years I felt like I got really "lost" in a book again and it was fantastic. I could do that easily when I was kid/teenager, now it's much harder to achieve for me.
Strongly agree. Just started reading it myself. One note for people picking it up: the English translation for ‘The Last Wish’ is not great but, if you power through it, all the remaining books are fantastic.
Wrong: Why Experts Keep Failing Us - and How to Know When Not to Trust Them by David H. Freedman
- Painfully relevant to the current pandemic. Explains why the experts aren't!
The End of Average by Todd Rose
- Pulls the curtain(s) aside from education, corporations and the non-science of "scientific management". Why Taylorism continues to dominate corporate and social life today. Explains many features of our lives (both civic and corporate) that were "baked into" society decades ago, are rarely examined (indeed rarely noticed) and are ripe for replacement.
This reads like (and should be made into) a BBC series: story after story of generations of human suffering from malaria, which remains far more deadly than Covid-19. Where else do you read that merely living in Rome before the existence of a cure for malaria was almost guaranteed to shorten your life significantly and end it badly? Imperial Rome, the center of Roman civilization! Rome, the center of the Catholic Church during and after Rome fell and into the Early Middle Ages! And this disease was endemic not only in Rome but to most of southern Europe extending up to Britain.
This is truly amazing work. All possible shit is included, all art and drawings. Engineering solutions and fresco painting methods recorded and analyzed.
Faery Tales (The Dark Fae Series Book 2)
By McKenzie Rae
Book 2 was just released last week. I sat down this morning to read and as of this evening I am about 200 pages in. It really sucked me in.
Disclaimer. I am the father of the author. But when she was younger I would read something she wrote and if she asked for my reaction I was honest. I would say, it is really good for a 14 year old. That would drive her crazy. But I would tell her I will always give you my honest reaction.
When she was picked up by a publisher in her early 20s, she was kind of bashful about me reading her work. It was so gratifying to be able to walk in about 2/3 of the way through that first published novel and tell her that even though it wasn't my preferred genre I had started to care about the characters and the plot and I had to finish.
I feel like each book has gotten better. This latest book captured my attention within the first few pages and I spent way more time reading it today than I originally intended.
Sorry if anyone is offended at me promoting my daughter's work.