WWW Wednesday—September 25, 2024

No intro today…I really don’t have much to say. Let’s just get on with it.

This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:
What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Seems easy enough, right? Let’s take a peek at this week’s answers:

What are you currently reading?

Cover of The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson Cover of On Classical Trinitarianism by Matthew Barrett Cover of An Inheritance of Magic by Benedict Jacka
The Space Between Worlds
by Micaiah Johnson
On Classical Trinitarianism: Retrieving the Nicene Doctrine of the Triune God
edited by Matthew Barrett
An Inheritance of Magic
by Benedict Jacka, read by Will Watt

I’ve barely scratched the surface of The Space Between Worlds but I can tell that this is one that’s going to mess with my head, but the writing is so nice that I don’t care. I’m reading this for a SF Book Club that meets next week. I’ve never tried a book club before, I’m looking forward to doing that (he says days in advance, we’ll see if my introversion will let me leave the house).

I’m still plugging away at On Classical Trinitarianism, it’s rewarding…but I spend a lot of time feeling that I’m not quite smart enough to read it. But I’m getting enough out of it to put up with feeling like I’m wearing a dunce cap.

I’m not far in An Inheritance of Magic, but I’m digging Watt’s narration and am enjoying revisiting this world before An Instruction in Shadow releases next month.

What did you recently finish reading?

Cover of The Debt Collector by Steven Max Russo Cover of Sleepless City by Reed Farrel Coleman
The Debt Collector
by Steven Max Russo
Sleepless City
by Reed Farrel Coleman, read by Peter Giles

Russo’s latest novel is one of those where you end up reading a lot further in each session than 1. you intended to and 2. you realize until you stop. I don’t know if it’s the story, the character, or his prose—but something just moved so smoothly about this. I’ll try to say more soon—and I should have a Q&A with Russo about it, too.

I’d like to say I adjusted to Giles’ narration, but his raspy narration and a couple of interesting (to try to be charitable) pronunciation choices never really settled with me. I did like some of the supporting character voices and accents he used, I have to say. Coleman’s story was just as gripping as I remembered.

What do you think you’ll read next?

Cover of Black Maria by Christine Boyer Cover of Born to Be Hanged by Keith Thomson
Black Maria
by Christine Boyer
Born to Be Hanged: The Epic Story of the Gentlemen Pirates Who Raided the South Seas, Rescued a Princess, and Stole a Fortune
by Keith Thomson, ready by Feodor Chin

I have no idea what Black Maria is about—a few weeks ago, Vern Smith from Run Amok Crime sent me a copy of the ARC. He’s yet to lead me astray, so I’m going for it.

I remember reading the back cover/jacket flap for Born to Be Hanged a year or so ago, and thinking it looked pretty fun (and maybe educational). Who doesn’t like a good pirate story, right? When I saw it browsing the library’s audiobooks, I had to jump.

What’s the end of September hold for you?

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2 Comments

  1. I”m currently rereading a vintage Georgette Heyer Regency romance “The Talisman Ring” which I read years ago but have forgotten the details of. It’s not first rate Heyer (those I can practically recite by heart) but it’s amusing fluff.

    That’s to lighten my mood after reading two downers: Julia Phillips’ “Bear” is a current best seller, a dark re-telling of Grimm’s “Snow White and Rose Red” with the two sisters transposed to an isolated island in Puget Sound, populated by a few eccentrics and recluses and kept alive by summer swarms of tourists. There is a bear, almost equally fantastic as the Grimm version – but the ending is grimmer than Grimm.

    “White Butterfly” is third in Walter Mosley’s Easy Rawlins mystery series. Easy spends most of the book drunk and despairing, and most of the people he meets as he passes through Watts, West Oakland, the posher LA suburbs, and a stint in jail, are Not NIce at All. Don’t count on this one to pull you out of your funk if you happen to be in one.

    Next I plan to read Katharine Koen’s “Through A Glass Darkly” as I started it years ago and got distracted. (Yes, this is from my TBR shelf, though it hasn’t been there as long as some others.)

  2. BTW, I miss getting comments on my comments – the little checkbox if someone reacts to what I’ve written is no longer available. Is this a way you have figured out to conserve your time and energy?

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