Hey, there's been a bunch of new users so I figured it might be a good idea to make this thread. Feel free to post your introductions, as well as any links to socials (only if you want to!) such as storygraph, goodreads, or bookwrym etc. I am hopeful to set up a bookwrym instance eventually but its still very much in early early early development.
Well then... hi, I'm Rinn (it is so nice to be able to grab the short names on new social media sites), I'm 28 and live somewhere in the EU. I like cats, video games, and learning new things (learning crochet atm).
Reading wise I'm mostly into sci-fi/fantasy + ungodly amounts of fanfiction when the mood takes me + RPG sourcebooks - I regularly play The One Ring 2e with a group and do some solo roleplaying in various systems (I journal extensively so to me solo roleplay is pretty much writing with dice).
My fave books I've read last year: the Calculating Stars, the Goblin Emperor (one of my overall faves, I reread it every 2 years or so), the Empress of Salt and Fortune.
It's nice to be here, I'm looking forward to watching this space develop ^^
Sure! I'll try to be fairly general to avoid spoiling anything.
It's about the youngest, half-goblin son of the elven Emperor, living in exile with his abusive uncle, until a message arrives that his father and older brothers have all perished in a totally-not-suspicious accident and he has unexpectedly inherited the throne. It follows him learning about and navigating courtly politics (and flailing. so much flailing.), his struggles with tradition and the intense alienation he feels as he is suddenly elevated to the top of society and finds that it kinda sucks to be there (and all the reasons why). I really enjoy the tone of this book - it's quite meditative and depicts certain political/social mechanisms in a somewhat realistic way, but is quite hopeful overall (without being preachy). It's very character/feelings focused and doesn't really have one "core" plot beyond following the protagonist's arc. The writing is excellent - especially the way it gives depth to characters who appear only very briefly and how much it conveys through characters' body language.
Word of caution: the jargon and the amount of names and terms that get thrown at you is overwhelming. This is intentional - you are made to feel exactly what the protagonist is feeling - but it still is too much for some. There is a glossary at the end that's helpful and often missed.
Most people seem to love this book, but those who don't tend to bounce off very hard, mostly because of aforementioned jargon/lack of one central intrigue. It's one of my personal faves and I've read it 3 or 4 times so I'm obviously in the first group ^^
Nice to meet you Rinn! You and me both, I absolutely love cats and video games too. I've also been crocheting ever since I was a kid and recently (finally) learned knitting. If you ever wanna talk about crochet from someone who's been crocheting for nearly 10 years now, my DMs are always open. Also if you haven't found them already, there's a bunch of RPG focused communities on lemmy, science fiction focused communities, as well as an excellent crochet community. If you haven't stumbled upon them already, I can link you cause I'm subscribed to a large portion of them. They probably will pop up in c/all sometimes too.
I'm excited for this place develop too, I think this niche is particularly "in demand" on lemmy so to speak
I'm going by Kaladin, as I've been loving my Storm light archive re-read. I've been enjoying Sandersons work for maybe 5 years now.
My go to is Sci-fi and Fantasy, but I'll take nonfiction if the subject interests me. I also struggle to sit down and read, so my list of read books is a little basic.
I also fucking hate red rising, I've literally read Naruto fanfiction that was better.
It’s… bad. Generically bad. The world building starts with one good idea (that was also the base from Brave New World, incidentally), but everything else is subpar: characters are one dimensional, the plot is basic, most things get solved by a deus ex machina that was totally unforshadowed, the writing is flat… it just has no redeeming quality.
NorthernLightMountain here (the 20 character limit on display names made me shorten it since it's 21 characters long) and I figured I'd drop by to say hi!
My handle comes from the works of my all time favorite author, anyone know who?
I started out my Lemmy journey as a reddit expat and ended up over at Beehaw since I liked the sound of them focusing on being a safe and wholesome place. Now it's starting to sound like they'll split off from Lemmy completely and move on to some other platform due to the seriously lacking moderating tools.
So I've been poking about trying to find myself a new home base and you guys caught my eye. I love to read and the fact that you guys wanted to go for a cozy book-releated area sounded nice! Figured it would be worth giving it a shot at least. :)
Welcome! :)
I seriously hope beehaw stays but we will see
Hope you enjoy it here, I try my best to keep it as active as I can. Let me know if you have any questions or concerns
My name is gabe, im 22 and love reading and knitting and crochet. also cats. I love freaking love cats. I have a link to my mastodon in my profile, and that links over to my storygraph. I don't really use goodreads anymore, it's far too broken.
I've landed here because I like reading and writing. I've saw somewhere that this would perhaps be the instance to go to find a good writing community.
Upon joining, I quickly noticed a very friendly and supportive environment. A lot of that is springs forth from our benevolent admin who genuinely seems to a very kind and generous person. Case in point? This thread. But I digress.
About me... I have an obsession with writing qua writing. I've recently finished an MA in philosophy, meaning I've been spending a lot of time reading and writing.
I'm a long time Linux user, and I'm passionate about FLOSS. I'm also enthusiastic about the Fediverse. I'm all about freedom, free flow of information, and community building.
My number 1 priority is peaceful coexistence. Whenever I can, I try my best to create harmony between people by mediating conflicts. This is quickly becoming my main craft.
Oh, and I like sewing. Knowing how to sew is like having a super power. Things which didn't exist before come into existence; things ripped apart become new again. Nothing puts my mind in a state of flow as sewing. Speaking of which reminded me that I have something to sew today! So, have fun around here, and enjoy this beautiful place.
Aw thank you! Conflict mediation is an extremely valuable skill to have. I am hopeful this communities gains traction but the only way it can is if we give it a fair try at least!
Hi! I'm still deciding how much anonymity I want to keep on the Fediverse, so for the moment I will not link other social. I will just say I'm a European woman a bit over 30. I'm so glad I ended up here, I have been looking for a community where I could talk about books! I love books and talking about them, getting recommendations and sharing impressions!
I like reading in original language, so I have been learning German. My goal is to read Goethe in original, but for the moment Duerenmatt is the furthest I have gotten. I strive to read as many diverse books as possible, I have been trying to read at least a book from each Literature Nobel Prize winner, but sci-fi and fantasy are my bread and butter. Asimov is what prompted me to become a scientist!
That is more than OK, please stay as private as much as you want to. Your identity is yours, and thankfully with the fediverse it's something entirely new you can start from scratch which is one thing I love about it :)
I have been trying to read at least a book from each Literature Nobel Prize winner
What's been your favorite so far if you don't mind me asking?
Restricting to Nobel Prizes, I think Hesse. He has such a sweet way with words that crosses language boundaries. Narcissus and Goldmund was the book I read of his, when I was still a teen. I loved it.
On the other hand, there is quite a list of authors that, in my very personal opinion, should have won but didn’t.
Non-controversial: David Foster Wallace. A representation of the void of contemporary society.
Very controversial: d’Annunzio. Similar incredibly powerful words to Hesse, unfortunately he had to decide to support the fascist government. If you are able to distinguish form and content, his form is like nothing else I have met. But the content is often horrible: he is the hedonistic Übermensch, incredibly self-centered and misogynistic. I don’t know if that’s why he never won it, honestly, but seems likely.
So far I've written a trilogy of science fantasy comedy graphic novels with an illustrator friend of mine.
I haven't started my next project yet, so I feel it's hard to say what's my perfetred topic or genre. Something that goes through my work, I think, is self-empowerment. Learning what you're worth, what you know, and using it to your advantage.
I like writing science fantasy, but I'm not sure I'll write it again soon.
Hello! I go by PseudoMon on the internet. I'm a game programmer from Southeast Asia. Honestly I was just exploring places on the fediverse and somehow stumbled my way here. This place seems pretty nifty! Reading and writing has been a lifelong passion of mine, though I haven't written more than the sporadic short stories and I have been reading way fewer books than I like recently, aha.
I usually read science fiction and fantasy with some dabbling into "literary" fiction and biography/history books. When not reading I also (predictably) play video games and also mess around with web development. Here's my (rarely-updated) Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/12174984
Honestly I've never really had any technical issues with Goodreads. I'm planning on moving to Bookwyrm at some point, but haven't had the time to do that.
Howdy! I'm ZagnutInSpace, a long time reader and writer in search of a chill space to hang out and talk about books, writing (read: editing), and other generally geeky stuff.
By genre, I'm usually drawn to weird experimental literature, Oulipo, fantasy and sci-fi, magical relism, and poetry.
I'm currently reading a 500+ page epic poem without any regular puntuation or capitalization called The Battlefield Where The Moon Says I Love You by Frank Stanford. The book is a super long meditation on civil rights and justice in the American south, and so far it has been a thoroughly fascinating and disorienting read.
I also program for a living, and in my free time I like to write little programs for fun. Right now I'm working on a tool (it may become "tools") to help writers who are exploring constrained writing but dont want to draft out insanity-inducing flow charts or tables to get started with some more complicated constraints.
I do write a little myself, and I'm currently juggling my time between two novel-length ideas that I'm just writing on scene-by-scene basis when I feel like it, nothing too serious.
Glad to meet all of you on this instance and talk about literature!
I've considered making a writingtools community to catalogue some writing tools and software i know of (that arent AI based) to make things easier to find!
Hello, RandomDent here! Don't want to give out too much personal info, but I read a lot and am trying to write things I don't hate, so far unsuccessfully lol.