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Booknotes 3.17

Nonfiction

  • An Immense World, by Ed Yong, published 2022. One of the most fascinating books I’ve ever read. It’s about the different ways animals sense the world (smell, sight, electric fields, etc.) and is chock-full of facts and scientific discovery stories that lit up my brain, like this one, to take an example at random: “Octopuses are different. Unlike squid, they can touch every part of their bodies. They can even reach inside themselves to groom their own gills—the equivalent of a human putting a hand down their throat to scratch their lungs.” While reading the book I wanted to switch careers and become a scientist. Definitely planning to read it again someday. (Which is saying something; I’m not much of a rereader.)
  • Medieval Horizons, by Ian Mortimer, published 2023. Also fascinating, about the large-scale changes that happened in different parts of life during the Middle Ages (travel, literacy, warfare, sense of self, etc.), and how those changes set the stage for modernity, in some ways more importantly than the technological changes of the Industrial Revolution. A compelling antidote to the idea that medieval times were static and boring.

Fiction

  • The Witness for the Dead, by Katherine Addison, published 2021, fantasy. Cemeteries of Amalo book 1. Really liked it. I think I even liked it as much as The Goblin Emperor, different though it was. The worldbuilding really works for me, even (and perhaps especially) the long, complicated names and the traditions and protocols. Looking forward to the rest of the series and to trying out Addison’s earlier books.
  • The Wolf of Oren-Yaro, by K. S. Villoso, published 2017, fantasy. More action-packed and less of a character study than I expected from what I’d heard about it.
  • High, by Adam Roberts, published 2024, science fiction. Interesting ideas, decent prose, generally liked it. I feel like I haven’t read nearly enough of this sort of idea-driven science fiction in a while, though that may say more about my memory (or lack thereof) than anything. Looking forward to reading more of Roberts’ work.