• Re: What are the best books you've read in 2024?

    From Mark Carroll@mtbc@ixod.org to rec.arts.books on Tue Feb 18 13:12:52 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.books

    On 03 Jan 2025, Mark Carroll wrote:
    (snip)
    I just paid a princely -u4 for a used copy of Zebrowski's
    "Macrolife" (also new to me)
    (snip)

    This turned out to be engaging enough to keep me reading, and the
    premise that the author's exploring is interesting (large space habitats
    that are self-sufficient and able to reproduce), it's decent for ideas.
    I wouldn't say the characters are strong and, goodness, the narrative's
    a bit heavy at times: there are long passages in which characters
    expound on or read about theoretical musings on this and that, basically explaining things to each other in detail rather than simply letting the
    story show us things. So, it needs a bit of forgiveness (or a good
    editor!) but I'm glad I bothered anyway. It reminds me of later in War
    and Peace when Tolstoy takes an occasional break from narrative to muse
    about, er, war or somesuch. I can't help but think Zebrowski a bit
    optimistic about advanced human society.

    Currently I am enjoying Adrian Tchaikovsky's "Alien Clay" which is
    engaging, agreeable, and rather less long and more easygoing. It also
    feels appropriately cynical in a way that the above didn't.

    -- Mark
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