Wednesday, November 13, 2024

🧩Why is Everything I Read Depressing? 1 Horror, 2 Dystopian, 1 Opiod Crisis, and 1 🧩

 

    I have read Matt Dinniman's "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series and looked forward to Kaiju: Battlefield Surgeon, another LITrpg short for literary role-playing game. LITrpg is a work that uses the structure of a computer role-player game with monsters, quests, battles, and multiple players. Where the "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series has a loss of players and mystery,  it has a playful silliness. Carl has dedicated himself to helping others succeed and survive. His mantra is, "You will not break me." Duke, in Kaiju, repeats, "This is too much," as he makes dark choices necessary for survival.   

🧌🪱💉🦖


    I don't love The Giver. Dystopian fantasy stories aren't my favorite in general. Even though I would like to live in a world where people don't suffer, and everyone has what they need materially, the cost is high. Only one person understands what has been sacrificed. He has the knowledge of good and evil and it's time for his successor to receive it. I read a review that referenced the Biblical imagery, that I had completely missed and now I want to reread the book. 

🍎🐍🛷👶🏻🚲

    I enjoy hearing what Malcolm Gladwell says and have read many, if not all, of his books. The Revenge of the Tipping Point: Overstories, Superspreaders, and the Rise of Social Engineering was meaty, engaging,  and well-told. He digs into painful topics like COVID-19, the opiate crisis, teen suicide, and more with insightful kindness and hope. I come away from reading his book, especially this one, feeling educated and given tools to interpret the world around me. 

🦠💊🌳

    I am excited to read the latest from James A. Corey. who wrote "The Expanse" series, which spawned an excellent series that ended too soon. The pair that makes up James A. Corey combines all the sci-fi elements. As Frederik Pohl says, "A good science fiction story should be able to predict not the automobile but the traffic jam." I have yet to read the start of the next series--a matter of when not if--but I did read this short novella called Livesuit about soldiers who fight the war against alien invaders in a livesuit. A livesuit is a body armor loaded with tech. A soldier is encased at the start of his/her enlistment of seven years and decanted when the enlistment is over. The suit makes the soldiers practically invincible. 

🧑‍🚀👽🛸🪐

    I picked up the The Puzzle Master by Danielle Trussoni because I wanted something intriguing but not too much thinky-thinky. Mike Brink becomes a savant through a traumatic brain injury. He has the ability to see patterns that others can't see which makes him . . . a master at solving and creating puzzles. He is presented with the puzzle of a convicted murderer that hasn't spoken since the death of her boyfriend until she gives her prison therapist a puzzle for Mike Brink. It leads down a weird and hard to sustain rabbit hole. 

😇אה🧠🧩

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