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What We've Been Reading
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What have you been reading this July?
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Rachel
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Jul 18, 2025 01:46PM




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I enjoyed volume 1 of Locke & Key. I have 6 volumes plus some spin-offs that I picked up in a Humble Bundle deal some time ago, but I haven't read past volume 1 yet. I agree that I don't think there is a Lovecraft connection beyond the town name, but it was enjoyably creepy. Joe Hill also wrote Horns, about the half-human son of the Devil. Given his parentage, his ability to write deeply unsettling books is not a surprise.
It's not until volume 7 of Locke & Key that he ties it in with the Sandman.

Currently watching the Netflix adaptation of Locke & Key, and enjoying it. Had no idea it crossed over with Sandman. Nearly done with season 2 with one more season to go.

I liked the second volume better, the Dodge character is creepy, and I guess technically human, but he's also something other so doesn't give me the same ick factor the first volume did. It's seriously bizarre, where there is a key that will pop your head open so people can poke around in your memories and you can take stuff out and put stuff in. Brilliant yet disturbing idea (especially the facial expressions of the people getting their brains scrambled).
Let's just say Hill has a very very strange mind. Mind you, The Dark Tower series was seriously weird at times too but I think the son cranks it up another level.
I'll keep going with this series. It almost feels like its for kids, 'cause its kids in a magic house with magic keys, like so many other kids books, but its definitely for adults.
Talking of TV shows, I loved the Lucifer TV series and have to admit I'm a bit disappointed that the comics actually take place after the time period of the TV show, I liked him going around with a cop solving crimes. It was this TV show that led me to The Sandman and this year I'm diving into all those spinoffs and crossovers.
Constantine's Hellblazer is another one that crosses over with The Sandman (he shows up fairly frequently actually). I actually like the movie, so of course I've got this image of Constantine looking like Keanu Reeves. Anyway will get into that series once I wrap up one of the others I'm in the middle of.
There's also the Dead Boy Detectives which was spawned from one of the Sandman tales.
And The Books of Magic....which I read the three most recent issues and was confused since it seemed to reference things I knew nothing about, only to find out there was stuff that came before that I'm hunting down.

I think the Constantine movie was probably better appreciated by people who hadn't already read the Hellblazer comics from the late 80s / early 90s, which was the first time Constantine got his own title. Prior to that he had just appeared as a guest in other titles, mostly in DC comics that dealt with supernatural issues, and often in the Swamp Thing title - which also had a TV series based on it, but it was nowhere near as good as Sandman.

You know...I think I watched the Constantine TV series.


I heard that Patrick McGoohan had to flee the country when the last episode of The Prisoner aired, people were so mad. There are still some very good episodes and some not so good. I rewatch them every few years.


@Audrey how are you liking Seraphina so far? I found the opening itself wonderful.



Bergreen provides an overview of Jules Verne's life and work with LOTS of excerpts from Verne's best known novels. Verne is considered the father of sci-fi. 😊
Interesting and informative. 4 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Also!! I opened a generalized "what are your favorite books?" request for reccomendations here with a lot of clarifying questions that I usually have about those types of responses. I keep finding new books at random and only have, like, 2 books I'm actually sure I'll enjoy reading so far, so if you have the patience to type out a response to that topic, thank you in advance! I will also be adding my own recommendation there eventually, but alas my brain cogs are overloaded and come back online at unpredictable variables. (It should be some time today or tomorrow).
Books finished in the past month (june 5-jul5)



Dropped:



In 2400 the Earth is hardly able to sustain human life and corporations in space are maneuvering for money and power. Can humanity on the planet be saved?
Good story. 3.5 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Switching to Son of a Witch by Gregory Maguire which given the darkness of Wicked will also be a bit on the depressing side. I read the first chapter, which was just a few pages long and already a caravan was travelling about finding dead bodies everywhere and having to stop and bury them...fun fun!



At the library I had also picked up Les Normaux: A Graphic Novel, it had vampires and stuff so I though why not. It was cute, the exact opposite of Locke & Key. What I would do was read the scary one in the evening, but then take a little time before bed to read the cozy one so I wouldn't get nightmares :) This one fills my 2025 BINGO slot.



Ursula Le Guin's The Language of the Night: Essays on Fiction, Science Fiction, and fantasy (excellent book)
Nnedi Okorafor's Just Out of Jupiter's Reach
A Cup of Flour, A Pinch of Death (by my mentor Valerie Burns)
A Court of Thorns and Roses -Sarah J. Maas
I was in the midst of reading Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis trilogy when -- Lois McMaster Bujold dropped the lil' novella: The Adventue of the Demonic Ox on me! What to do?
I've almost finished it, probably will today.
And more, but these are the SFF highlights.
!Ciao!



Anyways, Elvenbane isn't so good so far--the writing is lovely, but I loved the writing in the beginning of the last book of Lackey's I read, Magic's Pawn, but that fizzled out near the middle, so hoping the writing style stays solid. I'm also completely fed up with 'evil elves' and have almost 0 stamina left for reading about evil societies. Morally grey, I can understand, but evil is just so boring to me.... yeah. I need to get into some interesting books whose trigger warnings don't make me sound like a weirdo. As for Elvenbane, I know one author is dead and the series won't be completed, so I'm not planning to finish this book, just to get to the fun bits with dragon relationships. I want to see if the authors did anything interesting with their psychology--I'm always interested in that. If I don't find it in fantasy, I might veer off into scifi.
Still reading Dragonbone Chair, LOTR, and The Last Unicorn, and.... yk what, here's a list. I don't have enough of an opinion on most of these to say much, except that I want to keep reading:









And I thought I read a bunch of books in parallel :) I usually have one dead tree book, one eReader book, one graphic novel/manga/anthology to hop in and out of when I want something quick, and sometimes one non-SF/F on too.

..

*glances at my to-read and reread plans*








(and my audiobook)

(I did say I was "scouring" for books)


And that doesn't include the random things that catch my eye when I visit the library, I'm terrible at such temptations.
I need to quit my job, not enough time to read...

And that doesn't include the random t..."

Haha. That's a once-a-day multivitamin schedule. I hope they're quick reads.



Shortly after Witch Killer, I jumped into some OG gothic fiction with Ann Radcliffe's Sicilian Romance. I have previously read and loved Mysteries of Udolpho and Romance of the Forest, and Sicilian Romance is proving to be another good one. Now that I'm quite familiar with her writing, it's interesting to see how she plays and experiments with different methods of story telling. And her prose, is of course, wonderful as ever. That said, I didn't get much reading done during the week thanks to Nurgle, but finally started to catch up some this weekend as the brain fog clears!
Tony wrote: "I have started reading The House on the Borderland This is the second in Hodgson's Abyss trilogy, although they are a trilogy by theme rather than by sharing a story. Written in 190..."
I have been wanting to read House on the Borderland for a while, myself. How are you liking it?



It's interesting. Even a hundred years ago (or closer to 120 in this case) English was a slightly different language, so I find the writing a little stilted in places - Hodgson uses so many commas. I wonder if Lovecraft had read any Hodgson? There are some similarities in concept and I think that Hodgson is a better writer, although Lovecraft is perhaps the more imaginative of the two. It is available as a free download from Project Gutenberg.



It's interesting. Even a hundred years ago (or closer to 120 in this case) Engli..."
There was a lot of interaction between all the horror authors of the time, each of the influencing each other. It seems that:
Lovecraft discovered Hodgson's work relatively late, around 1934, but was deeply impressed by it, particularly by The House on the Borderland and The Night Land. Lovecraft appreciated the sense of cosmic horror, existential loneliness, and the vast, indifferent universe presented

I then went on to read The Scarlet Citadel by Robert E. Howard, his 2nd ever Conan story. I haven't read any Conan since high school, so this is a slow read (or reread in some cases) of the Complete Chronicles of Conan in between other reads. Unsurprisingly I loved the Scarlet Citadel! The final battle in particular was just so damn epic!
I'm now still deciding what to read next. The contenders are The Tainted Cup (which I know is hugely popular right now), City of Last Chances by Adrian Tchaikovsky, or The Black Company (which has been a long time coming for me, as I've been collecting the books for some time).
Michelle wrote: "I had to look up "Nurgle" 👵 I'm glad you're getting over it."
Just some Warhammer nerdery 😅 And thanks, it was a horrid one! Seems it's making the rounds around our neck of the woods, everyone seems to be getting it lately.
Tony wrote: "NekroRider wrote: "I have been wanting to read House on the Borderland for a while, myself. How are you liking it?"
It's interesting. Even a hundred years ago (or closer to 120 in this case) Engli..."
Would not be surprised at all if Lovecraft read him! At the very least because we could probably ask the question "did Lovecraft read it" and answer "yes" to just about any horror, gothic, speculative or general dark fiction published during or within the 100 years preceding his lifetime lol The guy was such a voracious reader of anything "weird"! That makes me think about just how obsessed so many authors of that age were with actively engaging with as much literature as possible - I sometimes wonder if as many popular authors today are as engage/obsessed in the same way. Or maybe there just isn't as much obvious essay writing, correspondence etc. Random thought of the day!

DNF a second book where the premise sounded great but the execution was vanilla. the main character spent the first 100 pages by himself also so no character dynamics when i stopped reading .
Replaced with Unintended Cultivator: Volume One and this is much more enjoyable. Standard wizard takes an apprentice set up with martial arts and spirit world animals in the wild . also sounds like their is going to be other sects of wizards fighting for political dominance once MC finishes training?

I got the giggles from your synopsis!

Also going to pick up Silver in the Wood around next time I get bored. I feel like it’ll need a lot of concentration for some reason.


Dropping Discworld’s Guards! Guards!for now. It’s just not what I’m looking for. Also putting off Redwall for similar reasons, but mainly my library loan ran out and I don’t particularly want to renew it.
Unhappy with The Children of Llyr and Knife, but still trudging on. Only 14%(page 37) and 34%(page 92) in, respectively, and my main gripe with Llyr is the *poof, giant timeskip to new characters*, mixed with ‘this is it?? This is the great evil??’ which could be fickle of me, we’ll see. Knife… feels like a (not well done) ripoff of ‘Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Rescue’ mixed with ‘Arietty.’ So far, it hasn’t been interesting. Compared to The Moorchild, its lore is very lacking. It could be the lack of magic, but Arietty was interesting without magic, so..
My problem with The Last Unicorn is that I keep putting it off to savor it and absorb every single paragraph. I hope I don’t forget about it at this snail-rate. Page 70. 70!!! 20%!

I just read it, and I really liked it! It was interesting to see from ART's crew's perspective, and to see how ART changed after meeting Murderbot. Do you also like the Murderbot Diaries?

Let me know how Malice goes, I won it through Goodreads but my copy never arrived so I still haven't read it and of course am very curious about what I missed. Its one massive brick of a book so was never something I could "squeeze in" on the side if I borrowed it form the library :)
And sounds like The Last Unicorn is going well if you're talking about savouring. Beagle wrote beautifully in that one, there's a lot to savour!

Will do! I've heard the beginning is the best part of the Last Unicorn, so that's contributing to my speed probably.
Books mentioned in this topic
Malice (other topics)Malice (other topics)
The Moorchild (other topics)
The Last Unicorn (other topics)
Guards! Guards! (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Adrian Tchaikovsky (other topics)Gregory Maguire (other topics)
M.V. Melcer (other topics)
Laurence Bergreen (other topics)
Michael Schiefelbein (other topics)
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