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Future's Edge
Isabel :) is currently reading
by Gareth L. Powell (Goodreads Author)
bookshelves: sci-fi, currently-reading
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  (page 148 of 352)
Feb 11, 2026 08:47PM

 
Unleash the Power...
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  (page 131 of 178)
Feb 06, 2026 02:43PM

 
Advocating for th...
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See all 13 books that Isabel :) is reading…
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Emily Austin
“I think I am an imposter. Twenty-seven years ago I was a baby. Before that I was a clump of cells. Before that I didn't exist. How could I be a bookstore clerk, or a Catholic, or a woman, or a person at all? I'm a life force contained in the deformed body of a baby. Of course I'm a fraud. The fact that I'm able to carry myself through life without being crushed beneath the psychological weight of being alive proves that I'm a con artist.”
Emily Austin, Everyone in This Room Will Someday Be Dead
tags: fr

Terry Pratchett
“Lady Ramkin's bosom rose and fell like an empire.”
Terry Pratchett, Guards! Guards!

Terry Pratchett
“The air of mean-minded resentfulness thickened noteiceably.”
Terry Pratchett, Guards! Guards!

Emily Austin
“I am inside of an ecosystem I don't belong in... I feel like a foreign object inside a body, waiting to be rejected.”
Emily Austin, Everyone in This Room Will Someday Be Dead

Sue Burke
“You must control bugs,” I say. “Bugs no eat fruit,” it answers. In other words, how can you control an animal except with fruit? “Change sap for bugs. Like this.” I show a chemical. “Sap will control animals.” “Bugs no eat fruit.” “Bugs drink sap.” “Yes,” it says. “Bugs no eat fruit.” “Change sap for bugs because bugs drink sap, no eat fruit.” “Bugs no eat fruit.” I realize that we are related plants, both bamboos, in fact, and our shared physiology is the only reason I can have a conversation of any complexity. The hedge along the river is too small to have many sentient roots. The presence of other snow vines triggers an aggressive growth, but this hedge has lived alone and is content to lead a manicured little life parasitizing its aspens and putting down more guard roots than it needs, thus serving the humans without realizing it. It has no need for intelligence, none at all. “Change sap for bugs,” I repeat, hoping that repetition will of itself prove persuasive. “Big animals eat bugs.” “Bugs no eat fruit.” “Big animals eat bugs.” “Big animals eat bugs,” the snow vine repeats. I have made progress. “Yes,” I say. “Change sap for bugs.” “Big animals eat bugs.” “Yes. Change sap for bugs. Like this.” “Bugs eat sap,” it says. “Bugs are pests.” “Bugs are good. Big animals eat bugs like fruit.” The snow vine stammers some meaningless chemical compounds and finally says, “Bugs are like fruit.” This is very significant progress. “Bugs are like fruit,” I agree. “Bugs eat sap. Change sap. Sap will control two animals.” “Sap will control bugs. Big animals eat bugs.” “Yes. You must change sap for bugs and animals.” “I will change sap for bugs and animals.” At last! “Yes. Change sap like this.” I deliver some prototype chemicals.”
Sue Burke, Semiosis

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