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Michael Cunningham recommended Solaris in Books (curated)

 
Solaris
Solaris
Stanislaw Lem | 2016 | Fiction & Poetry
7.3 (4 Ratings)
Book Favorite

"If speculative fiction is the last surviving instance of the novel of ideas, this to me is the greatest of them all."

Source
  
The Man in the High Castle
The Man in the High Castle
Philip K. Dick, Eric Brown | 1962 | Fiction & Poetry
7
7.5 (10 Ratings)
Book Rating
This was an interesting speculative history novel, it was engaging, but in the end, I didn't really feel one way or another about it.
  
The Room
The Room
Jonas Karlsson | 2015 | Fiction & Poetry
10
10.0 (1 Ratings)
Book Rating
This fascinating little novel is a speculative fiction study about fitting in vs. being different, that's witty, surreal and thought provoking. Read my full review here. https://tcl-bookreviews.com/2015/06/02/in-his-own-space/
  
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Merissa (12058 KP) created a post

Jan 6, 2022  
"Written by nine well-known authors the stories will take you on a journey through the speculative ‘what ifs?’ of England’s most famous year in history."

Tour: 1066 Turned Upside Down - @Archaeolibrary, @maryanneyarde, @HelenHollick, #CoffeePotBookClub, #BlogTour, #1066UpsideDown, #AlternativeHistory,

https://archaeolibrarian.wixsite.com/website/post/1066turnedupsidedown
     
It's an exciting time for international literature, and the breadth and diversity of these longlists reflect that.

From established authors like Javier Marías to new voices like Basma Abdel Aziz, from works of speculative fiction like Wicked Weeds to family sagas from Senegal like Doomi Golo, there’s something on here for every type of reader.

Founded in 2008 by Three Percent at the University or Rochester, the focus on finding the best books in translation from the past year has been constant.


Super Extra Grande

Super Extra Grande

Yoss and David Frye

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Book

“Intergalactic space travel meets outrageous, biting satire in Super Extra Grande…. Its author...


Science fiction
Moshi Moshi

Moshi Moshi

Banana Yoshimoto and Asa Yoneda

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Book

In Moshi-Moshi, Yoshie’s much-loved musician father has died in a suicide pact with an unknown...


Fiction
My Marriage

My Marriage

Jakob Wassermann and Michael Hofmann

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Book

Alexander Herzog, a young writer, goes to Vienna to escape his debts and a failed love affair. There...


Thriller
Vampire in Love

Vampire in Love

Margaret Jull Costa and Enrique Vila-Matas

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Book

“Arguably Spain’s most significant contemporary literary figure” (Joanna Kavenna, The New...


Fiction
Memoirs of a Polar Bear

Memoirs of a Polar Bear

Susan Bernofsky and Yoko Tawada

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Book

Someone tickled me behind my ears, under my arms. I curled up, became a full moon, and rolled on the...

and 20 other items
     
     
The Heart Goes Last
The Heart Goes Last
Margaret Atwood | 2016 | Fiction & Poetry
10
7.5 (4 Ratings)
Book Rating
Charmaine and Stan are sick and tired of being homeless, unemployed and hungry. So much so, that they're willing to sign their whole lives away for jobs and a home, but at what price? Read my review of Margaret Atwood's latest speculative fiction book here. https://tcl-bookreviews.com/2015/09/19/positron-not-positive/
  
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Emma Watson recommended The Handmaid's Tale in Books (curated)

 
The Handmaid's Tale
The Handmaid's Tale
Margaret Atwood | 1998 | Essays
8.3 (112 Ratings)
Book Favorite

"Margaret Atwood wrote The Handmaid’s Tale over thirty years ago now, but it is a book that has never stopped fascinating readers because it articulates so vividly what it feels like for a woman to lose power over her own body. Like George Orwell’s 1984 (a novel that Atwood was inspired by) its title alone summons up a whole set of ideas, even for those who haven’t read it…Atwood has called it ‘speculative fiction’, but also says that all the practises described in the novel are ‘drawn from the historical record’ – i.e. are things that have actually taken place in the past. Could any of Atwood’s speculations take place again, or are some of them taking place already? Are the women in the book powerless in their oppression or could they be doing more to fight it?"

Source
  
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ClareR (5726 KP) rated The Future in Books

Mar 26, 2024  
The Future
The Future
Naomi Alderman | 2023 | Contemporary, Science Fiction/Fantasy
10
10.0 (1 Ratings)
Book Rating
I couldn’t get enough of The Future by Naomi Alderman. This book pressed all of my Sci-Fi/ Speculative fiction/ dystopian buttons ALL AT ONCE!!

I’m not actually sure how I should explain this… There’s so much going on in this book - doomsday preppers with an awful lot of money, climate breakdown and pollution, social media influencers.

Actually, that doesn’t explain half of it.

This is the story of a heist. A pretty daring one, and one that could so easily fail, but in order to save the future, a group of friends decide that they will have to do something to protect the world from three of the most powerful and influential billionaires.

The story is told in punchy, short chapters, interspersed with excerpts from a chatroom ( I loved these parts - I didn’t think I would to begin with, but I really enjoyed them). This style really propels the story forward. Actually, the STORY propels the story forward.

Look, I just really, really loved this book, and I think you should go and read it. Ok?
  
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Felipe (17 KP) rated Arrival (2016) in Movies

Dec 7, 2020  
Arrival (2016)
Arrival (2016)
2016 | Drama, Mystery, Sci-Fi
Excellent (0 more)
A little hard to follow and it is never revealed who the aliens really are. (0 more)
Excellent speculative movie even if it was somewhat optimistic.
Contains spoilers, click to show
This movie poses and excellent problem of what it would be like if an advanced alien species visited Earth and what form that would take. I found the design of the aliens and the extent of their technology to be interesting but what I found more fascinating was how they were able to come up with a language that is at one time alien but also somewhat familiar using basic linguistic theory that is common to all languages and yet come up with something completely out of the box. Despite being an excellent film posing complex and thought provoking questions, I found the timeline and the flashbacks to be confusing and the ending of the film posing more questions than answers. The telling of the story is as complex as a tesseract or 4th dimensional hypercube trying to describe itself to a three dimensional cube. There simply is no common frame of reference to begin to understand the multidimensionality of the film.
  
Slow Motion Ghosts
Slow Motion Ghosts
Jeff Noon | 2018 | Crime
7
7.0 (1 Ratings)
Book Rating
Some good twists (1 more)
Parallel personal story
one-dimensional or clichéd characters (0 more)
A decent intriguing thriller set in the 80s
*** Disclosure - I received a free advance copy of this book from netgalley in return for an honest review ***
Jeff Noon is a writer of speculative fiction who has been on my reading list for some time (not through recommendation, but through finding his books in discount shops and liking the sound of them). Here he travels somewhat less speculative ground, telling the tale of a murder investigation during the aftermath of the Brixton riots of the early 80s.
The body of Brendan Clarke is found in unusual circumstances, with his face mutilated in certain odd patterns and with no apparent signs of struggle. The investigation into his murder leads the detectives to look into the earlier suicide of a Bowie-esque rock star as the links between the two are too big to ignore. There then follows an investigation into the cult-like group of misfit teenagers set up in Hastings and the cult status of King Lost, aka Lucas Bell.
There is the usual conflict within the investigative team - one jaded, opinionated DS, one DS that is hard-working and reliable and one DC that is off-screen most of the time researching things. An added element is the recent controversy surrounding DI Hobbes, as he recently shopped in his colleagues for battering a young black man in retaliation for the Brixton riots.
The main storyline is good, with enough mystery and emerging evidence to keep the interest. The link in to the past suicide of the cult figure adds an extra element. However it feels Noon went a little too far out of his way to make there a reasonable number of plausible suspects, all of whom are fairly interchangeable if I'm honest (I still can't remember which one of two characters died and which didn't).
It was interesting to read a crime book written about pre-Google times, so there really was a need for more hard work, door-knocking and evidence gathering.
There were some early incongruous events that came across as quite needlessly jarring, for example when someone says they can't remember what someone looked like, it was only a quick glimpse, can't remember anything at all and then somehow when asked about facial markings (apropos of nothing) suddenly remembered a facial tattoo. A couple of instances like that really took me out of the book.
All in all, this was a reasonably well-told crime book with a decent setting, but not exactly a ground-breaking storyline.