#5

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Kurt Vonnegut: The Sirens of Titan (Hardcover, 1971, Delta)

The Sirens of Titan is an outrageous romp through space, time, and morality. The richest, …

Vonnegut carries so much love, he cultivates compassion even to most despicable people

When I started reading this book, after Breakfast of Champions and Slaughterhouse #5 which I read as a young person learning how fucked up the world is, I had a feeling of almost Adamsian lightness of talking about heavy social things. Oh how wrong I was!

So to those who want to venture into this book, a fair warning: expect soul-crushing stuff after every corner. Reading the book is like wandering the caves of Mercury.

The story is very layered and has some twists, so don't be too arrogant if you think you see where it's going. What's more, please think the book through from back to front after you complete it.

There is only one positive character in the book, but I felt so much compassion to another one, and another one later. Which, as I recover from the book hangover[1], I find slightly distressing, but …

T.S. Falk: The Calypso Mystery: A SciFi Adventure (EBook, 2023)

For those who love James Rollins, Michael Crichton, and Indiana Jones!

What was meant …

Another interesting book in the series

This was also a good book that merges a bit of scifi with archeology, and it played out well. I found the story predictable but interesting nevertheless. It was a little weird reading this as #5 while it's actually a story that takes place between book #3 and #4, but it's fine if you remember its place.