User Profile

Kadomi

Kadomi@bookrastinating.com

Joined 3 years, 3 months ago

I am Kadomi@dice.camp. Avid book-lover from Germany, focus on #Sci-Fi and #Fantasy, exploring the Fediverse. I also love #truecrime, #mystery, #historicalfiction and just about any genre I can get my hands on. I also read a lot of #ttrpg stuff. Rulebooks, adventures, you name it.

I'm a queer lady, so I read the occasional #lesfic.

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Kadomi's books

Currently Reading (View all 5)

commented on A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik (The Scholomance, #1)

Naomi Novik: A Deadly Education (Hardcover, 2020, Del Rey)

I decided that Orion Lake needed to die after the second time he saved my …

Really having a tough time getting into it, but it's now finally grabbing my attention, I am finally invested.

Angie Thomas: The Hate U Give (Hardcover, 2018, Balzer + Bray)

SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD STARR CARTER moves between two worlds: the poor black neighborhood where she lives and …

Review of 'The Hate U Give' on 'Goodreads'

Absolutely outstanding book.

16-year old Starr Carter is a black teenager who goes to a white school. One night she is witness to a cop killing her friend Khalil for no reason, and this event changes her whole life.

Absolutely engaging cast of characters, told in a gripping way, wish every teenager read this book. Or anyone really.

I don't have the words to praise this book enough.

Review of 'Meow' on 'Goodreads'

After my previous book, I decided that a slice of life fantasy book might just be the thing, and it really was. Legends & Lattes is low-stakes fantasy, with barely a plot but a huge chunk of coziness.

Viv is an orc warrior who is retiring from adventuring, and she wants to start a coffeeshop. She's brought a good-luck charm from her adventures, and then just builds it up, until she is the proprietor of Legends & Lattes. She gathers a cozy cast of characters who work for her, or learn to love coffee and cinnamon rolls.

Reading this book was like drinking a good cup of coffee and munching on a piece of pastry. Just comfy. It read a lot like a fanfic coffee house AU of a fantasy story, Viv might be freshly retired from a DnD party. But that's all not bad stuff. Sometimes we need something …

reviewed A Crown of Swords by Robert Jordan (Wheel of Time, #7)

Robert Jordan: A Crown of Swords (2010, Tor Books)

A Crown of Swords is a fantasy novel by American author Robert Jordan, the seventh …

Review of 'A Crown of Swords (Wheel of Time, #7)' on 'Goodreads'

CN: sexual harassment

I thought I had only read the first 6 books of WoT back in the day, but no, I was wrong. As I read this long-winded book where not much of anything happened in 800 pages, a lot of the stuff from Ebou Dar came back to me.

The good: I like Mat, I liked his Ebou Dar chapters, and the end of the book with the attack on Ebou Dar is very promising. I liked the machinations of the Black Ajah, and generally the intrigue and political stuff.

The bad: Incredibly lame pacing. My usual complaints about the author not understanding female relationships, or women in general, having created a wide cast of super-unlikeable women. Inherent mysogyny everywhere. I get that the author tried a power role reversal but it doesn't change that sexism is everywhere in this book. I mean, come on, Rand is fine …

Kameron Hurley: The Stars Are Legion (2017, Gallery / Saga Press)

Review of 'The Stars Are Legion' on 'Goodreads'

This one is from the category 'WTF did I just read?' It's not my first book by Kameron Hurley, the queen of zero exposition ever. You just get thrown in, and the missing exposition, in this case because of amnesia, is part of the story.

Zan is a warrior from the family Katazyrna, and apparently the only one who can conquer the Mokshi, a world-ship that has left the Legion, a group of decaying world-ships and is supposed to be the salvation, as all other world-ships are dying. But Zan loses her memory every time she comes back from the Mokshi, and along with her amnesia, just like Zan you as the reader have to figure out what exactly is happening here.

We get two PoVs in this book. Zan, who remembers nothing, and has to regain her memories, and Jayd, apparently Zan's love, daughter of the Katazyrna leaders, who …

Sandra Gulland: Tales of passion, tales of woe (1999, HarperPerennial)

Companion to The many lives and secret sorrows of Josephine B.

Review of 'Tales of passion, tales of woe' on 'Goodreads'

I didn't like this book as much as the first one, but mostly, because the time of the French revolution was just way more interesting than Josephine angsting about how terrible the Bonaparte family is. Still highly entertaining, and I really want to finish this. There's another installment, right?

reviewed Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse (Between Earth and Sky, #2)

Rebecca Roanhorse: Fevered Star (2022, Center Point Large Print)

Review of 'Fevered Star' on 'Goodreads'

Not quite as good as Black Sun, but for a middle book a really strong book setting up the wheels in motion for a grand finale. Black Sun really benefited that time was ticking towards the eclipse, as Serapio and Xiala traveled to Tova. This urgency is gone now, and most of the protagonists of Black Sun have gone in different directions. The whole plot around Tova is far bigger than the first book hinted at, and I for my part can't wait to see it resolved.

Still a big Serapio and Xiala fan. <3

David Mitchell: Number9Dream (2003, Random House Trade Paperbacks)

David Mitchell follows his eerily precocious, globe-striding first novel, Ghostwritten, with a work that is …

Review of 'Number9Dream' on 'Goodreads'

Probably my least favorite Mitchell so far. There are bits I like, but overall it's confusing. When it's good, it's really good, but some chapters just go on forever. Each chapter kinda has its own gimmick, like what-ifs, the protagonist sharing his dreams or reading stories.

The end was confusing and not satisfying at all.

reviewed The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson and the Olympians, #1)

Rick Riordan: The Lightning Thief (2006, Miramax)

Twelve-year-old Percy Jackson learns he is a demigod, the son of a mortal woman and …

Review of 'The Lightning Thief' on 'Goodreads'

This middle grade book would have been one of my absolute favorites in my youth, and I loved it now too. I love Greek mythology, and this is basically Greek mythology meets modern urban fantasy.

Perseus Jackson, short Percy, is a problem student who can never settle down anywhere. His mother lives with his detestable step-father in New York, and he gets moved from boarding school to boarding school. But one day something changes, when his math teacher turns into a Fury and tries to attack him. He eventually finds out that he is actually a demi-god, the offspring of Poseidon with his mortal mother, and that there's a whole camp full of children like him.

But war is brewing amongst the three major gods Zeus, Poseidon and Hades because Zeus' bolt was stolen, and Percy is sent on a quest with Grover the Satyr, and Athena's daughter Annabeth, to …

Winnie M. Li: Dark Chapter (Paperback, 2018, Polis Books)

Vivian is a cosmopolitan Taiwanese-American tourist who often escapes her busy life in London through …

Review of 'Dark Chapter' on 'Goodreads'

CN Rape, Sexual Assault, Violence

This book offers a fictionalized version of the author's own experience with sexual assault, and you can imagine that this alone makes it a tough read at times. The story has two unique PoVs: Vivian Tan, a Chinese-American who lives in the UK, and who likes to travel alone, going on hikes. One fine day she travels to Belfast and goes on a hike there, to be assaulted by the other PoV character, Johnny, a 15 year old boy from an Irish Traveller family, Pavee, and just like Roma discriminated and prejudice against by the general populace. We get a look at his background, coming from a family where domestic violence was common.

The toughest part of course is the actual assault. We experience this in detail, and it's excruciating, painful, to experience this ordeal that Vivian, and the author both, had to live through. …

reviewed Best Served Cold by Joe Abercrombie (First Law World, #4)

Joe Abercrombie: Best Served Cold (Hardcover, 2009, Gollancz)

Review of 'Best Served Cold Joe Abercrombie' on 'Goodreads'

This stand-alone novel set after the First Law trilogy was probably even darker than the series, and definitely filled with a lot more gore. As the title suggests it's all about vengeance. Monza Murcatto is the female captain general of the Thousand Swords, a mercenary army formerly led by Cosca, the drunken mercenary we met in the trilogy. Monza's boss, Duke Orso of Styria betrays her, kills her brother and throws her off a cliff. But she survives, and vows revenge against the 7 men involved in this betrayal.

It starts off like a bloody heist movie, as Monza and her crew of misfits plot to kill one target after the other. But the vengeance project changes all people involved, there's more people involved and it's all out war in the end.

The most likeable character is probably Cosca and he is just as murderous and selfish as everyone else …