User Profile

Lazy_Cat

Lazy_Cat@bookrastinating.com

Joined 2 months ago

This link opens in a pop-up window

Lazy_Cat's books

Currently Reading

2026 Reading Goal

50% complete! Lazy_Cat has read 6 of 12 books.

Daniel Polansky: A city dreaming (2016)

M is an ageless drifter with a sharp tongue, few scruples, and the ability to …

Skipping Through Time With An Immortal Drifter in NYC

I will preface this review that I am a huge fan of Daniel Polansky, so it will be biased in his favor.

M is an ageless, misanthropic wizard, living in NYC for about a year, and just trying to keep his head down--unfortunately the universe has other plans for him.

Do you like surreal stories? You'll probably love A City Dreaming, which dances on the line between abstract art and compelling storytelling. The stories themselves--the shape of things, the characters generally, are pretty well grounded in reality. The world building, and specifically, the magic of the world, is where things get trippy. Sometimes beautiful, sometimes abhorrent, always strange, the magic in A City Dreaming will challenge readers and reward the ones willing to wrap their minds around it. And the way New York City is portrayed is a mirror of that strange, surrealist world running parrellel to reality.

Heather Fawcett: Agnes Aubert's Mystical Cat Shelter (Hardcover, Random House Worlds)

A woman who runs a cat rescue in 1920s Montreal turns to a grouchy but …

Cozy Fantasy + Cats

Agnes Aubert's life running a cat shelter is turned on its head after a magical duel in the street wrecks several buildings, including her own.

This was very good Cozy Fantasy fare. I quite enjoyed it! I've always enjoyed Heather Fawcett's prose, and was able to sink into the story easily. The characters were memorable and enjoyable as well. I also sometimes enjoy a book where there's some fantastical world building but the point of view character is just a normal person.

quoted The Book That Held Her Heart by Mark Lawrence (The Library Trilogy, #3)

Mark Lawrence: The Book That Held Her Heart (Hardcover, 2021, Ace)

The secret war that defines the Library has chosen its champions and set them on …

United in their togetherness, they had become something other than human, substituting a mob's instincts for those of a person. And here again, the simple mathematics of us and them had given a crowd license to chew pasties and joke among themselves while they watched the living become the dead.

The Book That Held Her Heart by  (The Library Trilogy, #3) (Page 381)

Book 3 of this series is just filled to the brim with stuff like this. It's not subtle, and that's not a complaint. It's very much a product of today.

reviewed The Book That Wouldn't Burn by Mark Lawrence (The Library Trilogy, #1)

Mark Lawrence: The Book That Wouldn't Burn (Hardcover, 2023, Ace)

A boy has lived his whole life trapped within a vast library, older than empires …

Another Excellent Mark Lawrence Story

This is a book about books and knowledge and libraries - those kinds of meta stories can be really hard to pull off I've found, but he did a solid job.

It's also got time travel shenanigans which I love. He pulls that off well too I think.

Lots of good twists even in this book.

I cannot wait to read the rest!

quoted The Book That Wouldn't Burn by Mark Lawrence (The Library Trilogy, #1)

Mark Lawrence: The Book That Wouldn't Burn (Hardcover, 2023, Ace)

A boy has lived his whole life trapped within a vast library, older than empires …

It's in the nature of humans to want to belong to a group, to want to be accepted, appreciated, and needed. What is most frightening about their kind are the sacrifices they are prepared to make in order to become part of such a tribe, clique, sect, sewing circle, cult, or book club. Reason and morality are often at the top of the list of what must be surrendered as part of the club fees. Truth becomes a collective property, an adaptable shield used to shelter the in-group from those outside.

Dogs, on the other hand, are great.

-Training Your Labrador, by Barbara Timberhut

The Book That Wouldn't Burn by  (The Library Trilogy, #1) (Page 697)

I'm pretty sure Mark Lawrence just made this book up but I can never be entirely certain. Either way, great quote.