Klärt sehr viele offene Fragen, top!
User Profile
I'm a creative coder and artist from Germany. Together with some friends, I made a trip through the fediverse: #fedivoyage
My main profile is piko@chaos.social
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Piko's books
2026 Reading Goal
6% complete! Piko has read 2 of 30 books.
User Activity
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Piko started reading Praxishandbuch Fangjagd by Andre Westerkamp
Piko finished reading Der Großinquisitor. by Fyodor Dostoevsky
Piko rated Der Großinquisitor.: 5 stars
Piko rated Geschichte Lateinamerikas: 3 stars
Piko rated Geschichte Lateinamerikas: 4 stars
Piko finished reading Geschichte Lateinamerikas by Stefan Rinke
Piko reviewed Die Grammatik. Spanisch by Herwig Krenn
Piko finished reading Die Grammatik. Spanisch by Herwig Krenn
Piko started reading Zahnrad- und Getriebetechnik
Piko started reading Lateinamerika by Nikolaus Werz
Piko rated Spanische Geschichte: 4 stars
Piko finished reading Spanische Geschichte by Walther L. Bernecker
Piko reviewed Spanische Geschichte by Walther L. Bernecker
Piko reviewed Kudos: A Novel by Rachel Cusk
Quick and entertaining read
4 stars
An author is on a tour through europe promoting her novel. She meets writers, literary agents, journalists, and other people, and talks to them – but it seems that she is a very good listener, so even in the interviews of her the interviewers talk about themselves and tell their stories and their thoughts about life and art.
It's the third of a trilogy, but I didn't read the two predecessors yet...
In the first half, there seems to be a underlying theme of neurodiversity which sadly disappears in the second half. I would have loved to in the end have her revealed as neurodiverse – maybe it is too subtle and I just didn't notice it. I found the ending not as good as the person who wrote the blurb.
An author is on a tour through europe promoting her novel. She meets writers, literary agents, journalists, and other people, and talks to them – but it seems that she is a very good listener, so even in the interviews of her the interviewers talk about themselves and tell their stories and their thoughts about life and art.
It's the third of a trilogy, but I didn't read the two predecessors yet...
In the first half, there seems to be a underlying theme of neurodiversity which sadly disappears in the second half. I would have loved to in the end have her revealed as neurodiverse – maybe it is too subtle and I just didn't notice it. I found the ending not as good as the person who wrote the blurb.















