also misericordiae@kbin.social
It looks like Antimemetics was originally posted online as a series of entries and short stories, as part of the SCP universe, which is an online collaborative fiction project (wikipedia for more info ). From a quick search, it seems some (all of?) it is still available if you look up ‘qntm’ on the SCP wiki, but I’m not sure if the self-published release included rewrites or additional material.
Currently reading There Is No Antimemetics Division by qntm, which involves a department of the SCP Foundation dealing with entities that delete memories, communication, etc. I don’t intend to go down the SCP rabbit hole, but I’m finding the book inventive and enjoyable so far.
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Read Dark Harvest by Norman Partridge. Short, fun, mindless Halloween action horror.
Bingo squares: Family Drama; Eazy, Breazy, Read-zie; Now a Major Motion Picture; It’s About Time; Award Winner; It’s a Holiday (hard); (alt) A Change in Perspective
Sounds like maybe The Viewing episode from Cabinet of Curiosities?
Just finished Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury, and haven’t picked out what I’m reading next.
I think this is one of those I should have dropped rather than power through. I liked the story, but the writing style just wasn’t for me: poetic, but verbose verging on purple, imo. Is all his work like this? I vaguely remember reading “There Will Come Soft Rains” a long time ago, but I don’t remember how it was written. Also, I thought this was going to be Halloween-related, but it really isn’t.
Bingo squares: Older Than You Are (1962), Family Drama, (maybe) Plays With Words, Bookception (hard), Now a Major Motion Picture, It’s About Time, (alt) A Change in Perspective.
I had similar issues with The Hollow Places, and it put me off reading any more of her horror titles. I do like T. Kingfisher’s fairy tale-inspired stuff, however; that kind of voice meshes a lot better with that genre, imo.
I would add The Addams Family (1991) and Addams Family Values (1993) to your Funny and Spooky list. I’ll also second the The Fog (1981) suggestion.
Reading Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury. I’m not really sold on it yet, but we’ll see.
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Finished Neuromancer by William Gibson. I’m glad to have read it to see what so much media took inspiration from, but overall, it wasn’t my favorite.
Bingo squares: Older Than You Are (1984), Award Winner (HM), Debut Work (HM), (alt) A Change in Perspective
Absolutely agreed. The narrative makes choices in a few places, and some of the second half seems kind of muddled.
That’s about where I started to lose interest, too. So much of the interesting world-building is in that first part, before it decides to turn into a heist novel.
I’m desperately trying to finish Neuromancer by William Gibson so I can move on to spooky season books. It’s not bad at all, I’m just not really clicking with it, so it’s been slow going.
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Finished Death in the Spires by K.J. Charles, a two-timeline mystery focusing on the unsolved murder of a member of a group of friends at Oxford. The author normally writes steamy romances, but this tastefully cut to black before anything got explicit. Something about the writing or story made it a very enjoyable, fast read; I haven’t devoured anything so quickly in ages.
Bingo squares: New Release; Disability Representation (hard); LGBTQIA+ Lead (hard); It’s About Time (hard); Mashup; Institutional; (alt) A Change in Perspective
Only adult one I can think of is Tailchaser’s Song by Tad Williams (cats). There’s a ton of these for kids, though; here’s a few I’ve read:
Edit: Sorry, I derped on the scifi/fantasy/action aspect of the request; the E.B. White books don’t fall into that category.
Yeah, it definitely looks a bit low budget, but I can forgive that if it gets everything else right enough.
I think it’s still worth seeing if you like Caveat, especially since it seems to be a shared universe (the bunny has a brief cameo). I maybe just set my expectations too high going in.
I wanted to see this thing in motion, so I tried to search up the youtube video, but no dice. Every article on it is just copy-pasted from the original on the Express site, and I can’t get the embedded video attached to it to work. I did find an article on NIWA’s site about a species of sea pig, which looks similar.
I think my parents have a copy of this (or something that looks very similar)! Not sure anyone’s actually made anything from it, though. Really unique design.
Watched Oddity most recently. The writer/director’s previous movie, Caveat, had a super ridiculous premise, but some excellent tension at the end, so I was hoping Oddity would be a good evolution of that. Turned out to be kind of a mixed bag, imo, but I didn’t dislike it.
I thought the bones of the plot of Longlegs were cool, but found some of the execution (Longlegs himself, and the uh… method) to be jarringly goofy. Liked the first half and the atmosphere, though.
they added an element of authenticity and sheer terror
- Longlegs - Longlegs (2024)
I can only assume the writer either has very different taste in horror from me/us, or we’ve been (not so) cunningly been sucked into engagement bait. Include the movie on a list of modern horror? Sure. I had some issues with it, but whatever. Longlegs himself, though? Oof.
I’m currently at 20/25 squares (16/20 hard mode, 8/20 from pre-existing TBR pile). I’ve been enjoying bingo, but since I’ve focused on it pretty much exclusively, I’m also looking forward to reading other things.
In a couple of cases, I’ve had trouble finding something I want to read (particularly hard modes), so I already have a few notes about improving that for next year.