Charming little book. A good place to jump off from The Paris Library. It is the characters that really make everything work well, strange yet lovable. In a time when it feels like community is falling apart, reading a book about a strong community that comes together is refreshing.

I'm not as familiar with this series as I am the essays series, but I'm finding it enjoyable. Nice to read on a kindle while at a hot springs.

Great to visit old characters that I love from the CR show. The plot was well thought out, and similar to several RPGs. Like most commissioned books, it wasn't the greatest fantasy book I've ever read, but it was a pleasant distraction during a nice snowy week off in December.

If you like the narrative voice of Flashman combined with the ingenuity of Mark Watney from “The Martian”, you'll like this book. I thought it was fun as hell.

Strangely took a very long hiatus about 2/3 through this book. But went back and finished it after all. Great character driven fantasy. Will be interest to see where it goes next.

Very Gaiman like. Fun and easy writing style in a good voice. I enjoyed how at the end, achieving perfection was less about being flawless, and more about being adaptable.

Well written description of the realities of working as an emergency physician. The pleasure of figuring out a difficult diagnosis and the despair of having your entire life screwed up by your schedule. The title of “Compassion and Burnout in the ER” is very apt, as it explores both very well.

Sloan's has a fun voice and his writing is full of sly pop culture references. Most of which I'm sure I missed. I enjoyed this one more than “Penumbra”, though I feel it was a little rushed at the end. I do have a sudden desire to go learn how to bake bread.

Really fun read. Great narrator voice. Like “The Martian” will likely make a better book than a movie. The action and scenery are there, but what carries it is the scientific details, which are better suited for print than film.

Long time fan of my favorite author. His work on underwater cable laying in the 90's is likely the defining piece of the industry. And the old philosophy major in me loves how he can explain Leibniz in the same book as a “very” short murder piece set in Middle Earth.

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