Just finished reading Exit Strategy by Jen J. Danna. It's been on my (metaphorical) shelf for a while, I think I found it a few years ago Dollar Tree. Started reading it during a power outage the other day, and got hooked pretty fast.
A lot of books are a bit bulkier, scifi/fantasy books that have a lot of world building and really detailed plotlines. Exit Strategy has a lot "smaller" of a story for a lack of a better term (smaller stakes, humanity isn't at stake or anything, + a smaller cast of characters), and it takes probably a dozen or so pages to introduce the setting and then gets right into the main plot.
It moves quickly, in the ~300 or so pages it has a self contained story that's moves rapidly. There's not a lot of subplots and it doesn't meander too much, so it's a fairly linear story throughout the entire book that doesn't get boring. Characters seem human, not just cardboard cutouts or with crazy inhuman smarts/skills/etc. Definitely worth a read.
#bookstr
Nate
Nate
npub1jy90...llx9
Random person on the internet. I sometimes blog or work on projects I might talk about here.
Made a hacked together Python client for Nostr, ActivityPub, & AT:
https://github.com/0n4t3/nipy
Happy new year

Nate's Blog
Holos Is Adding Custom Domain Support
Holos announced they're working on adding custom domain support to their server. It's a really cool development, and I figured I'd shar...
Merry Holidays, Happy Christmas, and pour one out for 'ol Saint Nick who threw hands with an Arianism heretic.
Wishing you all a great Christmas my fellow internet strangers.
@FediTree What's my fedi tree looking like across the bridge?
I replaced an iffy valve stem on my car today, everything went well until the check engine light came on during my test drive (new, unrelated problem).


Finished reading Three Body Problem by Liu Cixin recently, it's a really good read. At the start it feels like the writing keeps branching in unrelated ways, only to abandon the plotlines and jump to something seemingly unrelated, but it all comes together in the latter half of the book. A very interesting read with a fairly unique execution.
#bookstr