Every Book I Read in 2024

I read 16 books in 2024. I wrote in more detail about my favorites.

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poster for Shorefall

Shorefall

by Robert Jackson Bennett Book #2 in Founders Trilogy
2024-01-29
A worthy expansion of the universe from the first book. Characters are explored and expanded while the stakes are raised. We're getting really cosmic, but the book never strays from its superb worldbuilding.
poster for Argylle
2024-02-09
Light but fast read. It carries a little more characterization than other spy books, but not by a lot. Its crowded cast mean I can't keep anyone straight besides the 5 most frequently-mentioned characters. It reads a bit like a screenplay, preferring direct language to flowery descriptions. The plot is decent, but lacks depth. Would make for a good beach read.
poster for Death's End

Death's End

by Cixin Liu Book #3 in Remembrance of Earth's Past
  • 🥇 Award Winning
2024-03-16
Pretty spectacular in its scope and scale. Is a stellar conclusion to a trilogy with a slow burn. I think this is my favorite of the 3 - it focused the most on the things I found interesting: examining humanity in the face of large threats and classic hard scifi. It's a pretty packed book, but it flowed well. The characters and prose are still pretty weak, but the plot and philosophy cement it in the canon of science fiction.
An intricate puzzle-box of a mystery. Characters are good, pacing is prompt, and the author (once again) plays fair. It also kept its meta tone from the first book, which I continued to enjoy.
poster for Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow
  • 🥈 Award Winning
2024-04-24
A touching story of love, loss, friendship, and videogames. An honest depiction of game development and the people that make them, told over many years. Paced well and had a good mix of characters. I loved we saw in everyone's head, especially as they change and drift over time. It covers a lot of ground, but I found it both engrossing and tasteful. It's also nice that the author clearly knows about videogames (in contrast to a lot of media about games).
poster for Locklands

Locklands

by Robert Jackson Bennett Book #3 in Founders Trilogy
2024-07-01
Dragged a bit and lost some of the more focused storytelling earlier books showcased. But I loved the ambition of its scope and world. Falls into some well-tread fantasy tropes but balances those with some truly fascinating and original concepts.
Intense and sad, yet hopeful. I started it on the same day the book's story begins (July 20, 2024), which is sort of fascinating. It was written in 1993. Some details still seem far off and others... don't. Some very cool worldbuilding.
Sort of an interesting, ambling western. More contemplative than adventurous, it was enjoyable without being enthralling. I liked what humor there was and the characters grew on me eventually. The prose was pretty matter-of-fact but the story didn't feel like it had much of a point.
poster for Orconomics

Orconomics

by J. Zachary Pike Book #1 in Dark Profit Saga
  • 🥉 Award Winning
2024-09-28
A stellar mix of fantasy, humor, and finance. Story and characters are trope-y but compelling. Sounds absurd on paper, but it absolutely works. Ultimately pulls a "Galaxy Quest", managing to be both an excellent parody of traditional fantasy novels and an exemplar of the genre in its own right.
As always, an intricate little puzzle box that all comes together splendidly. A fitting vacation read too. She's the best for a reason!
poster for First Lie Wins
  • 🥇 Award Winning
2024-10-02
A satisfying mix of heist, espionage, and crime. Won't win any awards for prose or character development, but it's a tight read that keep me turning pages (just like it promised)
A fun concept (blog post of famous literary murders that are happening in real life) but struggles to live up to its promise. Characters are flat and story ultimately feels unresolved. The mystery itself is underwhelming. It takes some big swings at the psychology of killing, but it mostly misses. Is clearly a love letter to detective fiction, but doesn't feel like it has the spark that made its inspiration great. Also, it spoils a ton of other famous mystery fiction (some Christie, strangers on a train, etc), so proceed with caution.
Too many characters, weak personalities, and a little heavy on the skeeviness kept me from enjoying this to its fullest. But there was some fun corruption and a focus on good journalism which made it at least a decent beach read. Not one of Grisham's best though.
poster for The Tainted Cup
  • 🥈 Award Winning
2024-11-13
Is a wild mix of Sherlock Holmes, Pacific Rim, and cyberpunk-style body notifications. Really beats you over the head with fantasy terminology. But, you're rewarded with a dense, intertwined murder mystery. The characters are original anda lot of energy goes into interrogating the role each of us plays in society and what society owes us in return. I just would have appreciated it a little more if there were a glossary up front.
An in-depth look into the history of ZAZ and the production of Airplane!. The audio is good and there are a lot of voice cameos from producers, comedians, actors, and other people involved in the movie. It really was groundbreaking!
poster for Dark Deeds
  • 🥉 Award Winning
2024-12-25
Another rip-roaring outing with the crew of the Keiko. Really felt like it came into its own. Expertly blends a spy thriller with an action heist. Cashes in on some emotional payoff that authors really only get as they get farther into their series. Is a good time overall!