Do we even want to know? From the cover alone I suspect something between Douglas Adams' ‘meet the meat’ segment and Troy McClure introducing everyone to the meat factory (and, of course, the PBF version of the sausage factory).
Some choice excerpts from the book:
All done. Finished it Monday. It's a page turner and excellent. Book 2 is due out in March.Starting Red Queen by Juan Gomez-Jurado (translated from Spanish by Nick Caistor). It is apparently the first of three with 2 more to come.. It has quite a good start. The blurbs say it is a "thriller!"
Finally finished this. It was just okay. I decided about halfway through that I didn't really care for it - I didn't like James' dialogue - but was interested to see how it played out. The movie was wildly different from the book.The Children of Men (1992) by P.D. James. Only just started it, but I like her writing.
Another classic, like The Children of Men, where I prefer the movie over the book, which are very different from one another. Dick is really more of an ideas guy, for me. His writing is just alright, but it's at least straightforward and moves along. I literally just cracked open Imperial Earth (1975) at lunch today, incidentally.10 GREAT BOOKS FOR YOUR AI READING LIST
3. ‘Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?’ (1968) —Philip K. Dick
Before there was the 1982 film “Blade Runner,” there was the book it is based on, a masterpiece mélange of hard-boiled detective, environmental dystopia and identity crisis.
I'm curious how well this one holds up, as so much of it has been adopted and adapted in other things, ten times over. I don't hear much about a potential film adaptation anymore, which is maybe just as well. It would have been a blockbuster 25 years ago. Today, I'm not sure there'd be much point to seeing it onscreen now. It might seem derivative today, when in fact the reverse is true, and it was this that inspired so much sci-fi of the last 30 years. otoh, I might've said the same thing about The Fellowship of the Ring when Peter Jackson was working on his movie, or when Francis Ford Coppola did Bram Stoker's Dracula, and look how those turned out.4. ‘Neuromancer’ (1984) —William Gibson
Henry Case is a cyberspace hacker intent on one last score—if he can just outmaneuver the godlike AIs that populate Gibson’s elegantly crafted world.
Crisp writing and postmodern sensibilities that will please fans of “The Matrix” and “The Peripheral.”
I remember thinking this one was a bit of a struggle at the beginning, but it was worth hanging in. I think it took me some time to get on the same wavelength with Bacigalupi's writing style. Maybe others wouldn't have that problem. I read Ship Breaker (2010) after this and I found it went down smooth, but then I really struggled again with The Water Knife (2015). I'm not even sure I finished that one.6. ‘The Windup Girl’ (2009) —Paolo Bacigalupi
“I, Robot” in the era of climate change, this book tackles globalization, environmental degradation and the sex trade. A fast plot and rich world creation carries the reader through these weighty topics with ease.
Book 7 - System Collapse - comes out in less than a month. I think I've only read the first four, so I've some catching up to do.9. ‘All Systems Red: The Murderbot Diaries’ (2017) —Martha Wells
Murderbot is the genderless good guy in this wry and fast-paced investigation of sentience and emotion dressed up as a murder mystery. A page-turner that launched the bestselling series.