Obviously, they don’t have to slide into the cozy genre. But what books do you cuddle up with during a thunderstorm, or your variable weather of choice? Personally, Becky Chambers has become one of my favorites. I also read LOTR when I need a “good guys doing the right thing just because it’s the right thing to do”.

  • StringTheory@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Just about anything from the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett. Clever, insightful, delightfully sarcastic, but never mean-spirited.

    And no matter how many times you re-read them, you always find something new.

    • cduke23@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I totally just saw the headline and missed your comment that included Becky Chambers. I’m still getting used to Lemmy/Beehaw. Sorry for the reading comprehension fail!

    • styxbane@beehaw.orgOP
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      1 year ago

      No that’s totally reasonable because A Psalm for the Wild Built is such a great book. I need to read A Prayer for the Crown Shy though. That one I’m waiting for my turn for the copy on Libby

      • cduke23@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        I went ahead and bought all of the Long Way series from my local bookstore. I broke down and bought the audio books from Apple for the monk and robot series. I’ll buy them in paperback too when I can get to the bookstore and order them.

    • Schedar@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Has there been hints of any new Becky Chambers book that you’ve heard of? The news section of otherscribbles.com doesn’t have anything since nearly a year ago.

      When I was deep in the sleep deprived zone of new parenthood, listening & readying to Beckychambers books on audio book was just perfect. I was too fragile to deal with any horribly dark or dense sci-fi books (that so many seem to be) and her books always felt like a nice cup of tea (pretty appropriate considering psalm for the wild-built!)

      We are expecting our second and I’d love to have a new Becky chambers book to read or listen to when we restart the new born saga!

  • shufflerofrocks@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    right now, it’s ‘Ascendance of a Bookworm’

    It used to be Percy Jackson when I was a kid, but I think the re-reads have numbed it a bit. I also like to read ‘Never Let Me Go’ whenever I wanna get grounded and appreciate the simple joys of life

  • Jaximus@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    My personal favorite trilogy is His Dark Materials from Philip Pullman. It is somewhat forgotten these days but they are excellent in every meaning of the word.

  • Pigeon@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Fanfiction is my go-to when I’m sick, or depressed, or really tired. Nothing beats its combo of easy-to-read and wildly absorbing.

    Otherwise, I’m partial to cozy fantasy, like The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison.

    Also the Murderbot books by Martha Wells never fail me.

    Also… older books, with their wordiness and long sentences and lack of fear of semicolons, can be great for this. Virginia Woolf’s books for example are so dense, and the atmosphere that creates is sublime, but the way she writes somehow makes her wordy prose also really easy to read. The sentences just kind of tumble you along. I love it.

    Caveat being that older books, including Woolf’s, contain shit like casual racism and sexism and etc, and sometimes I have more capacity to overlook that than other times. Which is one reason I love when modern authors write in a more old-fashioned style, like in Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrel by Susanna Clarke - it lets me have my cake and eat it too.

    Poetry is also great a rainy day, including old poetry. It’s underrated these days. I think it’s partly from the pervasive modern idea that poetry is automatically “cringey”, and partly from the elitism and other -isms among the Poetry Establishment^tm, and partly from English teachers taking the fun out of it. But you can rediscover poetry, just like you can rediscover a love of novels after highschool steals it from you for a while.

    • witless@lemmy.nz
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      1 year ago

      Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrel by Susanna Clarke

      I want to reread that one but I have it in trade paperback size and the thought of lugging it to and from work (I only get to read on my lunchbreak) is enough to keep it anchored firmly on the shelf.