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Fuckfuckmyfuckingass , to lemmyshitpost in Jandals
@Fuckfuckmyfuckingass@lemmy.world avatar

No you’re not. These aren’t even made out of jean material.

nokturne213 , to newcommunities in Staffordshire

Is that a pretzel? I love a good pretzel.

Emperor OP ,
@Emperor@feddit.uk avatar

It’s a little known fact that the pretzel was invented in Staffordshire after some dough got caught up and knotted in a pottery wheel.

nokturne213 , (edited )

I thought it was German monks making praying hands.

Emperor OP ,
@Emperor@feddit.uk avatar

It is (k)not.

Mr_Blott ,

It’s a stray pube

sunbytes , to books in What are you reading??

Children of Ruin, by Adrian Tchaikovsky.

It’s the sequel to Children of Time that won the Hugo award a few years ago.

Children of time may be the best science fiction book I’ve ever read (out of hundreds), and I’ve been devouring everything else by Tchaikovsky ever since.

The dude has range, and has been incredibly prolific over his career.

And the writing style is incredible. He makes incredibly complex concepts/plots very very easy to understand and follow.

toxy ,
@toxy@mastodon.acc.sunet.se avatar

@sunbytes He has done a fantasy series called “Shadows of the Apt” too and that is incredible also.

sunbytes ,

Oh yeah I’m like 6x books into that too.

Great stuff.

bonegakrejg ,

The third book is excellent as well. Easilly one of my favorite scifi series.

AVincentInSpace , to books in What are you reading??

I’m most of the way through Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. Same guy that wrote The Martian (the book that got very faithfully adapted into a movie with Matt Damon) and this book is jam-packed with just as much real-world science.

If you’ve never read (or seen) The Martian, here’s the basic premise: the year is 2040-something and NASA has started manned missions to Mars. Our hero Mark Watney is one of six crew aboard Ares 5, which is planned to spend 30 sols (Martian days – 37 minutes longer than an Earth day) on the planet and do research. On Sol 6 of those 30, there’s a massive dust storm with winds strong enough that they threaten to make the rocket for the return journey tip over, leaving them stranded on Mars, if they don’t abort now. Just one problem: Mark is nowhere to be seen. The dust storm is too thick to see through, and the last thing his team saw just before his radio went dead was all his vital signs drop to zero. The captain searches for him for as long as she can, but eventually she’s forced to call it off and return home with only five of the six crew.

Eight hours later, Mark wakes up, says “ow, my everything”, figures out that the main communications antenna that the storm ripped off the HAB (astronaut house), punctured his suit, and grazed his side poked a hole straight through his suit’s bio monitor as it did so (hence why his team saw his vitals drop), looks over at the empty launch pad, and realizes he is now the only human on Mars and the first one to be stranded there. The rest of the book is him using every scientific trick in the book to keep himself alive until he can reach the Ares 6 landing site where there’s another rocket set up. As a not-too-spoilery example, Thanksgiving was going to happen while the team was there, so NASA sent them with whole, uncooked potatoes among other things with which to prepare a Thanksgiving feast. He combines Martian dirt with some natural fertilizer (read: his own poop) to make fertile soil, and gets water by recombining hydrazine (leftover rocket fuel the return rocket didn’t need) with oxygen in a rather terrifying method that involves small amounts of fire, then covers the floor of the HAB in soil and plants the potatoes. It’s a very cool book. My one gripe with it is that the protagonist is a bit of a jerk. He’s very full of himself and he swears a lot.

The protagonist of Andy Weir’s next book, Project Hail Mary, is neither of those things. He wakes up, amnesiac, on board a spacecraft, and quicklu discovers that its other two crewmembers did not survive the medically induced coma they were placed in for the journey. He has a flashback and remembers why he is here: some extraterrestrial bacterium-esque life form dubbed “astrophage” that feeds off of stars has started feeding off the Sun, and at the rate it’s getting dimmer, within 20 years the Earth will get cold enough that humans are looking at extinction. Additional astronomy revealed all the stars in our stellar neighborhood were infected with astrophage, and all but one were getting dimmer. Project Hail Mary, the spacecraft he’s on, is (as the name implies) humanity’s last-ditch effort to save themselves: take three of their best astronauts, yeet them at that star, and pray they find out why it’s not getting dimmer and report back to Earth in time to save the human race. I don’t want to spoil this book too much, because it’s super good, but they go super in depth about the alien life form (which it turns out is DNA-based and uses truly staggering amounts of infrared light to propel itself between the Earth and Venus, whose carbon dioxide filled atmosphere is necessary for it to breed, and stores the solar energy it collects by directly converting it to mass (E=mc²) in the form of neutrinos).

There’s also a huge surprise waiting for him at his destination star which I flatly refuse to spoil. You’re just going to have to read it for yourself, although I can practically guarantee you’ll be just as excited as I was.

Labonnie , to books in What are you reading??

Just finished “Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow” by Gabrielle Devin and currently reading"The Code Book" by Simon Singh.

papagoose08 , to books in What are you reading??
@papagoose08@lemmy.world avatar

I read The Wager a few months back. I enjoyed it. If you’re looking for something else in that vane you might try Batavia by Peter  FitzSimons.

I am currently rereading Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy. It’s a great read, but a little dark.

whoscheckingin , to books in What are you reading??

Just finished Persepolis Rising and eagerly awaiting to get my hands on Tiamath’s Wrath from my library. Fiction has always been my goto in such times and never once has it disappointed me.

TonyTonyChopper , to books in What are you reading??
@TonyTonyChopper@mander.xyz avatar

Berserk

Takeshidude , to books in What are you reading??

I just finished Lieutenant Hornblower and am thoroughly enjoying the series. I’ll be starting Hornblower and the Hotspur soon.

Salix , to books in What are you reading??

Just finished rewatching The Magicians, since it’s my favorite darker adult magic TV Show. Now I am about to start The Magicians by Lev Grossman to see what it’s like.

TheAnonymouseJoker , to books in What are you reading??
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

The Daily Stoic as everyday routine. I have other books in queue.

https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/5b840d05-77e4-411b-a13b-5248957aae81.jpeg

Melatonin , to books in What are you reading??

“My Heart Is A Chainsaw” by Steven Graham Jones

vairse , to books in What are you reading??

Working through Perdido Street Station on my new Kobo. I understand the critiques on pacing, and spending too much time on world building as now, 400 pages in, races, sections of the city, creatures, and cultures are still being introduced. But it has been an enjoyable ride so far, especially with one of the main PoVs being one of my favorite tropes of just “scientist doing science”

rubpoll , to books in What are you reading??
@rubpoll@hexbear.net avatar

The One Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by NK Jemisin.

It’s basically this:

https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/e989f5eb-47eb-4be7-b900-5b9641f8b95e.jpeg

dessalines , to books in What are you reading??

Just started reading Erich Maria Remarque - Three Comrades. I’m really liking it so far.

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