Bryan Alexander
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in NYC, The United States
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December 2007
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Bryan Alexander
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Last to Leave the Room is an interesting hybrid novel. It combines Gothic weirdness with science fiction, urban politics with corporate shenanigans. Above all it's about monsters and romance. The plot concerns a hard-charging, brilliant, scheming, and ...more |
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Bryan Alexander
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37 other people
liked
Susan Kay - on semihiatus 's review
of
Last to Leave the Room:
"Thank you to St. Martin’s Press for sending me a copy of this much anticipated book.
That’s where the love ends for me unfortunately. I really didn’t like this. The text is so dense. I struggled so hard in the first third to get into the story with a" Read more of this review » |
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"My complete review of Last to Leave the Room is published at Grimdark Magazine.
Last to Leave the Room is the new dark speculative fiction by Caitlin Starling, the USA Today bestselling author of The Death of Jane Lawrence, which seamlessly blends sci" Read more of this review » |
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Bryan Alexander
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Le Fanu's 'Carmilla' (1872) is a short vampire tale that is interesting for two reasons other than that it works as story-telling. It is a bridge between the vampire lore of Eastern Europe as it had started to appear in English literature and 'Dracul" Read more of this review » |
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Excellent review. I'm glad you read the whole darn thing so we don't have to finish it!
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Bryan Alexander
is now following Owain Glyndwr's reviews
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This book is a journalistic account of the company OpenAI's rapid rise, seen through a very critical lens. Readers can take away two things, then: an early history of the firm and a summary of opposition. As someone who follows the field I found the ...more |
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Bryan Alexander
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This is my second Schweblin book after Seven Empty Houses. Like that collection Mouthful of Birds offers intense short stories with unpredictable plots and very concise writing. These stories range across personal situations, genres, and tropes. Some ...more |
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“Thus, from the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted object which we are capable of conceiving, namely, the production of the higher animals, directly follows. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.”
― The Origin of Species
― The Origin of Species
“Then he explained in a whisper that the plan was composed entirely of awesome. It was made and designed by the House of Awesome, from materials found in the deep awesome mines of Awesometania and it would be recorded in the Annals of Awesome - and nowhere else, because any other book would catch fire and explode from the awesome - and by its awesomeness it would be known from now until the crack of doom.”
― Tigerman
― Tigerman
“Kershaw had long ago realised, apparently, that dealing with Brits was tricky. You had to listen to what a Brit was saying -- which was invariably that he thought XYZ was a terrific idea and he hoped it went very well for you -- while at the same time paying heed to the greasy, nauseous suspicion you had that, although every word and phrase indicated approval, somehow the sum of the whole was that you'd have to be a mental pygmy to come up with this plan and a complete fucking idiot to pursue it.”
― Tigerman
― Tigerman
“An ugly calm lay over the streets like the anticipation of a beating.”
― Tigerman
― Tigerman
“The boy reported - after the Sergeant had slept for a few hours, which was not nearly enough - that YouTube had actually gone down for ten minutes under the weight of traffic. The story was truly global, truly immense: not Obama, not Justin Bieber, not Psy and not Bin Laden had ever touched this, he said. Not Khaled Saeed and not Mohamed Bouazizi, either. If Pippa Middleton and Megan Fox had announced their intention to marry during a live theatrical production of 50 Shades of Grey starring Benedict Cumberbatch, and then taken off their clothes to reveal their bodies tattooed with the text of the eighth Harry Potter novel, they might have approached this level of frenzy. But probably not, the boy said, because not everyone liked Benedict Cumberbatch.”
― Tigerman
― Tigerman
E.T.A. Hoffman, H.P. Lovecraft, Shirley Jackson and (arguably) Clive Barker all moved horror fiction forward in their time. Who's doing so today? I t ...more
Central Community Library Science Fiction Readers Discussion Book Group. Meets on the third Saturday of every month from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. at Cen ...more
This group is dedicated to an appreciation of important works of literature, both classic and contemporary... that happen to fall into the category of ...more
Tip off each other to great authors like Kage Baker, Alastair Reynolds, Charles Stross, Linda Nagata, Nancy Kress, Tim Powers... Anyone who writes nov ...more
This is our first book club adventure and we are using it as an opportunity to both learn about and experiment with social media. We hope you’ll learn ...more
