Fun kids book that I'll give to my baby cousin.
Sci-fi about the horrors and insanity of war. Others' mileage will vary hugely based on their patience for 1980's science fiction comics, but I loved this.
Verse novel about a figure who greets departing souls at the start of the afterlife. Quick read, but I didn't love it. I did like the twist at the end, but the 200 pages leading up to it didn't grab me.
Not-great attempt to mix horror and super heroes, which fails to pull either off effectively.
Andrew Hamilton does things on the internet that I find funny. I was disappointed at how... okay this was. Straightforward description of his overall uneventful experience in prison. Fine, but I'd hoped for more.
A collection of short essays about the joys of books and reading. Exactly my wheelhouse - but better to dip in and out of, given how thematically similar all of the pieces are.
When I was 10, I loved Choose Your Own Adventure books, and I still think all young kids should be given them. Checked this one out for the sake of nostalgia. Not terrible, but definitely for 10-year-olds.
Watchmen is rightly acclaimed as one of the best comic series ever. This is the sequel no one asked for, involving none of the original creators. Much better than it had any right to be.
Famously bad storyline from the 90s. Slightly worse than I'd heard it was.
Fun second part in the series. It did start to grate slightly that all five narrators had exactly the same voice, but it was a fun voice and the story moved along well.
Obscure NZ sci-fi book published in 1997 to no fanfare that I can recall. It's quite uneven and very derivative, which still puts it as the best sci-fi novel New Zealand has ever produced.
1970's anarchic British sci-fi. Dumb fun.
Same as book 1. The most interesting thing was that the scene on the cover never happens in the book, nor does anything that could be construed as any kind of resurrection. So that's a bit weird.
Predator is the best movie ever made and there have been no bad entries in the franchise [citation needed]. This is a collection of stories from the 80s and 90s. It is...a lot of Predator. But that's what I signed up for.
Heroic eco-terrorism written by the creator of the Kamala Khan Ms Marvel. Huge fun.
A very typical example of the 1980s post-apocalyptic fiction I read too much of as a child: not really a plot, just someone walking around the ruins surviving different hazards that the author thought a post-bomb world world would contain. And some racism.
Sci-fi comedy that I read as a kid. Fun enough, but didn't really hold up.
Reading this series is basically a form of self-harm. But at least I'm halfway through now!
Ellen Hopkins writes verse novels which a lot of my students love, and which I don't mind. This is her 'spicy' adult novel. It didn't work. In fairness, I don't love spicy romance novels. People who do might like this.
Super hero finds out the government is corrupt so fights them. A mediocre take on a concept that's been done a bunch of times, usually better. (In his afterword, the author agrees - this was his first published work and he admits it's pretty clunky.)
Very fun and readable YA space opera.
Whimsical fun fantasy tale. Delightful!
Fun but light action story about an immortal warrior. A good take on an old idea.
I noped out of this after 30 pages. I'm claiming the pages I read for the challenge because 1) this is from a New Zealand author, so double points, even if it's only 60. 2) I should get _something_ out of this. This book reads like a piece of Year 11 creative writing - complete with stilted dialogue, awkward exposition, and incorrect punctuation. Bless the author for their enthusiasm, but I wasn't up for 400 pages of it.
Super hero silliness. Lots of fun, but I prefer this author's other works.
Just awful. Onto book 6!
1980s superhero stuff. Revolutionary and ground-breaking for the time, and slightly racist by today's standards. Huge nostalgia pop for gen-x comic nerds, possibly not much to offer anyone else.
A woman working a dead-end office job gains secret access to her workmates' emails and chats and finds out what they're really saying about her. Really fun, and also made me go back to my department group chat and scan the last month of entries to remind myself what I had said about people...
Deeply confessional and confronting exploration of the death of the author's father. Incredible.
Short collection of poetry themed around the ocean. Having 25 or so poems in a row on one topic means this is one to dip in and out of rather than read all at once, but it's very accessible and has a good mix of pieces.
Superhero stuff from the 1990s. Uneven in a lot of places, but terrific fun if you were reading superhero stuff in the 90s. (If you weren't, this may not be for you...)
Hansel and Gretel, but written by Stephen King and illustrated by Maurice Sendak, so yay!
Fun, quick thriller. The actual plot (woman is kidnapped, some people look for her) is actually thin but the author does a thing where all of the characters are gone into in more depth than usual, explaining their motivations and feelings in a way that still makes the story move along and keep your interest.
Alternate history/science fiction about the Russian war in Afghanistan. Interesting, but a little bit confused. This author has done some really clever narratives - this seemed like sort of a practise run for them.
Sub-Enid-Blyton kids-own mystery/adventure from the 1930s. Fine if that's what you're looking for, but there's a reason this isn't as well known as things like The Famous Five.
1950s science-fiction. Great if you like that sort of thing, but probably only appeals to a very niche audience.
Terrible. Offensive and terrible. Just as bad as the first three in the series. I can't wait to read book 5!