“Feels like a puzzle and less like a mystery”. I totally get what you’re saying and I love that description!
@nichescenes2 ай бұрын
Sounds like she like most take that step evolving to just really like upmarket storytelling. Same happens for kids growing up on anime in the west. They start out liking action, then age, and scoff at it as they get int drama slice of life, then scoff at that, and want cerebral stuff, then scoff at that as it's talking to them and they want more of an open ended discussion on what literature and themes are, so they go upmarket and are okay with a good premise a vague world and culture and stuff they can fill in. Then we all fall back into just enjoying series within our mood in all the categories.
@connorhale3413 ай бұрын
In the past year, I've become way more interested in standalone novels. Sword of Kaigen, Tchiakovsky novellas, and Piranesi showed me how much an author with a vision can accomplish in a single novel.
@apocalypsereading71173 ай бұрын
love your definition of "the mysterious" vs mystery novels. for me the ultimate one of these is prob Pedro Páramo - scorching hot Mexican desert ghost town, we slowly piece together who lived there and how it got that way. (also if you're looking for more "literary" stuff then this is def that!)
@merphynapierreviews3 ай бұрын
This sounds PERFECT for me!
@Montie-Adkins3 ай бұрын
Aggressive bio-stuff: The Animated series Scavenger's Reign. Bio-driven, character driven, dangerous as hell. The animation is like artist Moebius. No really. It's awesome. Merphy! Scavenger's Reign.
@ar42032 ай бұрын
Have you read "our wives under the sea" by julia armfield? It was a 5 star book for me & very atmospheric & I think you would like it. For reference my favorite books of the last year or two have been Annihilation, mexican gothic, piranisi, & Our wives under the sea. So if you liked those I would seriously give it a read!!it really involves like almost everything you listed at the beggining. Its about this women& her wife who works on a deep sea submarine, they lost contact with the sub for months & were sort of like presumed dead, but then she randomly comes back, changed...its creepy & atmospheric & I really think youll like it.
@hannahthiessen69873 ай бұрын
I realised in 2023 that I had found myself in a big reading slump because most of the books I picked up to read were duds. This year I’ve been challenging myself to read across as many genres as I can to rediscover my reading tastes. It’s been a lot of fun!
@Mermer-163 ай бұрын
Oh, that would be fun! Any pleasant surprises? Unpleasant ones? I did something similar where I had family members assign me books. I have a big family, so I got everything from Star Wars to Toni Morrison!
@wesleyejackson3 ай бұрын
Book of the New Sun - Gene Wolfe Ice - Anna Kavan
@whatsupmara3 ай бұрын
I've been subscribed for 4 years now and it's so great to see your tastes evolve. Inspires me to explore things out of my comfort zone as well :)
@Punkandcannonballer3 ай бұрын
You might like Semiosis, a story that follows a group of people trying to settle on a planet with sentient plant life and learning to communicate and coexist with it. As others have mentioned, Scavenger's Reign and Outer Wilds are also wonderful. They have a grounded kind of unreality about them that feels very in-line with Vandermeer, Valente, or Mieville.
@keanus98713 ай бұрын
Merphy: "I don't like mysteries" Merphy: endlessly speculates about the One Piece, the Will of D, Void Century, etc etc etc
@nichescenes3 ай бұрын
She is a mystery of personality. She atleast is able to change opinions and admit her faults. unlike others who double down and think they write better than acclaimed authors.
@Goldfish_13132 ай бұрын
Yeah, but One Piece isn‘t a typical mystery story in it‘s core
@nichescenes2 ай бұрын
@@Goldfish_1313 good point. She mentioned liking to figure stuff out. It’s different from mystery. I think she meant she wouldn’t like say scoobi do or Sherlock. That said I feel like she’d like say case closed. lol. Her saying she likes slow stuff surprised me cause she bounces off things fast sometimes. Like all of us we like to think we’re simple but or reasons for liking things aren’t formulaic. It’s why there’s no perfect temple for a good film or book that 99% of people will like in your demo. Sometimes you can do everything people like, show don’t tell, hook, no exposition, big world building, great characters, unique plot, and people can like some generic slop someone made in a weekend cause it’s funny and cozy. 😂spy x family for example. They creator doesn’t try as hard as others to make it the most fantastic thing ever but they sell better then stories with tons of depth and characters and worlds and yadda yadda.
@antistition3 ай бұрын
I absolutely loved Klara and the Sun. Don't know why it doesn't get more love.
@Samakain3 ай бұрын
Your channel and your deep enthusiasm for the things you love was one of the things i need to really start reading again. And I read some new books and enjoyed them a lot but I got curious about what I used to love. So I'm going back every second or third or so to something that was a fundamental pillar of what I understood as my taste. The kid who read some of those books no longer exists there are years between him and who I am and a lot of lessons along that way. It's been really really interesting to look at this stories with new eyes and see what I missed, what hits and what doesn't. Current restarting Hobb, and the tone of this book is so different to what I remember and that's really really refreshing. This process is so rewarding. Revist your darlings, make sure they keep up with you. Excellent video.
@kristen76233 ай бұрын
The mysterious! That’s why I loved Piranesi! The handmaids tale, Never let me go, Wayward Pines! Will definitely be reading Klara and the sun
@insidelaurensbrain38333 ай бұрын
Klara and the Sun is one of my fave books of all time! I also recommend the audiobook! When you said its a potential five star book I squealed with excitment haha
@thomasray3 ай бұрын
Man, the video game Outer Wilds ticks so many of these boxes
@psychicsocial3 ай бұрын
Ahhh she would love that game.
@thomasray3 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm glad I'm not the only one
@jonasquinn79773 ай бұрын
Absolutely, an absolute masterclass in storytelling
@ErimlRGG3 ай бұрын
based on her love for Southern Reach I would bet she would love Control and Alan Wake 2
@ghjong0013 ай бұрын
I love the game, but never finished it because I'm so freaking terrible at flying the danged spaceship...
@WryOttle3 ай бұрын
A nautical tale, weird, emotional, very unique, AND a mystery... try The Scar by China Mieville. His worldbuilding and characters are absolutely incredible, too. His Bas-Lag trilogy is so weird and awesome. Love the channel!
@pobbityboppity111025 күн бұрын
China Mieville is right on the money for her new tastes
@shawnlinnehan73493 ай бұрын
You may have read some or all of these, but for a killer environment, plants or otherwise: Hothouse, The Integral Trees, Darwinia, The Terror, even Gormenghast. More literary stuff could even have Lonesome Dove, as that was one deadly walk, and Swamplandia. There's plenty of weird stuff, but here's something no one would probably say: Richard Brautigan's The Hawkline Monster.
@JoeNicolosi-l8i3 ай бұрын
Yes! Hothouse, and also Non-Stop.
@DJSoul223 ай бұрын
Gormenghast is my favorite series, another good book si downward to the earth by Silverberg.
@meowkat3473 ай бұрын
The subtle, emotional read is something that I really loved in Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. It’s also a slow burn mystery that you have to puzzle together and follow the clues, but it’s mostly an intimate study about these characters and it’s so deep in its emotion and humanity. I loved the characters and something about it just resonated with me so deeply. If you’ve haven’t read Never Let Me Go PLEASE DO NOT READ ANYTHING ABOUT IT! It’s so easy to spoil that book, you really need to go in so blind. I just saw the cover and knew I had to read it, and I’m so glad I went in blind. It hits me every time and makes me cry! It doesn’t work for everyone, but it is my favorite book of all time.
@davidaaronnajera86923 ай бұрын
I've only read Klara and the Sun and Remains of the Day by Ishiguro, but Remains of the Day was an absolute masterclass in subtlety. I imagine Never Let Me Go is on the same level.
@KarlaLamboglia3 ай бұрын
I almost never comment, but I am leaving this here to support this request. Please read it. It's fantastic and don't spoil yourself!!!
@meowkat3473 ай бұрын
@@KarlaLamboglia thanks! I appreciate your support on Merphy reading this book! 😆
@meowkat3473 ай бұрын
@@davidaaronnajera8692 I need to read those other two books! I can’t believe I haven’t!
@sharonashford62803 ай бұрын
Never Let Me Go is the best example of show don't tell I have every read. Yes, please go in blind. I rate this book as one of the best I have every read. It gave me the chills when I realised what was happening.
@genteelblackhole3 ай бұрын
I can relate, I'm trying to figure out exactly what's happening to my shifting tastes at the moment too. Some of my usual comfort genres haven't been working for me so well lately, maybe I need to try a wider variety of things too.
@ana-maria.c3 ай бұрын
I adore books that feel like a puzzle to be uncovered, where you get to piece together new information about the world, characters or even plot as you progress and it feels so rewarding when a new piece falls into place and you get a new perspective on the story or sth that bugged you for a while finally makes sense. It’s what I love most about Sanderson’s series, who are by no means mystery novels :))
@KierTheScrivener3 ай бұрын
I really love this video and makes me think more about my reading taste
@readingwarlock3 ай бұрын
Vandermeer, Ishiguro, Liu and Butler are also my faves! I think the element that draws me to their storytelling is how they create a space to explore personhood and humanity (the best and worst of it). 😊
@Maxery.3 ай бұрын
For like a Bio-environmental-horror I would suggest Blood Music. Its not as good as Annihilation (hard to be) but it gave me some of the same vibes for sure.
@thedeertraveler3 ай бұрын
Just found you thanks to youtube home, and instantly fell in love with your voice and how you describe things!
@kyliecrawfishin3 ай бұрын
Red from OSP just did a great video about this!! what you were describing was environmental storytelling (not as in the literal plant life, but the world environment being a major part of the storytelling! it’s common in video games and d&d) Environmental storytelling is one of my favorites and something I want to learn to do one day! (OSP = overly sarcastic productions if you want to see the vid)
@libicki3 ай бұрын
I was just coming here to say this! The way Red talks about environmental storytelling and Merphy talks about "the mysterious" are so similar
@alannapenner373 ай бұрын
Absolutely yes for the nature-focused books! I'd love a video of all your recommendations!
@rammelbroadcasting3 ай бұрын
Klara and the sun is a 5 star book. I have been singing its praises ever since I read it. I even loaned it to a work friend who then left work and never gave it back, so I had to buy it again 🤦♂️
@BetheQuail3 ай бұрын
Here’s one that feels like a progenitor of Malazan’s Chain of Dogs, though it’s historical fiction - The War of the End of the World by Mario Vargas Llosa. Has a lot of these elements.
@emmaellin3 ай бұрын
Not sure if you've ever mentioned China Mieville before but the further i got into the video the more i thought "she might love China Mieville" especially if you've gained an appreciation for "the weird". Perdido Street Station especially throws in a lot of ideas and concepts while still delivering an interesting overarching story.
@SimplementInefable3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the idea of putting together thoughts like this!
@damianmk63717 күн бұрын
Haruki Murakami has this mysterious style. Wind-up Bird Chronicle is a good example.
@denisejeffries26753 ай бұрын
I enjoyed your video immensely! This is going to help me a lot. I am now interested in reassessing my reading tastes and I think it will really help me when choosing books going forward. I love your videos!
@pocketfullofponder3 ай бұрын
Now we need a vlog of you trying all these book recommendations 🤓
@natasharedmane3 ай бұрын
Merphy I am on my knees begging for you to check out Disco Elysium. It's so aggressively exactly what you just described in this video :'))) Disco Elysium is a game but I promise it feels like reading a book, including the gameplay!
@OriginalMrocco3 ай бұрын
That would be crazy
@rafaela000023 ай бұрын
oh man disco elysium
@samhartje7232 ай бұрын
Disco is life changing
@moonstonepearl212 ай бұрын
You should check out some of Clark Ashton Smith's work. He's big on plant horror. He's a bit like Lovecraft in what he produced.
@temporalloop3 ай бұрын
totally get what you're saying here! i also LOVE annihilation & gravitate towards more atmospheric or weird-leaning SFF. would highly recommend: - The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jimenez - The Masquerade Series by Seth Dickinson - The Raven Cycle by Maggie Stiefvater
@dog-earedpages10173 ай бұрын
You should try Ray Nayler for more eco sci fi, particularly The Mountain in the Sea. It’s a brilliant novel that has themes of memory, consciousness, language, inter species communication, technology, etc. This novel focuses more on the animal side of nature, particularly with sea life here, but it’s still very atmospheric and has wonderful concepts. Would recommend to anyone who loves bio/eco sci fi.
@robertmicallef97323 ай бұрын
The Walking Shadow by Brian Stableford has a major thread on aggressive plant life. Thomas Disch's Genocide makes aggressive plant life as its theme. Not so much plant life but David Gerold's War Against the Chtorr deals with a very aggressive invasion of a plant like species. Chaga by Ian MacDonald deals with an invasive species kind of intrusion.
@samm84103 ай бұрын
You should definitely check out Thomas Ligotti given that you’ve been enjoying VanderMeer. Ligotti was a big influence on him, and VanderMeer even wrote the foreword for the Penguin Classics release of Songs of a Dead Dreamer & Grimscribe (which would be a good starting point).
@mariareadsssf3 ай бұрын
I won't shut up until you read "Tainaron. Mail from Another City" by Leena Krohn. Jeff and Ann VanderMeer made possible some of Leena Krohn's work in a Collected Fiction. Also glad to see Octavia E. Butler geting the recognition she deserves.
@riva7rau3 ай бұрын
Adrian Tchaikovsky has become one of my favorite authors, simply because he can write about almost anything and make it be good. I enjoyed City of Last Chances, but oh my god House of Open Wounds was just amazing! His depiction of a spider culture and intelligence in Children of Time was just crazy weird and inventive. I am finding that I'm drawn to unique / weird / inventive stories that offer me something new. I've been reading SciFi and Fantasy for decades, so I'm looking for new ideas, settings, plots and character types to really get me excited. Tchaikovsky does that for me. As an aside, I'm pleased to see several of books / book sets on your list that are also on my TBR. I need to read faster! :)
@davidaaronnajera86923 ай бұрын
It sounds like you're moving more towards literary fiction. I'd recommend exploring authors outside the SFF genre such as Salman Rushdie, Toni Morrison, Garcia Marquez... these are authors that are more in the "magical realism" genre, where mystery and subtlety are more the norm.
@rad49243 ай бұрын
I can relate to this. Books by my favourite authors have really disappointed me lately, meanwhile the best book I've read this year was a YA wholesome romance novel (which I originally intended to read ironically).
@davidranderson13 ай бұрын
The books you highlighted strike me as ones that were written by their authors based on a desire to explore a new concept that really forced them to process very different thoughts or emotions. It seems like the writers couldn't have started with a character or a plot point. They must have started with something that really shook up the mental furniture -- what if the universe is an inherently hostile place? what if nature one day turns on us? can obsessive love be so all-consuming you don't even need the other person?
@mishelly3 ай бұрын
i really love how you explain what you like. how its done you have explained it so well, I am doing something similar on my channel- by genre adressing all the books that are my faveorites and why they are. Themes or settings symbols whatever.
@alexandregomes67843 ай бұрын
I'm not sure if you've ever heard of it, but there's this kids series called fairy oak that is the most cottagecore book I ever read. I'm sure you would love it. Extremely lighthearted and easy to read for a break maybe.
@lulupain183 ай бұрын
I Who Have Never Known Men is the best mysterious novel I have ever read. 🙌 The mystery is in the center of the story... but you will somehow care more about the characters and their journey.
@garhom133 ай бұрын
So, my recommendation doesn't necessarily do anything too strange for the genre, but After Moses is a neat sci-fi story about humanity after their AI guide, Moses, vanishes. Humans quickly find that the things they built with Moses's guidance, they don't actually understand, and that sends society into quick decline. Earth tears itself apart in war and the colonies around the solar system are left to fend for themselves. Matthew, the main character, is a loner freelancer scraping by about a century after Moses has vanished. Over the course of book 1, his solitary lifestyle is changed as he picks up extra crew members, against his nature. The crew has to learn to live and work with each other if they are to make it. There are strong themes of found family, as the five crewmates learn to mesh together. The author's love for our solar system also bleeds through as he writes about the extraordinary locations the crew visits. Each is described in vivid detail, and made me want to be able to see them for myself. The story itself is a tale of doing good where you can, even in the face of the inevitable end.
@merphynapierreviews3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@captnsquashypant822 ай бұрын
You knew changes was definitely gonna be a huge shift for Dresden when Mac sat down to actually to talk to him
@Starlesslight3 ай бұрын
You ever read Rex Stout? It is a crime solving book, but the thing I like about it is the characters, and the way there is continuity and connectivity to the books as they progress. It's got humor, seriousness, and some sadness in it in a way that the Agatha Christie novels never really had. I always felt most of her novels were pretty shallow. Also, if you've never read RA Salvatore and his long running series set in the Forgotten Realms, you should check them out.
@banaa94633 ай бұрын
The reading goal you made of reading more from the same author that had the best books of the quarter(?) led to these kinds of favorites, so I think I'm gonna copy your goal
@cuspaudio3 ай бұрын
The Wickwire watch is a book i own and may read next. I have just finished The Ferryman by Justin cronin, sci-fi, mystery with intrigue,ticks alot of your boxes. Definitely recommend it. Great vid btw
@azazazazaz9363 ай бұрын
I think the difference in your tastes is between murder mysteries and ontological mysteries, with you preferring the second. In the second one, the setting itself is the mystery
@merphynapierreviews3 ай бұрын
Well put!
@Zivilin3 ай бұрын
So something like Fredric Brown's short story "Hall of Mirrors"? 🤔
@teaguebates58073 ай бұрын
Grey Dog by Elliott Gish. I’m halfway through. Atmospheric, natural setting, weird, unpredictable, flawed protagonist, defies convention, mysterious. Gish does a great job writing in the timeperiod - turn of the 20th century. Picked it up after I got hooked by the first two pages. Written as journal entries, it’s been forever since I read that type of book.
@Mermer-163 ай бұрын
It can be, for a reading nerd, a bit difficult when you find out your tastes have changed. Growing up, I read tons of fantasy, and when I started reading again as an adult, I tried and quit so many adult fantasy series. It was a hard thing to let go, but I finally realised I'd rather read historical fiction like Les Mis than sit through long-winded exposition about some epic fantasy world. (See, Hugo put all that stuff into separate chapters so you can conveniently skip it, lol! And Tolkien wrote entire history books instead of trying to cram it all into the story he was telling at the time.) There are exceptions, of course--classics I still love (Narnia, Middle Earth, Gormenghast), and new ones I was fortunate to discover (First Law, Realm of the Elderlings, Discworld). Ultimately, I think writers who can create an entire world are amazing. Sadly, I'll probably never visit their worlds.
@tutdunsthemouse3 ай бұрын
Glad to see other Gormenghast fans!
@ErimlRGG3 ай бұрын
I started reading and not just watching your channel two years ago but I'm a slow reader. I realized after a while that our tastes didn't align much but now they are starting to align, which sucks because you are probably going to talk about books I would love but I can't keep up haha I just read the Southern Reach and I started Borne. I love Vandermeer's writing
@macs33043 ай бұрын
I Who Have Never Known Men seems like it’d be a winner for you. Incredible book
@Talking_Story3 ай бұрын
This was very interesting to me thanks for sharing
@Noregretz2583 ай бұрын
I’m think the books that are more of a puzzle than a mystery fall under the New weird sub-genre, or atleast everything you listed does. I’m just getting into it myself and I’m really enjoying everything I’ve read so far.
@thefriesofLockeLamora3 ай бұрын
I love murder mysteries but like other OG genres, they can get stale. So I've found myself enjoying non-western murder mysteries. I also love when they're uniquely written. For instance, Keigo Higashino's Newcomer follows the main detective interviewing the neighbours and peripheral businesses around the victim's murder scene. It was brilliant. I also love a very slow fat fantasy book. I love it starting slow, setting up everything then we are off to the races like The Dragonbone Chair. I also love a story that stops itself for the author to indulge the reader. Terry Pratchett does it so well in Discworld with fourth wall breaks and footnotes. I love sarcastic characters but I have found a deeper appreciation for very kind characters. It's very rare in the real world.
@impastomusic3 ай бұрын
I adore Ishiguro, and Never Let Me Go is my favourite of his thus far. You might also enjoy Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy that begins with Oryx and Crake.
@blacksmithwolf3 ай бұрын
You mentioned roadside picnic; If you want to dip your toe into Japanese light novels Otherside Picnic is a great sci-fi, Lovecraftian horror, yuri novel inspired by Roadside Picnic that focuses on Japanese netlore.
@SamPegg903 ай бұрын
If you like Klara, I really think you’ll love Never Let Me Go. The creepy atmosphere in that book is so captivating!
@BrebearMckae3 ай бұрын
I feel like maybe some of the mystery books that are more related to a past mystery or is lit fix/mystery may work for you, then!
@Coleton25733 ай бұрын
It's really strange to me that Jimmy Nutts hasn't gotten you to read China Mieville's Bas-Lag trilogy yet.
@vicjames32563 ай бұрын
In the Literary Fiction space, would add: George Saunders, Karen Russell, Hermann Hesse, Etgar Keret, Roberto Bolaño, Italo Calvino, and some others.
@MrNottocd3 ай бұрын
Have you read any C.J Cherryh? What I like the most is how she creates that feel defined and don't feel like a human in a costume. Interested in hard Sci-Fi, try the Alliance Union series or the Downbelow station. A human becoming part of an alien culture, The Faded Sun Aliens as the main characters, The Chanur Series A world where cognitive dissonance is ingrained in the culture and a look at the effects, Wave Without A Shore Irish Fantasy, the Ealdwood series
@TheAlobear3 ай бұрын
Ah, Malazan... I read the first six books of the series between October 2012 and October 2015, then read the seventh in September 2017 - and I've loved every one of them. I have the next one ready on my shelf - but after a seven-year break, I can't remember anything about these books whatsoever - and I'm certainly not going to read them all again to find out! But I am having a lot of trouble finding good books at the moment - so maybe it's finally time to try and find a way back into Malazan...?
@KierTheScrivener3 ай бұрын
I LOVE Klara and the Sun
@WickedGoodBooks3 ай бұрын
Loved this. A lot of these are also my taste too!
@keravnos22313 ай бұрын
I will say, this year in regards to your taste has been quite odd. You picked up jojo (I'm kidding 😂). On another note, watching your videos has evolved and changed my reading taste as well so thank you. I would've never picked up Adrian Tchaikovsky's book
@nichescenes3 ай бұрын
Yeah im looking forward to her take on jojo given it's an author that fought against the all male shonen cast due to shonen being a boy's magazine mainly.
@hugomon33 ай бұрын
I'm the exact same way when it comes to mysteries. I think of it like being an archaeologist vs a detective. Yeah both are trying to find the answers, but the vibes are totally different 🔎
@mattj21183 ай бұрын
You would love Wyvern by A.A. Attanasio. I’ve never read anyone else who can make nature and characters come alive with their prose in the same way.
@LeahHung1253 ай бұрын
I really enjoy Ishiguro, and you are making me want to re read him. Never Let Me Go is so good, and Remains of the Day.
@EmilyAnn6345713 ай бұрын
What you were describing as atmospheric books Wendell Berry called “sense of place”. Might be a helpful turn of ohrase
@masoninho83 ай бұрын
Going off your criteria, especially the mysterious world, I think you'd love Gormenghast. The final book falls off a bit due to the health of Mervyn Peake at the time, but I think it's still worth it.
@katherinep10103 ай бұрын
I think you would really like Never Let Me Go by Ishiguro. It has a lot of the same something is going on here, but I don't understand what. Though in this case the main character does know what it is.
@lifelesstone3 ай бұрын
Wanna see something crazy? When you’re done with Dresden wait couple months and reread. It hits so much different when you see how crazy is writing really is
@emryborge70273 ай бұрын
Thank you for recommending the Annihilation series, for a long time I was hesitant to read it because of the low rating on goodreads, and I’m absolutely blown away by how good it is. Don’t trust the goodreads ratings, people😂
@drivenspirit4163 ай бұрын
I feel like you'd really like Cage of Souls by Adrian Tchaikovsky! Its post-apocalyptic and the animals/creatures are winning while humanity is dying out. I found the main setting (a prison floating in the middle of a swamp) the most interesting parts of the book.
@JoeNicolosi-l8i3 ай бұрын
Wow!! Don't worry about making an interesting video; this one is riveting. I note you're already into Adrian Tchaikovsky's books, and he has a new one I highly recommend: Alien Clay. I'm assuming you've already read Children of Time (if not, I think it checks all your boxes.) Ishiguro excels at crafting a dystopian world in which nobody seems to be aware of how horrible it is. IMO his magnum opus is Never Let Me Go. If you haven't read it yet, go there ASAP but prepare to be profoundly disturbed. On the interesting biology front, I also recommend The Mountain in the Sea by Ray Nayler. You mentioned checking out books with a more literary approach; I dare you to try Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell. When you get to the end of part 1, you'll think the book you're reading is defective; it isn't.
@Zablazer73 ай бұрын
I think you would LOVE The Deep Sky by Yume Kitasei. The climate crisis has passed the point of no return according to the people that caused it, so the governments of the world have banded together to build, launch, and put passengers on a space shuttle bound for an Earth-like planet. It follows the group of people on said shuttle as they are awoken from stasis. Then someone dies and people think it might be a murder, but it is so much than a whodunnit but in space this time. The characters in this book are incredible. We get flashbacks into the time the people on the ship spent at the special school that trained them for this mission and the political forces that stood for and against this plan. There are a lot of Big Ideas (TM) discussed in this book.
@oleksandrbyelyenko4353 ай бұрын
Have you read The Day of Triffids? It is about conscious plants
@AhyZdalph3 ай бұрын
I saw a movie (or tv series) on that theme long ago. Is it based on that novel?
@oleksandrbyelyenko4353 ай бұрын
@@AhyZdalph yeah there was some show or something. I've not seen it. But I've read the book twice
@oleksandrbyelyenko4353 ай бұрын
@@AhyZdalphyes there is one. But I haven't watched it
@debs38552 ай бұрын
Have you read Semiosis? It definately hits on the creepy aggressive plant life *shudder* Check content warnings. It was an intense read for me. I had to set it down a few times.
@pauloid763 ай бұрын
After watching your video, I still like my previous recommendations: Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series, starting with The Jane Eyre Affair. It is very cheeky like Hitchhikers Guide, very character focused. It's less "sci fi" and more "weird and different" I love David Brin and I haven't seen you review any of his books. I think he'd be up your alley. He's a very thought provoking futurist. I usually recommend Kiln People as an intro. But The Postman might be better because there is more natural setting to it.
@kurathchibicrystalkitty51463 ай бұрын
I like Thursday Next a lot, and I think Merphy would really like it. I'm sure hoping that the eighth book comes out next year and that it's the last one, though. I don't think I could stand waiting another 12 years for a ninth book! I tried Startide Rising but couldn't get into it. Is it worth another try?
@Srbthmlnsmth3 ай бұрын
The moment you said invasive plant life I thought… Tainted Cup!!! And then she said she doesn’t enjoy murder mysteries a minute later
@merphynapierreviews3 ай бұрын
I actually loved Tainted Cup despite it being a detective novel! It’s because of all the other elements that I loved it and I’m looking forward to the sequel!
@Srbthmlnsmth3 ай бұрын
@@merphynapierreviews maybe I should try Attack on Titan 🤔 it was in the comp and everyone I follow on booktube loves it. I’m not an anime viewer cuz I find them v cringe but I think maaaaybe it’s time I like you adjust my tastes or maybe it’ll happen organically (I loved YA once upon a time but hate almost everything that releases in it nowadays except 1-2 gems a year so maybe anime is my answer)
@Srbthmlnsmth3 ай бұрын
@@merphynapierreviews oh lol I see!! Also then can I recommend The Spellshop by Sarah J Durst idk if ur into cozy fantasy but it’s a nice chill cute vibey one that has a sentient plant! But it talks so maybe not ur cup of tea (in general this author is good at avoiding tropes or using them well, I love her stuff)
@nadiatanya3 ай бұрын
What a unique video idea, you have a new subscriber! We have very similar tastes. This makes me want to thought experiment my own preferences. Based on your vid, what book recs that I’ve loved, starting with author Brom: Slewfoot(do audiobook), The Child Thief. (Side note I also loved Lost Gods but not in your categories). From here based on what you might like: Children of Time. Fuzzy Nation, Library at Mount Char, The Gracekeepers. Edit* Hollow Kingdom by Kira Buxton is one of my most fav books. I wonder if you’d like as much. It’s post apocalyptic from animals point of view. Hilarious and horrifying at the same time…
@nichescenes3 ай бұрын
The paradox of book readers: they want you to write less, and leave things to their interpretation and show don't tell without using descriptions or explaining anything while also making the story deep and serious but make it funny and lively and make the story unique like i never saw before while knowing i know all the tropes and will grade you off if you remind me of a popular one while asking them to ask agents to publish their books with agents that only want what sold well for fear of money loss...so it's a spiral of nothing published is good...nothing published is unique, unique things don't get published, unique stuff published, people don't like it cause there not used to it and it's too unique and doesn't follow what they know...etc. Murphy has it right rethink your logic on what you like. You never know.
@robertunijat82993 ай бұрын
You like Klara And the Sun? You really should read Never Let Me Go by Ishiguro! Similar vibe.
@Shelf_Improvement3 ай бұрын
I recently did this because I wasn't enjoying a lot of the books I read. I'm still not exactly sure what my taste is, but I'm figuring it out.
@kurathchibicrystalkitty51463 ай бұрын
How about the Bloom trilogy by Kenneth Oppel for an 'invasive plants' story? It's YA, though, so it might not be to your liking. Otherwise, lots of recommendations! Winter Tide [by Ruthanna Emrys], a perspective flip Lovecraft story where the Innsmouth residents are being oppressed. A Darkling Sea [by James Cambias], a first contact with sightless aliens underneath an ice-encrusted planet. Seanan McGuire's Wayward Children series, which deals with the consequences of children who go into other worlds and then come back changed by their experiences. The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie, which I often have a hard time describing because it's so unusual, but it's one of my favourite books of all time. Elfelheim by Michael Flynn, which is sci-fi disguised as a historical fantasy. Max Gladstone's Craft Sequence series, which has a fantastic magic system and intriguing human-deity interactions. Deep Secret and The Merlin Conspiracy [by Dianna Wynne Jones] Since you like Discworld, you might like her type of humour as well. Lots of twisty-turny events and a dash of surrealism that still manages to make perfect sense. Oh, and since you liked The Tainted Cup, how about the Divine Cities trilogy by the same author? I have a bunch of spooky books to recommend as well, but I'll save those for when we're closer to spooky season. I totally get not liking mysteries but loving 'mysterious' types of books, since I'm the same. 😀
@sophiehugli27523 ай бұрын
The divine cities trilogy is great and I think Merphy would love it!
@JerodimusPrime3 ай бұрын
Merph, your love for aggressive plant life makes me wonder if you ever watched the cartoon Joyce and the Wheeled Warriors as a child?
@janellerowe6093 ай бұрын
I know you like absurdist fiction. You need to read Welcome to Night Vale! I can’t wait to hear your thoughts on it.
@Forever_weird3 ай бұрын
Wait the One Piece obsessed book otaku loves books set at/by the sea 😱😱😱
@merphynapierreviews3 ай бұрын
😂
@douglashufnagel74243 ай бұрын
I would recommend looking at the other work done by both Jim Butcher and Steven Erikson if you are looking to double down on authors. I have heard good things about Erikson's science fiction and I loved Butcher's Codex Alera series.
@patrickmitchell66943 ай бұрын
Have you read any of Kevin Hearns books Iron Druid Chronicles and 7 Kennnings?
@JoshuaStingl3 ай бұрын
Have you ever read any Tad Williams? If not I imagine there are a few of his series you would enjoy.
@gabriellabatel3 ай бұрын
You and I have the EXACT same evolving tastes
@tenwolf3 ай бұрын
Have you heard about the Rages series by Kritika H. Rao? The first book, The Surviving Sky came out last year and the sequel came out earlier this year. It has a lot in it that it sounds like it appeals to you. It is set in a world that the environment and climate is extremely hostile to human life. Humans live in floating cities that are up-kept by the parts of the population born with plant-based powers to keep them safe and alive. The book deals with caste systems and politics. The main characters are a couple who have been married for years and are now struggling with their relationship. The overarching mystery is of course the world itself.
@brutalusgaming88093 ай бұрын
The only reason I did not DNF Annihilation is, inspired by this channel, my wife and I are doing select buddy reads and I picked it for that. My wife also wanted to DNF that thing but we both pushed through.