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Memory by Lois McMaster Bujold

This later book in the interminable Vorkosigan series is a competent, fun whodunnit novella wrapped in 200 pages of boring on either end. 
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Behemoth by Peter Watts

Third book in this sci-fi apocalypse series is even bleaker and awful-er than the last to the point that it fully tips over into way too much territory, also it has an unsatisfying ending and desperately needed to be cut down to half its size. 

Maelstrom by Peter Watts

Watts’s second entry in the Rifters series doesn’t quite have the same unique magnetic characters of the first (and maybe it has slightly too many characters in general) but what it lacks in story it makes up for in prediction and world - read this to wallow in a truly terrible future dystopia that feels extremely likely. 

Cetaganda by Lois McMaster Bujold

As I continue through the interminable Vorkosigan saga I’m still struck by how the tone has been changing, from the original intense and dark tone of the opening books towards something like a James Bond book - fun, a bit silly, full of intrigue, but ultimately not reaching for greatness. 

Vor Game by Lois McMaster Bujold

Super fun to see good ole Miles Vorkosigan go on further adventures, further enraging his elders, but I am sad to mention that the darkness and sadness that made the earlier books in this series so special has basically disappeared, by now, which is a real shame. 

The Warrior's Apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold

For some reason Bujold had a story in mind she wanted to tell that required a very kooky setup, is the only way to describe it, in a big break from the last two books of her's that I just finished, so although I spent the first two thirds of this book shaking my head at how downright silly some of the events were, the payoff was fantastic and I couldn't put it down.

Starfish by Peter Watts

Watts has this way of threading 3-4 different core themes through an exciting narrative, and unlike a more conventional novel, he doesn’t really try to make them all relate explicitly; the result in Starfish is dense and difficult, but leavened with exciting plot and compelling, tragic characters, and absolutely mesmerizing. 

Night Watch (1973)

Honestly this old thriller really pulled me in from the moment it started, then in the middle I thought it was getting a bit too dramatic, but it turned out I should have had more faith because by the end it made perfect sense and i loved it.