Thursday, July 2, 2026

He Who Fights with Monsters 9 (He Who Fights with Monsters, #9)He Who Fights with Monsters 9 by Shirtaloon
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

The flavor of these books continues to be quite a bit different from normal LitRPGs in that it's not primarily focused on progression for progression's sake but in how to remain a good person when everyone around you and your power itself wants to turn you into a monster.

This particular book isn't unique in this observation, of course, but the healing aspects to it are really quite beautiful. Go out with an assumed identity, search for trouble, find it, and then land yourself into a big pile of steaming shit-smeared bird wings. Messengers.

Yes, well, this kind of thing needs to happen. A bigger, badder foe. But now the baby monarch is in town.

The quality of mercy is quite strained. ;)

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Tuesday, June 30, 2026

He Who Fights With Monsters 8 (He Who Fights with Monsters, #8)He Who Fights With Monsters 8 by Shirtaloon
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I think Jason has a sneaking suspicion that he may not be entirely mortal anymore.

I mean, aside from dying multiple times, no longer being human, being able to slam people around with just his aura, or being a freaking monarch of a domain and having a consecrated temple devoted to Knight Rider that can imprison cult leaders and torture them with Baywatch memorabilia.

Though, to be perfectly honest, you don't have to lose your mortality to do the last bit. I think that's just a perk of being awfully weird.

Fortunately, it's not an exclusive trait!


The novel is awfully fascinating, too, on the god-encroaching territory. Too much power, too many bad choices, and everyone is leery. Including the gods that keep popping into his life.

Fun stuff.

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He Who Fights With Monsters 7 (He Who Fights with Monsters, #7)He Who Fights With Monsters 7 by Shirtaloon
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This one hit me in the feels. Coming back home (to another world, not Earth where he ACTUALLY came from) was the best thing that could happen to him.

Except that people are shit everywhere.

The powerful still play games and they're never nice ones.

And nobody ever tries to understand where others are coming from. Like a returning world-savior coming back from the dead, having undergone a dozen soul-scouring experiences, who just wanted to get back to something light and normal and soul-healing--being forced in stupid regal politics out of none of his doing. And throwing him into the shit without realizing just WHAT they had grabbed.


What was healing about this book?

Friends. Trust. Faith. They made this book everything.

I love it.

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Monday, June 29, 2026

I Will Fear No EvilI Will Fear No Evil by Robert A. Heinlein
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

For what is VERY much a novel of its time, 1970, with free love, challenging normal family relationships, being accepting of all kinds of LGBTQ setups, or even freedom for age limitations (December/May relationships), it's a book that really ought to feel right at home with modern audiences.

Indeed, for a good 3/4 of the novel, it really would be. Just get beyond the first quarter of the novel and fly right into the whole SF true sex change (old man's brain in a young woman's body, trying to deal with social/sexual situations), and it pretty much flies. It's fun, free love, sex, and especially love, love, love transcending all boundaries. And I don't mean true love or monogamous love, but freedom to love.

It's a wild ride just so long as you place the novel in exactly its right place and time.



But in modern time? LOOOOL. I almost quit it over the opening sequences of the dirty old men oggling the young woman who, even though she was perfectly happy with it all, still felt... ugly and dirty because so many modern examples shows it to BE ugly and dirty. But this IS a character novel and taking it all on the cases presented here, it's actually rather sweet and accepting and it becomes a clever and honestly interesting take and condemnation of closed-mindedness all across the board.

Trans politics through the easy SF lens? Yep. All sexual politics m/f f/f m/m and everything else inbetween, challenging critics and readers through that easy SF lens? Absolutely. It's bold and fearless.

There's a LOT to love about this novel. It's also easy to condemn for the sheer creepiness of a few aspects.

Would I recommend this to anyone without this caveat? No. But with it? It's honestly worthwhile. Just problematic. :)

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He Who Fights with Monsters 6 (He Who Fights with Monsters, #6)He Who Fights with Monsters 6 by Shirtaloon
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is an appropriate time to quote a line from another property. "Earth--what a shithole."

It's encapsulated quite nicely in this volume.

Of course, when your home is a dumpling slowly being suffused with much too much soup, to the point where it'll frankly dissolve if it takes a single more iota of broth, you can't really judge much on the niceties, like how fine the bowl is or what kind of utensil you use.

This is just a nice way of saying the ends justify the means and the shit's already gone in the drink. But hey, we LIVE here. We know.

Or rather, we live in a non-magickified version of the shithole, but the underlying concept is the same.

I just wish we had our own hero trying to unsoupify the wonton. Alas.

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Sunday, June 28, 2026

A Glimmer of Death (Merry Gentry, #10)A Glimmer of Death by Laurell K. Hamilton
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

So.

The good:

When it finally gets to the mystery of the magical ***** and its resolution, it's pretty decent. I'm invested and I feel inordinately happy to have something like this in the novel that resembles the previous private investigations/royal intrigue/fae novels that had been coming out so many years ago.

The bad:

It took a LONG time to get through all the toddler and fashion nonsense at the beginning. It took an even longer time to get through all the narrative-foreplay-less sex scenes that felt so horribly gratuitous I felt like I was plopped directly into the worst polyamorous-political nonsense cribbed right from the Anita Blake series complete with cribbed-reused-plundered plotlines from that series as well.

And it took SO DAMN LONG to move past it.

To be very honest, I was reminded of the very worst nonsense I wished never happened in the Blake series. Of course, I kept coming back because when the magic stuff and the fighting stuff and the plot stuff finally kicks in (when it isn't sex), it's pretty great. But this one?

I'm kinda sad I came back to Merry.

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He Who Fights with Monsters 5 (He Who Fights with Monsters, #5)He Who Fights with Monsters 5 by Shirtaloon
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a weird one to review. It's not bad at all, but on reflection, it's just an on-Earth battle-fest with tragedy against reality eating vampires showing us that we're underwhelmed a good half of the time and utterly outclassed the rest.

It makes for good drama and a solid ongoing read, but there's a real lack of character building compared to the previous novel.

Of course, read together, it's hardly noticeable. Everything runs smoothly, and long, and fun.

So really, no complaints. :) Can't wait to squash these blood drinkers, though.

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He Who Fights with Monsters 9 by Shirtaloon My rating: 5 of 5 stars The flavor of these books continues to be quite a bit different from ...