Read Psalm for the Wild Built
That's a very Becky Chambers book.
That's it, that's the whole of my review.
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Popcorn used to create an eco-friendly alternative to polystyrene foam
Abandoned former USSR sites – in pictures
The Race to Preserve East Germany’s Colorful Plastic Past
Scientists Mystified, Wary, as Africa Avoids COVID Disaster
New clues to the biology of long COVID are starting to emerge
The Pirate Queen Who Avenged Her Husband’s Death on the High Seas
How Your Family Tree Could Catch a Killer
Singapore’s tech-utopia dream is turning into a surveillance state nightmare
How Prison Writers Struggle to Be Heard
Burnout: Firefighter trauma rises in the American West
That's it, that's the whole of my review.
Popcorn used to create an eco-friendly alternative to polystyrene foam
Abandoned former USSR sites – in pictures
The Race to Preserve East Germany’s Colorful Plastic Past
Scientists Mystified, Wary, as Africa Avoids COVID Disaster
New clues to the biology of long COVID are starting to emerge
The Pirate Queen Who Avenged Her Husband’s Death on the High Seas
How Your Family Tree Could Catch a Killer
Singapore’s tech-utopia dream is turning into a surveillance state nightmare
How Prison Writers Struggle to Be Heard
Burnout: Firefighter trauma rises in the American West
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In Psalm, tea making is a religious vocation. You do it for other people because it's a whole thing. Their society has worked out all the big problems, all that's left is for our protagonist to work out a few personal problems, starting by accurately identifying those problems after a vaguely-defined trip into the wilderness. At the end, somebody makes a cup of tea. It's emotionally satisfying, at least for the characters.
I typically like her books, but this was... very Becky Chambers. People who don't like her books would really hate it. It's like pure, distilled essence of Becky Chambers in book format, with a little more sprinkled on top as a garnish.
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I was really looking forward to Psalm for the Wild-Built, but I couldn't even finish it.
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