Wow, one of these old-school "random nerd dumps information"-Wikipedia-articles:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maryna_and_Serhiy_Dyachenko
I love it, let's hope the editors never find it.
Book reader community.
Wow, one of these old-school "random nerd dumps information"-Wikipedia-articles:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maryna_and_Serhiy_Dyachenko
I love it, let's hope the editors never find it.
What do you mean by these nerd dumps?
I meant „a nerd/fan dumps information into Wikipedia“: the article is mostly a collection of lists (novels are listed twice 👍) including „Fictional creatures and objects created by writers“. I think it's amazing but I'm pretty it doesn't conform with Wikipedia's article writing rules or whatever.
@jlow @counselwolf , hey, check out my page, I am looking for book reviews to post, what do you think?
I’m currently reading it. So no spoilers. But I can answer one thing - Sasha is not short for Alexandra. Like many other cultures, Russians have a “home name” and a “formal name” for people. Sasha is just her home name. That’s why no one at the institute calls her that unless they know her closely.
The Russian abbreviation comes from the older form Aleksashka, which was shortened to Sashka, which then gets shortened to Sasha.
Sounds like an interesting read, worth adding to the list then?
Yeah, it is. It's a unique novel to say the least.