#18 in Mystery & adventure books
Use arrows to jump to the previous/next product

Reddit mentions of Survival: Species Imperative #1

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 1

We found 1 Reddit mentions of Survival: Species Imperative #1. Here are the top ones.

Survival: Species Imperative #1
Buying options
View on Amazon.com
or
    Features:
  • Magnetic mount, with 50 lb. pull, securely attaches to magnetic surfaces
  • Fits any device with a 1/4-20 tripod socket
  • Positions device at nearly any angle
  • Ideal for use with small cameras, camcorders, optic scopes, etc.
  • Durable injection-molded, glass-reinforced nylon thermoplastic resin clamp head and knobs
Specs:
Release dateMay 2005

idea-bulb Interested in what Redditors like? Check out our Shuffle feature

Shuffle: random products popular on Reddit

Found 1 comment on Survival: Species Imperative #1:

u/1point618 ยท 3 pointsr/printSF

I actually read a bunch this month!

  • _The Ballad of Black Tom_ by Victor LaValle is a Lovecraftian horror story told from the perspective of a black musician living in Harlem in the 20s and a white police officer who get caught up in a plot to awaken Cthulhu. The novella deals with 20s racial politics as well as Lovecraftian horrors. Been recommending this one because its good, short, and $3 for Kindle.

  • The Obelisk Gate by NK Jemisin is her follow-up to this year's Hugo winner, The Fifth Season. Great fantasy novels about a world where geology and magic are tightly intertwined, and where civilizations have been rising and falling for tens of thousands of years. Highly recommend them.

  • Survival by Julie E. Czerneda. I just started this even though it's been on my to-read list for so long that I don't remember how it got on there. Czerneda is a marine biologist, as is her main character, and the biology in this novel is on-point. In addition, there's a cool galaxy-spanning mystery going on. I'm only about 1/4 of the way through it so just really getting into the full plot, but enjoying it so far.

  • A Door into Ocean by Joan Slonczewski. I picked this up b/c we'd read it a few months ago in r/SF_Book_Club, and people seemed to really like it. However, I found it pretty boring and the characters rather shallow, so I quit after about a 100 pages. I doubt I'll go back to this one unless I hear something really compelling about it.

  • Saga vol 1. Comic book that I've been hearing about for ages. Really good so far, although I'm not that far through it. Looking forward to reading it up to its current run.

  • Black Panther by Ta-Nehisi Coates. Another comic run. August saw the completion of the last arc and the beginning of the latest one. The first few issues had some pacing issues, but Coates seems to have found his voice and is barreling ahead with the story of the warrior king whose previously peaceful kingdom sees a popular, feminist uprising. There aren't good guys and bad guys, just shades of grey, which is a nice change from the usual Marvel way.

  • Falling Free by Lois McMaster Bujold. I picked this up because of the sheer volumes of praise and recommendation that the Vorksian Saga gets here in r/printSF. However, I'm finding it rather forgettable so far, to the point that I actually forgot that I was half-way through this book and had to edit this comment. The premise is interesting, but it's somewhat clumsily handled and the plot and writing aren't keeping my interest very well. It also suffers REALLY BADLY from the "20th century morals in a far-future world" problem that makes a lot of older Space Opera feel really dated.