SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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Of Monsters and Mainframes
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"Of Monsters and Mainframes" Discuss Everything *Spoilers*
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One of our TSG readers posted this reddit link where the binary code chapters are translated.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comm...
They are quite fabulous.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comm...
They are quite fabulous.

https://www.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comm...
They ..."
That is so cool! I was wondering if the binary sections really said something. I'm excited to check it out when I'm finished (or maybe before).
Edited to add - I couldn't wait. The translations are in spoiler tags, so you can choose to view only the sections you've read so far.

This is my first book read with the group. This book was not something that I would have probably chosen to read on my own, but I really enjoyed it.
The characters and their interactions with each other I think is what really stood out to me. It was fun to see the progression of Demeter's personality throughout the adventure.
I would say the only thing that gave me trouble was any fight with vampires from Frank's perspective. I mean it makes sense since he can't see them, but I struggled to follow the action in some spots.

I really liked Demeter, and her relationship with Steward, and how both of their characters grew and changed over the course of the story. I also loved the part where Demeter and Steward were helping to raise Issac and Agnus on the ship. And the part with the strange fish people was kind of ridiculous, but also fun.
Some of it was certainly far fetched, but with a vampire on a spaceship at the beginning, followed by werewolves and Cthulu fish people, I just turned off my disbelief and went with it.
I thought the audiobook narration was great overall. My only real complaint about the book is that sometimes the pronunciation of things was incorrect / inconsistent (Angus instead of Agnus for instance, or even once or twice where I am pretty sure the narrator said the wrong word entirely). But these instances were uncommon and didn't take away from my overall enjoyment.

Overall I liked it. Demeter is a very interesting character
I agree with that. I feel like the author wanted us more invested in Demeter's relationships more than introducing *another* monster classic.

I listened to it on audio (the binary chapters were tough and I thought the book was corrupted when I first started it- thanks so much to the post above that translated them!) It was a bit over-produced and I don't know why they didn't just stick to each narrator voicing all their own spoken parts rather than just their own chapters because it was weird having each author narrating each character with a different voice.
My only real qualm with the story itself, and please correct me if I'm wrong, was that it was never clearly explained as to why that particular Demeter ship was the only one who had all the monster activity. What are the odds? There was one excerpt that alluded to other AIs dealing with monsters but no other mention of other ghostships. So why was she the creep magnet?
The relationships, the monsters, the plots, and the humor all had me smiling ear to ear and laughing aloud often. Though, I was able to use this for my "reminds me of my childhood" prompt for the popsugar reading challenge too because I used to love having monster movie marathons this time of year growing up, so I was probably the target audience.
1. What did you think of the world?
2. What did you think of the characters?
3. What worked or didn't for you?
4. Overall thoughts?