S&L Podcast - #509 - New Achievement!

We wrap up Dungeon Crawler Carl, including our horrible imitations of Jeff Hays. Plus, we announce the next pick for May and ponder data-driven determinations of the best SFF books of Tom’s life.

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WHAT ARE WE NOMMING?
Tom: Gnocchi Bolognese
Veronica: Gin and tonic

QUICK BURNS – add time stamp!
Any news or announcements

We have to change from per-episode to subscription billing. That means a flat monthly fee for supporting the show instead of only paying when there is an episode.

Tamahome: Brandon Sanderson’s Isles of the Emberdark available for preorder. That’s quite an early preorder for February 2026: Isles of the Emberdark

Iain: Children of Strife is on the way. Tor UK acquires four stellar novels by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Liqorice: Cassidy Beeve-Morris, er, not sure what to call him, a “data scientist and blogger,” was doing an analysis on the best sci-fi and fantasy of the last 50 years based on the major awards (Hugo, Nebula, etc.). He noticed a curious thing: there is a very distinct trend where Sword has started to outperform Laser in awards over time. Speaking as an armchair economist who fails to understand that correlation does not imply causation (I’m referring to myself, not the author), my first impulse was to attribute the change to Veronica’s influence. But then I realized that S&L has only been in production for 15 of the 50-plus-year trend, which means it’s more likely that Veronica is a product of her times while Tom is a relic of the golden age. Where Has All the Sci-Fi Gone? (Reddit)

Okay, I should probably follow up with a summary of the top ten according to awards received that spurred the observation of Sword trending over Laser. Personally, I’ve read all of them except for The Yiddish Policemen’s Union and Blackout/All Clear. To be honest, I’ve never heard of either of them. Say what?

Note that March’s S&L pick The City & the City shows up at the #18 spot. And I’m sure Princess Doughnut missed getting onto this list by a whisker. Meow.

The details, with all of the grisly math, are here (did I mention the author was a data scientist?): Determining Best Science Fiction & Fantasy Novels Since 1970

Tamahome: Mike Flanagan’s Carrie TV series has been greenlit at Prime Video. The series will be eight episodes and begin filming this summer: Mike Flanagan’s ‘Carrie’ Greenlit at Prime Video

BARE YOUR SWORD

Ruth: I had never really considered before the impact of negative commentary on the morale of our overlords… I want T & V to feel enthusiastic about the book club, so I shall endeavour to make some more positive comments about our current and future picks!
I’m still not entirely convinced by Alexander Skarsgård as Murderbot, tbh. I saw someone suggesting that Gwendoline Christie would have been perfect for the role and now I can’t help wishing she had been cast instead! I’ll probably watch the show anyway, though, as the trailer looks good—it captures the snarky tone perfectly.

Stephen: Since Alexander put up the money to start the show and I’m sure having his name attached brought in more investors, I’m going in with a neutral mind. I really wanted an animated version like the ones in some episodes of Love, Death & Robots. I guess I’ll have to wait some more time for my vision to come true. Maybe DCC, but the character of Carl may be too tempting for some actors to pass up.

Paul: You know, his deadpan voice and subtle facial expressions actually really sold me. I had always imagined Murderbot as having a low female voice, but listening to him as Murderbot in the trailer, I thought “Yeah, this is what a SECU would be programmed to sound like.”
I’m sold. #TeamSkarsgardbot

BOOK OF THE MONTH DISCUSSION
May Book Advance Kick-Off
Mickey 7 by Edward Ashton
Amazon: Mickey 7

Wrap-Up
Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman
Amazon: Dungeon Crawler Carl

Ruth: It was interesting to hear the clip of the fully dramatised audiobook, even though, tbh, my takeaway was that Jeff Hays’ performance is so good you don’t need anything else!

A Quick Note on Isekai—and Dungeon Crawler Carl’s flavor of portal fantasy: Discord Discussion
Why this book is awesome: Goodreads Discussion

ScottM: I feel like if I wanted to experience a level grind as a form of escape, I would rather play some WoW or another MMO. In novel form, it just doesn’t click for me. I expect I would feel similarly about most litRPG novels. I understand what the novel is doing and I don’t mind reading it. I’m just also not especially interested in what it’s doing. DCC Reaction: It’s Fine

ADDENDUMS
Our show is currently entirely funded by our patrons. Thank you to all the folks who back our show; if you’d like to support the show, head to Patreon.

You can also support the show by buying books through our links! Find links to the books we talk about and some of our favorites at Sword & Laser.

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Goodreads

S&L Podcast – #508 – Sexy, Sexy, Mind Palace

We have Murderbot trailer! And we like it! Plus, the Hugo nominees are out and we wrap up our thoughts on The City and the City and begin our April dungeon crawl.

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WHAT ARE WE NOMMING?
Tom: Sumo Mandarin Orange
Veronica: Cadbury Egg season

QUICK BURNS
CountZeroOr and Trike: Murderbot trailer: May 16 on Apple TV” (Watch on YouTube)

Seth: Happy National Library Week (in the USA) (ALA National Library Week)

Chaminade and Geoff: Hugo shortlist 2025 is out!
Novel:

  • Alien Clay by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Orbit US, Tor UK)

  • The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley (Avid Reader Press, Sceptre)

  • Service Model by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Tordotcom)

  • Someone You Can Build a Nest In by John Wiswell (DAW)

  • A Sorceress Comes to Call by T. Kingfisher (Tor)

  • The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett (Del Rey, Hodderscape UK)

“For the first time I can remember, I’ve read them all before the nominations! Service Model or The Tainted Cup are my favorites, but they are all good.”
2025 Hugo Award Finalists

Mark: SFWA names Nicola Griffith as the 41st Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master (SFWA Announcement)

Seth: The S&L bump strikes again with The Ministry of Time – this time it’s on the short list for the brand‑new Climate Fiction Prize (Climate Fiction Prize)

The long list for the Women’s Prize for Fiction has been announced – it’s mostly lit‑fic, but the nominees include S&L pick The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley. Another example of the S&L bump? (Women’s Prize Long List)

NaNoWriMo shuts down as a foundation due to funding issues (TechCrunch)

BARE YOUR SWORD
TRP: When I saw the title, I thought Tom and Veronica would mention Elisabeth Wheatley. She’s an indie author who writes in the fantasy genre. She is a queen of TikTok/YouTube self‑promotion and created a voracious book‑reading character called Book Goblin. I have read her book Daindreth’s Assassin and can definitely recommend it.

Tassie Dave: The question was asked, “How often have we read the March Madness runner‑up?” In the 9 years of March Madness, the runner‑up has not ended up as a pick eventually, only 3 times.
- 2016: was a tie. Both books read. The Fifth Season as an alt‑pick.
- 2017: Howl’s Moving Castle was a pick in 2020.
- 2018: Soulless was an alt‑pick.
- 2019: Never picked. The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August.
- 2020: Never picked. The City of Brass.
- 2021: Never picked. Gods of Jade and Shadow.
- 2022: Children of Time was a pick in 2023.
- 2023: Children of Time was a pick in 2023.
- 2024: Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries was a pick in 2024.

Of the books chosen to be in the March Madness Final 16 brackets, 33 have ended up as S&L book picks (so far).
- The best year was 2018, where 8 of the 16 books ended up as book picks (7 official and 1 alt‑pick).
- The most read in a single year was in 2024: 6 of the 12 book picks for the year were March Madness books (5 from the 2024 tournament and 1 from 2022).
- 4.77 books, on average, from each tournament end up as book picks; 3.66 books when you account for books that were in multiple tournaments.
- 4 runner‑ups were read in the same year: 2016, 2018 (both April alt‑picks), and 2023 & 2024 (both May picks).
The Fifth Season was, effectively, the runner‑up, as V&T used their veto powers to declare A Darker Shade of Magic as the official book pick.

With Veronica expressing a boundless love for all things cheese, I wanted to pass along an amazing landmark between Milwaukee and Chicago: the Mars Cheese Castle (marscheese.com). Should you ever make it to Wisconsin, this is a fun location to try a variety of Wisconsin cheese. Most restaurants will offer fried cheese curds, but I would recommend trying fresh cheese curds as well. Fresh cheese curds are lovingly referred to as “squeaky cheese.”
Ever yours,
Shawn D. Whale
p.s. I failed to find the Bare Your Sword link on Goodreads, which is why I sent you this.

BOOK OF THE MONTH DISCUSSION
Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman (BookshopAmazon)

FINAL THOUGHTS (spoilery)
The City & the City by China Miéville (BookshopAmazon)
Book briefing: Patreon

TCaTC: Boring Borlu (Goodreads)

ADDENDUMS
Our show is currently entirely funded by our patrons. Thank you to all the folks who back our show, and if you would like to support the show that way, head to patreon.com/swordandlaser.
You can also support the show by buying books through our links! Find links to the books we talk about and some of our favorites at swordandlaser.com.