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Introduce Yourself!
Bria wrote: "Hey all, I'm Bria! I'm a 26 year old living in Colorado. I'm an avid book reader and Fantasy is my favorite genre with Science Fiction begin a close second. I look forward to hearing about what ..."
Hello, Bria: I'm looking for a few readers to act as early editors and provide feedback for a sci fi fantasy book I wrote. Checkout the basics of the book at the website for the novel at: (http://home.comcast.net/~Time_of_the_Hea...) The first 3 chapters are available as a downloadable PDF on this site. If you want to read the entire book for free and send me comments, e-mail me at Time_of_the_Heathen@comcast.net and I will send you a PDF of the book. Just send me your comments when you complete your reading
Jim
Hello Science Fiction Club. My name is Ted Magnuson. I was just thinking today how nice it would be to call up an accountant friend of mine and have a halogram conversation with her. It would sure beat having to drive 40 minutes each way to visit her office. I especially like audio books, read while I drive, read while I hit the rowing machine. That lets me double and triple my read-time. Please feel free to stop by my library, check out my reading list and say hey!
I live on the West Coast in tiny little old Oregon. As for my age, I'm celebrating the 21st anniversary of some birthday or another. As a kid, my first encounter with high tech was when a neighbor bought the first Color TV in the neighborhood. Wowie. We could make trees purple and the sky green. I'm the author of 'The Moses Probe,' a science fiction adventure where people log onto the internet with brain waves.
Scott wrote: "Going to join in on the fun.My name is Scott, and I am 39 years old, married, with one (almost) four year old son, and one son due in a matter of weeks. I am an unemployed Mechanical Designer ho..."
Hey Scott,
I find that most non standard books are scifi!!! The authors Jonathan Lethem and Jonathan Carroll are good example of this!!! So keep reading and God will help with the job. He helped me!!
WIL
Tee wrote: "Hello All,I'm Tee, a science fiction/fantasy reader who is in the process of becoming a writer. My all time fav is "Dune" by Herbert and "She" by H. R. Haggard. This is my first time joining..."
hey Tee,
Try Gun, With Occasional Music by Jonathan lethem. I enjoyed it very much!! Let me know what you think of it!!
WIL
Hello! I read a lot of SF and fantasy, but find that I often stick to golden-era SF or familiar fantasy authors (all too easy when a series runs over lots of volumes!). I'm joining this book club in the hope it will introduce me to some new authors and titles.(Having said that, I'm going to enjoy reading some old favourites in November. The Handmaid's Tale is one of my all-time best reads, and I loved the Earthsea books as a child.)
Look forward to getting to know you all...
Tee wrote: "Hello All,I'm Tee, a science fiction/fantasy reader who is in the process of becoming a writer. My all time fav is "Dune" by Herbert and "She" by H. R. Haggard. This is my first time joining..."
Check out Spin by Robert Charles Wilson.
Patrick wrote: "Ciao! My name's Patrick and science fiction and fantasy are my bread and butter. Not sure which one is the bread and which one is the butter (probably fantasy, 'cause it's so fattening, plus brea..."
Hello, Patrick:
I'm Jim and author of a new sci fi/fantasy titled Time of the Heathen. I also thought Dune was great. I liked the core idea, that God could be surprised.
My story occurs between the end of a world-wide nuclear war, interrupted by an invasion of aliens (who destroy all of the world's armies) and the inauguration an alien global administration to control and transform human culture. Of the few human survivors of the war and the invasion, some resist the new alien government, other collaborate. What happens to a particular couple, Ewan and Alysa, is the focal point of the story.
I'm looking for a few readers to act as early editors and provide feedback for the book. Checkout the basics of the book at the website for the novel at: (http://home.comcast.net/~Time_of_the_Hea...) The first 3 chapters are available as a downloadable PDF on this site. If you want to read the entire book for free and send me comments, e-mail me at Time_of_the_Heathen@comcast.net and I will send you a PDF of the book. Just send me your comments when you complete your reading.
The novel is currently available on Kindle Books (http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss?url=se...)
Hi again James. Must admit that the idea of the plot is interesting. I'll email when there time to give the reading the time it deserves.
Hi my name is D.S.Patrick I am a new Author with a book being released on December 1, 2009. My book is called The Dragons of Rosemar. Check out my home page for more information. Thanks
I'm Steve. I'm American, I'm a grad student, and I like science fiction. I read slowly, and I'm okay with that.
Hi you all,I was born in 1975 and I live in a small town near Barcelona, Spain (so I apologise for any mistakes in my english, and corrections are welcome :-)). I like to read in almost any genre, but I feel specially comfortable with science fiction and fantasy (scifi, mostly) books.
My favorite fantasy books are those in the Earthsea series, the lord of the rings trilogy, the song of ice and fire by George R.R. Martin (which I'm currently reading, first time for me), and the Dark Materials Trilogy by Philip Pullman. I know, not so original... Recently I read The Name of The Wind, by Patrick Rothfus, and I did enjoy it, although it was below my expectatives. I would like to add that I was hugely disappinted with the Narnia books.
My favorite science fiction authors are Greg Egan, Vernor Vinge, Ursula K Le Guin, Joe Haldeman, Frederik Pohl, some Heinlein and some Neal Stephenson, and many others. However, the science fiction book I enjoyed the most last year was The Knife of Never Letting Go, by Patrick Ness. That one was a great and amazing discovery.
And that's all. I hope to have a wonderful time in this group.
Hi Steve,
Is "Savor" the word one can apply to a slow reading style? I read slowly too for that reason and manage to find the typos (:0).
Tee
Hi everyone! I'm Wendy, I was born in the Netherlands and fantasy is my all-time favourite genre since I read Lord of the Rings in English at 15 for the first of many, many times;) Historical fiction that borders on fantasy is a close second. I was trained as a psychologist but quickly turned to imaginative methods of healing like dream work and past life therapy. I have my own practice in the Netherlands.
In 2005 I began writing myself, and this year my first novel, 'Curse of the Tahiéra' was released.
I thought of making up a little list to see how some of my favorite books have influenced me over the years:
-'Lord of the Rings' hooked me to fantasy forever and made me want to write my own;
-'The Riddle-Master trilogy' made me want to play the Celtic harp and introduced me to the shamanic use of sound;
-'Death's Master' and 'Tales from the Flat Earth' blew me away and showed me a good dose of philosophical thought and spirituality can be the backbone of good fantasy;
-'The Hounds of the Morrigan' made me fall in love with Ireland and all things Celtic;
-'The Once and future King' (read at 12!)made me laugh, then cry, then laugh again and anchored me forever to the Arthurian world of ancient Britain;
-'The Last Unicorn' kept me reading through the night in a difficult phase of my life,
-The 'Earthsea' series introduced me to the use of Jungian thinking in fantasy,
-The 'Lankhmar' series made me want to wield a sword, (still don't have one though)
-'Curse of the Tahiéra', my own book finally made me go and play the Celtic harp and I never looked back!
Well I could go on, but you get the picture;)
I don't read as much as I used to, but I'm always on the lookout for books that marry good fantasy to shamanism or spirituality. Or anything to do with harps. And dragons. I love dragons...
Hi, I'm Malin from Sweden and am both a reader and a writer of sci-fi/fantasy. Nowadays it's been mostly writing, but I've done a lot of reading 'in my past' (sounds a bit strange when you've barely passed 20 years of age) and I'm hoping to catch up on that pile lying about in my bookshelf. You can find my writing here on Goodreads, on deviantArt or at Elfwood.
Hello, i'm Sharon....21 yaers old. I live in Indonesia in Manado city.i don't speak english very well, but i want to make a friends with you guys...
Gbu.
Malin wrote: "Hi, I'm Malin from Sweden and am both a reader and a writer of sci-fi/fantasy. Nowadays it's been mostly writing, but I've done a lot of reading 'in my past' (sounds a bit strange when you've barel..."Hi Malin,
Like you I've done quite a bit of reading and now am trying my hand at writing. Do you use any grammar tools or writing software to assist you? I've tried a couple like WriteSpark, but find working from an outline for fiction too boring and too structured.
Tee
Tee wrote: "Malin wrote: "Hi, I'm Malin from Sweden and am both a reader and a writer of sci-fi/fantasy. Nowadays it's been mostly writing, but I've done a lot of reading 'in my past' (sounds a bit strange whe..."
No, I work with Word and my own head, that's it. I get some spelling and thesaurus help through Word, and whenever I can't think of the word in English, I use online translation services (English is my second language).
The best help is to find a critique group and share your work!
The future should have been perfect. Microscopic robots known as nans could repair any damage to your body, keep you young by resetting your cellular clocks, and allow you to download upgrades like intelligence, muscle strength, and eyesight. You were supposed to be able to have anything you wanted with a simple thought, to be able to fly without the aid of a machine, to be able to live forever. But when a small group of five terraformers working on Venus return to Earth, they discover that every other human in the solar system has been gruesomely murdered. Now, James Keats and his four companions must discover what happened to the rest of humanity and fight back if they wish to avoid the same, horrifying fate. Welcome to the post-human era.If you like you can check out my book trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4lSYRYVw...
my website :http://post-humannovel.com/
let me know what you guys think.
thank you!
Hello all!I was born in '83 in Maine, USA. I lived there for four years, before moving to Virginia, where I lived for one year. I grew up in New Jersey. I went to college in Philadelphia. After university, I worked in Hollywood for three years. Then, I moved to Japan to teach English for the better part of a year. Now I'm back in New Jersey.
I've been searching for a book club that fits my taste (as I don't ONLY read sci-fi or fantasy), and this really seems to be the best thing I've stumbled across. There really appears to be a strong group here, and I'm really excited to jump in and start participating in this community.
Some of the books I've read so far this year parallel what you've been reading, so that's a nice coincidence. Here's my list for 2009, in no particular order, as of today:
The Graveyard Book
War of the Worlds
I, Robot
Neuromancer
Snow Crash
Starship Troopers
Soon I Will Be Invincible
I Am Legend
World War Z
The Diamond Age
...plus many more outside the genres of sci-fi and fantasy.
Nice to meet you all! Can't wait to start reading along!
Hi, everyone. I'm Gabriel, an accounting student at Metro State College of Denver. I'm more into fantasy than the SciFi. Currently reading Unseen Academicals, slowly, between exams. As soon as the semester's done, I'm going to catch up on my Iain Banks. I have Transition and Whit, or Isis Amongst the Unsaved both waiting in the wings. But first I have to survive the semester.
Hi everyone,I was born in 1952 and exposed to the Ace Doubles and Perry Rhodan novels in the early 1970's. Being a slow reader and with not a lot of SFF books at the local library and on very low income I read mostly Marvel comic books for much of the 1970's and early 1980's. I read 2-6 books/year the 1980's and 1990's but it wasn't until this decade did I catch the full time reading bug. I think this was due to the lack of SFF on TV and I had a bit more of a disposable income. I now special order SFF books from my book store and over the last 4 years or so buy a book/week. Drives my wife nuts hehehe, she's not a reader unfortunately.
My favorite authors though are Clifford D Simak, James P Hogan, C.S. Freidman, Piers Anthony, Robert J. Sawyer, Margret Weise, C.J Cherryh, Elizabeth Haydon, Julie C. Czernada, William King and others.
Nice group and I hope to make some friends and my blog is
here
Malin wrote: "Tee wrote: "Malin wrote: "Hi, I'm Malin from Sweden and am both a reader and a writer of sci-fi/fantasy. Nowadays it's been mostly writing, but I've done a lot of reading 'in my past' (sounds a bit..."Hi Malin,
Thank you for the pointers. At first I found that having a pen in hand make the words flow and would go back to edit for grammar and spelling later. Now that I'm more comfortable working at the computer I find it easier to do the composing and correcting for spelling at the same time. Still need to go back for the grammar after the idea is out my head and onto the page.
Once I'm done with course work I'll try your suggestion about reviewers.
Thanks again,
Tee
I just stumbled on this site. I've been looking for a reliable sorce of book title for a while now.
I've read:
All of the potters
All of David Gemmell
Most of Feist, Edding, Salvator.
All of Terry Goodkind (except the last the voyage ones)
Most of Robin Hobb
Most of L.K. Hammilton (stoped when it went porn on me)
Jim butcher.
many more varied writers. I'm mainly into fantasy. My favorite writer, god rest his soul, is David gemmell. I Like Goodkind, but i swear i can smell his ego in the last few books. I just read Malazan, book of the fallen #1. And my current projects are P. Anthony and the Twilight books, I'm on eclipes.
Anyway if you want a good book ask and i'll give you a title. If you see a writer I must read please feel free to say hello and toss a title at me.
joe
Joe wrote: "I just stumbled on this site. I've been looking for a reliable sorce of book title for a while now. I've read:
All of the potters
All of David Gemmell
Most of Feist, Edding, Salvator.
All o..."
Hi Joe,
I ditched Hamilton for the same reason. Looks like we have read in the same circles. Try the Blood Books by Tanya Huff. Also the first set of the Pern (Dragon Flight, etc.) novels by Anne McCaffrey are very good. You might also like the DragonLance Chronicles by Weiss and Hickman.
If you get wind of a good successor to the Dune series, give me a shout. I'm building a reading to-do list for the first month after graduation.
Thanks in advance,
Tee
sadly i've never read the dune book. I tried the first one and just couldn't get into it. Someone told me once they get really good later in the series. Have you read the Butcher Dresdin files books? I'll have to look for huff. I've read the pern stuff a long time ago i think, and the origional Dragon lance series and a few of the associated stories.
Hey everybody. My name is Graham, I'm 33, married with a baby on the way, and I live in Chester, a small city between Liverpool and North Wales in the UK. Favourite SF/Fantasy authors at the moment include China Mieville, Graham Joyce and Gene Wolfe. I get a bit turned off by the long epic series fantasy novels, preferring writers who can say what they need to in one volume.
Hi Graham. You I'm guessing you read all of the david Gemmell books then. Since he was a UK writer. If not he definitely meats your criterea of being a 1 boook per story writer.
Joe wrote: "Hi Graham. You I'm guessing you read all of the david Gemmell books then. Since he was a UK writer. If not he definitely meats your criterea of being a 1 boook per story writer."
Yes, I've read many, if not all, of his books. I actually wrote to him when I was 14 or so, and he was kind enough to write back. A lovely man, I was very saddened to hear of his death.
Graham wrote: "Hey everybody. My name is Graham, I'm 33, married with a baby on the way, and I live in Chester, a small city between Liverpool and North Wales in the UK. Favourite SF/Fantasy authors at the moment..."
Hi! I got friends in Chester and have visited twice! Lovely town. Welcome, and thanks for sharing my dislike of series! ;)
Hello. I'm Joshua, 30 married with a ton of kids. I'm US ARMY currently in Hawaii. I enjoy sci-fi fantasy books the longer the series the better. My favorite authors are Tad Williams, Token, Stephen King and Terry Brooks. I do most of my reading while away from home kids and life being quite demanding. I joined to get ideas of new authors to read. I have an 11 year old who has read more books than I can count. I need ideas for him also.
Joe wrote: "sadly i've never read the dune book. I tried the first one and just couldn't get into it. Someone told me once they get really good later in the series. Have you read the Butcher Dresdin files book..."Dune gets intense about the middle of the first book. If you have seen the mini series - the books are way better. I've read every Dresden file I could get access to. The whole urban wizard thing is outstanding and then for him to have a vampire sibling-good reading that.
Tee
Hi-ho. 43 year old attorney in Texas who should be working right now...Stanford Law degree (I was impressed with the place until they accepted me as a student). Father of a pack of daughters, all of whom have been raised to genuflect when "Ender's Game" is mentioned.
First turned on to Sci-Fi by Star Trek reruns and a mangled copy of the "Illustrated Man" that my brother gave to me.
Fantasy was introduced to me by a 5th grade teacher who read the Hobbit to us in his native Irish brogue. I still can't read Tolkein without hearing his voice.
I go easy on "hard" science fiction, especially if it starts to remind me of any classes that I tried to avoid as a history major in college. Don't spend 10 pages telling me how the inversion warp drive works...just tell me what the bad guy blew up.
I dig Card; I think that Terry Brooks best days are behind him; and I laugh to the point of bleeding lungs with Terry Pratchett. Scalzi is a new discovery for me. Gaiman's a freaking genius. And the Dresden Files are the best popcorn reading on the planet.
Always looking for good book suggestions, as opposed to just picking something off of the shelf at B&N based on cover art.
Welcome to the group Monk. I always perk up when I hear the word "attorney" as I've worked in/for the legal industry for more than two decades now. Your post had me laughing. Looking forward to your reviews.
My name is Marge and I'm crazy about Dune and Lord of the Rings. I also love English literature, historical fiction, true crime and some mysteries and action novels. But I just love Dune and the Lord of the Rings! These books take me away from the crazy world we live in and I can pretend I'm having adventures far, far away!
Monk wrote: "Hi-ho. 43 year old attorney in Texas who should be working right now...Stanford Law degree (I was impressed with the place until they accepted me as a student). Father of a pack of daughters, all..."
Hi Monk. You have a very happy turn of phrase! I'm still morning that more Dresden didn't make it to DVD. You have go to read "God's Demon" by Wayne Barlowe. Totally agree with your assessment of Terry Brooks - he is so done. Even Raymond Fiest and Brain Herbert are growing cold.
You have a unique voice - don't stop writing.
Tee
Marge wrote: "My name is Marge and I'm crazy about Dune and Lord of the Rings. I also love English literature, historical fiction, true crime and some mysteries and action novels. But I just love Dune and the ..."
Hi Marge,
You have the cutest dog! I first read Dune back in the 60's when my reading level really wasn't up to the task (LOL)and have been revisiting it ever since. Dune and She (H. Rider Haggard)are my favorite books. Lord of the Rings Movies are sadly a bit better than the books, but I've still enjoyed reading them. I'm also into anything about Anne Boleyn (but that's a different book group). Don't know where I'm going to get my new Dune fix, but are we not overdue for another movie in the series?
Tee
Tee wrote: "Monk wrote: "Hi-ho. 43 year old attorney in Texas who should be working right now...Stanford Law degree (I was impressed with the place until they accepted me as a student). Father of a pack of d..."
Thanks for the recommendation, Tee. I'll check it out sometime down the road and let you know what I think.
Please do the same and alert me of any titles that include magic, wizards, high adventure, dragons and dark lords.
Tee
Monk wrote: "Hi-ho. 43 year old attorney in Texas who should be working right now...Stanford Law degree (I was impressed with the place until they accepted me as a student). Father of a pack of daughters, all..."Hi Monk - 'just tell me what the bad guy blew up' - run, do not walk, and get R. M. Meluch's Myriad series. Fast pace, great characters, funny as heck, and you definitely know what the bad guy blew up. - The first book is The Myriad
Janny wrote: "Monk wrote: "Hi-ho. 43 year old attorney in Texas who should be working right now...Stanford Law degree (I was impressed with the place until they accepted me as a student). Father of a pack of d..."
I'm on it like stink on a monkey. Thanks!
Hi I'm Valjeanne Jeffers (smile). Sorry I'm late but I was finishing up my MA in psychology and moving down south to be near my wonderful family. I'm a goodreads author and SF/fantasy nut:).
Here are some of my SF favorite books:
Wild Seed
Clay's Ark
Imago
The Good House
My Soul to Keep
Otherland (4 book series)
Dawn
The Gunslinger/Drawing of the Three
The Talisman
IT
Valjeanne wrote: "Hi I'm Valjeanne Jeffers (smile). Sorry I'm late but I was finishing up my MA in psychology and moving down south to be near my wonderful family. I'm a goodreads author and SF/fantasy nut:).Her..."
Hi Valjeanne! Nice to meet another author/psychologist who mixes dreams with reality:)
Wendy
Valjeanne wrote: "Hi I'm Valjeanne Jeffers (smile). Sorry I'm late but I was finishing up my MA in psychology and moving down south to be near my wonderful family. I'm a goodreads author and SF/fantasy nut:).Her..."
Hi Valjeanne,
We share a reading of "My Soul to Keep" and The Gunslinger. Have you read "The Living Blood" by Due?
Or anything by Brandon Massey? "ThunderLand" was a good read.
Hi Tee :) Yes I love My Soul to Keep -- I love what Due does with her characters! I've heard of Brandon Massey, but I've never read any of his titles, I'll have to check him out -:)
Valjeanne wrote: "Hi Tee :) Yes I love My Soul to Keep -- I love what Due does with her characters! I've heard of Brandon Massey, but I've never read any of his titles, I'll have to check him out -:)"Brandon has a website:http://brandonmassey.com/
He writes in the same tradition as Due. There are not enough African American's writing in this genre!
Tee
Co-sign! But check out this website:
www.blacksciencefictionsociety.com. Anyone can join but a bunch of writers of color hang out there -:)
Oh and here are my websites -:):
http://immortaldream.ning.com (just for readers) &
http://www.blackscififantasy24.ning.com
Valjeanne wrote: "Co-sign! But check out this website:
www.blacksciencefictionsociety.com. Anyone can join but a bunch of writers of color hang out there -:)"
HelloMy name is Lorne. I'm an Zoologist & Ecologist by training and a statistician by trade, who writes eco-fantasy on the side. Lately I've had a thing for animal fantasy, whether aimed at a young audience (e.g. Silverwing, Rat's of NIMH), or allegory/philosopy wrapped in an animal-fantasy guise (think Watership Down or even Life of Pi). The common theme for me is nature and its description--especially through fiction. Fiction engages me, and carries me to those places where non-fiction dares not tread (or else bores me en route). Suggestions for reading would be much appreciated!
I'm pleased to meet you all.
Kind Regards
Lorne Rothman, PhD
Author,
Southcrop Forest
Hello, My name is paul i Live in seattle Iwas born in '68 and grew up on star trek,heinlein, burroughs etc. Am a fan of sci-fi more than fantasy, I left the genre for a long time and now am back into it reading old and new titles.
sci-fi/fantasy I've read this year:
I, Robot by Asimov
The Martian Chronicles-Bradbury
Darkover Landfall-Bradley
Babel'17-Delany
Stone of Tears-Goodkind
The Giver-Lowry
Snow Crash
The Diamond Age-Stephenson
The Time Machine
The Invisible Man-Wells
2 I wish I hadn't read:
Twilight-Meyer
The Dangerous Days of Daniel X-Patterson
plus alot of non scifi books
this looks like a interesting group happy reading
Hello all! My name is Lindsay, I'm 23 (and a half, I guess, since today's my half birthday...:S), and I live in Salt Lake City, Utah. I'm currently attending the University of Utah as an Anthropology major, as well as working toward minors in Creative Writing, History, and Linguistics. Obviously I love words and people. I started reading very early on in my life, and have stayed ahead of the class in that regard ever since. It may have something to do with the hours spent at the library or the staying up all night to finish a book. I love books. But the genre that has always pulled me in has been fantasy. I've got loads more to say on the subject, but I'll refrain for now. In December of 2006 I had an epiphany - I realized that by not having a comprehensive list of all the books I've read, I'll forget them all. So January 2007 I started listing all the books, authors, and amount of pages (just for fun, to see how many pages I read a year). Well, that first year I got up to 31,107 pages of just recreational reading. So I've continued to keep track, and I absolutely love to look back over the list and remind myself of books that I spent hours with and the deserve to be remembered. I've read some fabulous books this past year, and I'll list them all here, but I'm still in the middle of several others plus textbooks. I highly recommend most of these books. Ask if you want to know more about any of them. Green Rider - Kristen Britain
Good Omens - Neil Gaiman & Terry Pratchett (I try to read this every single year because I love it so much)
The Blade Itself - Joe Abercrombie
Fortune and Fate - Sharon Shinn
Conf. of a Jane Austen Addict - Laurie Viera Rigler
Before They are Hanged - Joe Abercrombie
The Book of Lost Things - John Connolly
The Poe Shadow - Matthew Pearl
Interred With Their Bones - Jennifer Lee Carrell
Fragile Things - Neil Gaiman
The Graveyard Book - Neil Gaiman
The Likeness - Tana French
Pick Me Up - Zoe Rice
The Life of Pi - Yann Martel
Elantris - Brandon Sanderson
Why Mermaids Sing - C.S. Harris
The Book of Air and Shadows - Michael Gruber
Silent in the Grave - Deanna Raybourn
Where Serpents Sleep - C.S. Harris
A Fatal Waltz - Tasha Alexander
A Poisoned Season - Tasha Alexander
Luck in the Shadows - Lynn Flewelling
The Lightning Thief - Rick Riordan
Silent in the Sanctuary - Deanna Raybourn
Silent on the Moor - Deanna Raybourn
Little Brother - Cory Doctorow
Rachel's Holiday - Marian Keyes
The Last Argument of Kings - Joe Abercrombie
Naamah's Kiss - Jacqueline Carey
The Lovely Bones - Alice Sebold
Mistborn - Brandon Sanderson
The Well of Ascension - Brandon Sanderson
The Hero of Ages - Brandon Sanderson
Dictee - Theresa Hak Kyung Cha
The Genius - Jesse Kellerman
Bewitching Season - Marissa Doyle
The Gods of Amyrantha - Jennifer Fallon
The Lost Symbol - Dan Brown
Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories - Agatha Christie
Company of Liars - Karen Maitland
The Pale Horse - Agatha Christie
They Do It With Mirrors - Agatha Christie
Currently savoring The Illustrated Man again. I can only read bits of Ray Bradbury at a time because each story forces me to step back and admire his word-craft and genius. I'll stop typing now, but I look forward to discussions in this group!
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