Miévillians discussion
General
>
The Weird Mess Hall & Chit-chat Centre



Sure — but you and I are already on for Oryx & Crake, too!

Ha, I kept thinking: "I wonder where GR's cut-off point is with polls, in case I post the poll after all that work and I get that dreaded message: "There has been a problem saving your comment" #.#
Derek (Guilty of thoughtcrime) wrote: "Traveller wrote: "And Derek, if Fahrenheit 451 doesn't come in, since we both want to do it, why don't we in any case? ;) "
Sure — but you and I are already on for Oryx & Crake, too!"
Oh, my golly... yes I do remember that I've been wanting to read that one for the longest time as well. In actual fact, I think I started it up twice, but wasn't grabbed in, so a group discussion might be a good whip to get me through the first bit. :P



So shout if you're interested.

I'd seen the promos, and it does look good. I've only tried to read one VanderMeer short story, and it was too long...
But I'm still interested in doing VanderMeer either as short fiction or long.


Well, yes, short stories and quite long-ish ones that approach the size of novellas almost. One of the stories in the book was a bit boring, and now I'm wondering which one it was that Derek is referring to.


No, it was something on either tor.com or Clarkesworld. The central character was named Jeff VanderMeer, stranded in some place on the Aral Sea iirc (which would make it fantasy, as there are no places on the Aral Sea).
Ah, here it is: Errata
and it was Lake Baikal. With a penguin.

Then if you feel it's getting boring for you, you could always skip out at that point. There's actually 3 stories that I liked for different reasons, and one of them I'd very much like to discuss with this group.
What we could also do-we could alternate CM's short stories with Vandermeer's short stories. Then whoever has read the CM stories can 'lead' them in, or introduce them to us, and then I'll do the Vandermeer story again the next time, and so on. Or how does that sound?
Btw, thanks for the link, Derek!

That's my take. Traveler, if any of those fit in with VanderMeer, I would trust your judgment on reading order. If anyone wants to know more, check out the wikipedia entry at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Looking_.... But fair warning, plot synopses are fairly spoiler-laden.




(This tends to happen to me when I see bargains at used bookstores)

Last person posting in the other thread, being Allen, said: My daughter's 10 ... She's watched a few old Who episodes with me, and likes Rose but Matt Smith's her favorite. Especially dinosaurs on a spaceship! Could be that we've corrupted her with old Land of the Lost episodes, not to mention Wonder Woman :)
And I think she's going to gravitate to sci-fi cause she's started reading Bruce Coville books now.
Haven't heard of Da Vinci's Demons. Will look it up. And the wife and I went through a Tudors binge too. And Sherlock. And Downton Abbey. Just some great TV being produced - and I'm tempted to say the best stuff is either British made or independent of the networks. Primarily because they put money into the characters, in my opinion.
and
Funny thing though. I never got to watch Doctor Who as a kid. It only aired on PBS and in the mountains we could pull in signals for the three major networks. So, I'm having to catch up on the back stories for the Daleks and Cybermen - thanks to Hulu and Netflix. Not that I mind. Like living a wished-for childhood :)
Okay, I have now started watching Vikings too. I never tried it before because i thought the violence would be too much for me, and it is true that it is very violent, but i guess it kinda fit in with what really happened back then; these really were very violent people.... I'm not sure if they were quite this violent, but it is certainly possible, i suppose.
Just a note to the people with kids: Da Vinci's Demons and Vikings are NOT for kids. Da Vinci is not only violent, but it also plays out in a very, er... sophisticated society in which pretty much everything went...


I've watched the first 3 episodes so far and I'm quite impressed with the attention to detail. I think they're trying to portray Viking life as realistically as possible within the frame of a storyline.


I can't help wondering what Norwegians think of the series....
Oh, and I see now that the story is indeed based on the sagas about the main character of the series.



I thought this would be quite fitting for Mievillians:

MERRY CHRISTMAS, EVERYONE!


anybody read it yet?


Also, The Last Days of New Paris has come out since, and looks more interesting.



and then of course swept up in the incomprehensible

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...-..."
Cool! :D

Very happy to be a member of this group. The Bas-Lag trilogy is very dear to my heart, I myself want to re-read Perdido Street Station with this new map :)
If you catch any errors please comment as this map is currently in beta version. Someone already caught an error with the Skyrail passing over the river. I fixed it and advancing to version 0.5.1v.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Thank you all.
Books mentioned in this topic
This Census-Taker (other topics)This Census-Taker (other topics)
This Census-Taker (other topics)
The Last Days of New Paris (other topics)
House of Leaves (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jeff VanderMeer (other topics)Jeff VanderMeer (other topics)
Michael Moorcock (other topics)
I just read Fahrenheit 451 last year, after many years of boxing and moving it, and was truly surprised how much it moved me. I am not sure I will read it again so soon but I would love to join the discussion.
It has been probably 35-40 years since I read A Canticle for Leibowitz. A religious sub-genre sounds right to me. Am I remembering correctly?