The Not a Book Club Club discussion
Random Musings..



If it was me buying books because I wanted a physical copy of books I consider the great works of the field I'd be looking for the following:
Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay.
The Inheritance Trilogy by N.K. Jemisin (that's the omnibus, they're also available individually.
Hyperion by Dan Simmons and it's sequels. The series is basically two duologies rather than a set series of four books.
Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie
I would expect most bookstores with a good SF&F range to have books on the above list.
However, looking at your "read" list I would say your tastes run to young adult, urban fantasy/paranormal romance and literary classics. To that end I would recommend Patricia Briggs with the Mercy Thompson books, Ilona Andrews with their Kate Daniels series, Rachel Caine's Morganville vampires series (YA UF/PA series) and anything by Terry Pratchett. You've already read lots of Gail Carriger who is the other one I'd recommend.

If it was me buying books because I wanted a phy..."
Same...I noticed you have the Sookie Stackhouse books on your favourites shelf, so the recommendations Lindsay has made, especially Patricia Briggs, I think you would be really happy with.

I just checked when The Hanging Tree (Peter Grant #6) comes out, as I'm re-reading the first 5 to be up to speed when it drops.
Hardback is out in November 2015, which gives me plenty of time. But the paperback is listed as April 2016. Does it always take this long between bindings?
I have the first 5 in paperback, so I kinda want them all the same (sorry, a tad OCD). I hardly ever get first editions, so don't know if 5 months is normal.
Geoff wrote: "I liked it a lot. And it's very well regarded amongst King fans."
Yeah. I think the best book he's written in awhile is Joyland and that it's far better than 11/22/63. I was kind of bored for awhile. But I know I'm in a minority there.
Yeah. I think the best book he's written in awhile is Joyland and that it's far better than 11/22/63. I was kind of bored for awhile. But I know I'm in a minority there.

Last year I used it to buy the first 6 Dresden books.
Not sure what I'll spend it on yet. The next 6 Dresdens? Some Sanderson? A missing Pratchett (if I've missed any)? My first ever Asimov?
Decisions, decisions...
I'm a tiny bit restricted because I have to work with what this German bookstore issuing the voucher has available in English (I don't read German translations if I can avoid them), but I think they're happy to order stuff.
Any suggestions?

Am dying to start on Games of Astraeus because I enjoyed the first one and it ended with a mean cliffhanger. It's a space adventure with a twist.
Would love some more Ryiria, but I already checked and they don't have them. Will have to get those elsewhere, probably on Kindle.
Also, I'm doing an "Author A-Z" challenge in another group, and I'm set on Asimov for my "A". Have not read him before, although I know some of his work through adaptations.

I'm currently reading The Fifth Season and loving it. I recommend any Jemisin, though. Also anything Robin Hobb.

I'm assuming you mean the Dreamblood series by N.K. Jemisin? I've read the first one, The Killing Moon and it was excellent. Not as good as her other stuff, but her other stuff is a pretty high bar. It does have a lot to say about the relationship of people and society towards death. In fact, that's by far the most interesting part of the book: the villain is fairly ordinary.
IIRC, this was her first novel written chronologically, although The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms was published first.


All the best wishes for you two - so many exciting things!

Her job is in San Francisco, about a 20 minute subway ride from where we live.
Also we bought a house that has an in-law downstairs because her mom will be moving in with us in October (because she needs a place to live but also because she will help take care of the baby so my wife didnt go to school for 15 years to get a phd and then just be a stay at home mom :P)
Also...Dual income rocks! I'm thinking of becoming a republican now....Just kidding!

Her job is in San Francisco, about a 20 minute subway ride from where we live.
Also we bought a hous..."
Heh. Some of the most educated women I know are currently stay-at-home moms - it's hard to predict how motherhood [eta: parenthood, shouldn't leave out the dads!] will change your goals/desires/etc.
So nice to be able to have the parental help, though - one of the things I noticed when I moved here was a) how expensive child care is and b) how many grandparents take care of their grandchildren. I grew up 3,000 miles away from mine, so it's a bit of an alien concept.





Suzanne wrote: "Rob...you should have told them there would be a test!"
I think one month I brought up the pick after about 2 hours and we talked about it for all of 2 minutes.
I think one month I brought up the pick after about 2 hours and we talked about it for all of 2 minutes.

You'll have to be my proxy for all the Rob meeting that's apparently going around.


Books mentioned in this topic
The Hanging Tree (other topics)Sword Song (other topics)
Dark is the Moon (other topics)
Foxglove Summer (other topics)
The Bands of Mourning (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Anthony Ryan (other topics)Miles Cameron (other topics)
Sebastien de Castell (other topics)
Sebastien de Castell (other topics)
Miles Cameron (other topics)
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Can't say I can think of anything like that Sree.