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What Else Are You Reading? > What Else Are You Reading? April 2013

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message 101: by Nancy (new)

Nancy O'Toole (temporaryworlds) | 135 comments I'm reading Zoo City by Lauren Beukes, and I'm listening to Frost Burned by Patricia Briggs. I'm pretty happy with both.


message 102: by Glaiza (new)

Glaiza | 16 comments Just finished Deathless by Catherynne Valente. It was a brilliant mix of Russian folklore and alternative history. In the middle of American Gods by Neil Gaiman. Zoo City and King Rat are next on my list.


message 103: by Misti (new)

Misti (spookster5) | 549 comments I just finished The Human Division series last night. I waited until they were all available before starting them. Then I was able to zip right through them.

Now I'm reading Heartless.


message 104: by Rob, Roberator (new)

Rob (robzak) | 7205 comments Mod
I finished Dragonflight this past weekend (My Review).

I will be starting The Wise Man's Fear with some friends in a few days.


message 105: by A.L. (new)

A.L. Butcher (alb2012) | 314 comments Just finished Shadow of the Wraith which was pretty good anmd just started The Dragon Within as I have only read a couple of pages I can't yet comment.

I watched the hobbit the other day so I might have to re-read LOTR next:)


message 106: by Josh (new)

Josh Morgan (bookbum9) | 9 comments Just finished The Word for World Is Forest for a English Lit class it was a good book very interesting read for me since I haven't read a lot of Scfi. I might check out some of Ursula K. Le Guin other books.


message 107: by Dharmakirti (new)

Dharmakirti | 942 comments Glaiza wrote: "Just finished Deathless by Catherynne Valente. It was a brilliant mix of Russian folklore and alternative history. In the middle of American Gods by Neil Gaiman. Zoo City and King Rat are next on m..."


The only Catherynne Valente I've managed to read so far is The Habitation of the Blessed and it rocked my world. I'm anxious to check out more work by Ms. Valente.


message 108: by Glaiza (last edited Apr 16, 2013 08:38PM) (new)

Glaiza | 16 comments Valente's In the Night Garden is my favourite book by her. Inspired by the Arabian nights but with her own mythology, all the stories are connected and layered. Palimpsest is more surreal, dark and twisted so some readers can find it a bit bizarre. I'll have to check out The Habitation of the Blessed one day.


message 109: by Glaiza (new)

Glaiza | 16 comments Josh wrote: "Just finished The Word for World Is Forest for a English Lit class it was a good book very interesting read for me since I haven't read a lot of Scfi. I might check out some of Ursula K. Le Guin ot..."

I still have to check out Le Guin's sci fi works. I've only read The Left Hand of Darkness and her fantasy series The Earthsea Trilogy which I really liked when I was younger. For sci-fi, I heard The Lathe of Heaven is really good.


message 110: by Pioup (new)

Pioup I've just finished The Woman in White which was OK, but too long, I rushed at the end so I could pick up a new book.
And this morning I started A Natural History of Dragons, possibly because the cover looks good (ahem). Next I'll have to read either The Blind Assassin or Le Déchronologue for a book club session I've been invited to (my first irl book club thing!)


message 111: by Sandi (new)

Sandi (sandikal) | 1212 comments Pioup, The Blind Assassin is an excellent read.

I'm in a reading funk right now. I'm going to start listening to The Gone-away World today, but I can't seem to find a print book that holds my attention. I think I just have too many to choose from.


message 112: by Mike (new)

Mike | 8 comments I just finished The Great North Road.
I liked it a lot. It is Looong, but kept my interest. Portions seemed more than a little contrived, but not enough to spoil the story.


message 113: by Noomninam (new)

Noomninam Listening to "Century Rain" by Alistair Reynolds, with outstanding performance by John Lee. This book has everything, from noir to nanotech, and the writing is so clean -- double-plus recommended. Also reading e-book of "Humility Garden" by Felicity Savage, which I bought when it came out (90s?) and never got around to. Also excellent. And on the bedside table, an advance copy of "The Shining Girls" by Lauren Beukes -- very promising.


message 114: by Sky (new)

Sky Corbelli | 352 comments Just finished The Black Prism, going to move on to Thread Slivers today.


message 115: by Neil (new)

Neil | 165 comments I have just picked up The Man Who Folded Himself after it was mentioned in the topic about books you love no-one else knows about. Seemed pretty interesting.


message 116: by Pioup (new)

Pioup Sandi wrote: "Pioup, The Blind Assassin is an excellent read.

Good to know! I wanted to read another book by Atwood for a while so I'm happy with the club choice.


message 117: by William (new)

William Harlan (raunwynn) | 172 comments The Apocalypse Whenever group is reading Dead of Eve this month.
I complained but was secretly looking forward to it.


message 118: by Sandi (new)

Sandi (sandikal) | 1212 comments William wrote: "The Apocalypse Whenever group is reading Dead of Eve this month.
I complained but was secretly looking forward to it."


There's a group just for apocalyptic fiction?


message 119: by William (new)

William Harlan (raunwynn) | 172 comments Sandi wrote: "There's a group just for apocalyptic fiction?"

Here they are: Apocalypse Whenever


message 120: by Carolina (new)

Carolina Sarah wrote: "Finished Don Quixote aided somewhat by having my internet go kaput for about a week. It might honestly have become one of my most favourite books. I was genuinely in tears when it came to the end. ..."

Did you read the unabridged version? I read the "short" version and then tried the unabridged one in original Castilian and just couldn't do it! If you did kudos to you!!!


message 121: by Geoff (new)

Geoff (geoffgreer) Kasher in the Rye: The True Tale of a White Boy from Oakland Who Became a Drug Addict, Criminal, Mental Patient, and Then Turned 16 by Moshe Kasher

and

The King's Blood by Daniel Abraham

I've resorted to having two books on the go for when my tablet loses power. That way I can just switch to a DTE.


message 122: by Walter (new)

Walter Spence (walterspence) | 707 comments Reading Marvel Comics: The Untold Story. Remember so many of the names from the early days. And seeing how so many of those writers and artists were treated, as regards their creative work, the appeal of being self-published has become even more obvious.


message 123: by Robyn (new)

Robyn (i_am_robyn) | 188 comments Just finished Pirate Cinema. 4/5 stars.

My review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...


message 124: by Carolina (new)

Carolina Sarah wrote: "I will say that it didn't feel abridged when every new character introduced went off on a 10 page monologue detailing every event in their lives... "

I can totally understand you, me I gave up at the first monologue when he is left alone in the mountains...


message 125: by Melissa (new)

Melissa | 50 comments I am enjoyingLife After Life


message 126: by Neil (new)

Neil | 165 comments Got a bit behind on the Discworld series so I've started up Unseen Academicals.


message 127: by Jo (new)

Jo | 4 comments Aside from Dragonflight, I read The Eye of the World. I just finished Promise of Blood, which was a pleasant surprise. My bathroom reading is Casino Royale, though I haven't made much progress. I just started The Great Hunt and am picking back up Empire in Black and Gold. A fairly busy month for me.


message 128: by Paul (new)

Paul (latepaul) Melissa wrote: "I am enjoying Life After Life"

I'm also reading this.


message 129: by Brian (new)

Brian Pepple (bpepple) | 3 comments Just started reading The Stupidest Angel: A Heartwarming Tale of Christmas Terror, and once I'm finished with that I'll head on to The Magicians and Small Favor.


message 130: by Ronel (new)

Ronel | 8 comments I am not as imaginative. I only have A Game of Thrones, and The Heroes on my reading list for April.


message 131: by John (new)

John Bullock (beagrie) | 120 comments I just picked up a book called Bedlam by Christopher Brookmyre, having never heard of either. I popped into Waterstones (first time in a physical book store for a few years) and bought the book solely based on the scribbled recommendation of a Waterstones employee that was pinned to the shelf (the recommendation, not the employee).

I asked the staff if I could come back and complain if I didn't like the book. She just smiled nervously, unsure if I was being serious or not.

I wasn't.


message 132: by Jay (new)

Jay Adams (jburdadams) Finished Old Man's War, 1/2 way through Starship Troopers and started The Ghost Brigades. Great stuff!


message 133: by Pickle (new)

Pickle | 192 comments just finished Iron Council (New Crobuzon, #3) by China Miéville and it was terrible, im due to read Railsea by China Miéville before i hand it back to the library but think i will read The Hutt Gambit (Star Wars The Han Solo Trilogy, #2) by A.C. Crispin to cheer me up after that last book.

I also might read Gateway by Frederik Pohl & Mars by Ben Bova


message 134: by Kate (new)

Kate O'Hanlon (kateohanlon) | 778 comments Almost finished The Best of All Possible Worlds, which was on sale in the Kindle store a few weeks ago. I's enjoying it a lot more than I expected to and am reminded that I should read more sf set beyond Earth.


message 135: by Ian (new)

Ian Roberts | 143 comments Just finished The Way of Kings on audible - despite its flaws its still one of the most ambitious things I've read for a long time and overall is Epic!! Just hope it doesnt trail off the way Mistborn did after the first book. By the way, 45 hours audiobook for 1 credit?? Great value......

Also finished The Daylight War this week, another series that started great and seems to be struggling to stay at the same level - was Ok but not up to the very high standard of the first 2 books somehow


message 136: by Rob, Roberator (new)

Rob (robzak) | 7205 comments Mod
Ian wrote: " Just hope it doesnt trail off the way Mistborn did after the first book"

I'm curious if you finished the trilogy. I'll grant the second book isn't as good as the first, especially the first half of it.

The third book and the conclusion on the other hand were excellent in my opinion. I was very impressed with how he tied everything together.


message 137: by Ian (new)

Ian Roberts | 143 comments Yes, I finished it. I think on Mistborn the concepts/worldbuilding were great but then the story itself got pretty weak and full of holes. The way Sanderson writes politics feels like a kindergarten version compared to eg GRRM and I had some problems with it, just was a bit disappointing after a great start.


message 138: by Chad (new)

Chad Huckabaa | 14 comments Been working on The First Law Trilogy by Joe Abercrombie , about 1/3 of the way through book 2. Also reading Quick Fixes - tales of Repairman Jack by F. Paul Wilson . I just recently discovered Joe Abercrombie and am enjoying his stuff immensely.


message 139: by Martin (new)

Martin Mcgoey | 2 comments Just started on The Robert E. Howard Omnibus for the Kindle. $1.99 isn't bad for 2000 pages. I've never read any Conan the Barbarian stories before, but so far I'm really enjoying it. Very George R.R. Martin-esque.


message 140: by Dara (new)

Dara (cmdrdara) | 2702 comments Finished Assassin's Apprentice last night. Really liked it but thought the end was a little confused and rushed. Will likely pick the second book up this weekend. Now getting a jump on Wool Omnibus for May.


message 141: by Tamahome (last edited Apr 24, 2013 09:22AM) (new)

Tamahome | 7234 comments Coming back to Peter F. Hamilton's anthology Manhattan in Reverse, after podcaster Luke Burrage just discussed it. The title story wasn't that good, but Demon Trap was excellent. They both feature Paula Myo from the Commonwealth books, nicely relifed I might ad. :)


message 142: by Joseph (new)

Joseph | 2433 comments Finished The Door to Saturn and am about to start Thief's Covenant by Ari Marmell.


message 143: by Jeff (new)

Jeff Namadan (jnamadan) | 218 comments Just finished the Whispersync tag-team on The Way of Kings. Started a little slow for me and really didn't get into it until about 1/2 way in. Then I wanted to read/listen. Enjoyed it but kinda fried since it was sooooo long. Still have 1 audible credit for April so I'm going thru the thread for ideas. Looking for something a little lighter but fun. Perhaps something along the lines of a Dresden Files read perhaps or something completely outside of the S&L genre.


message 144: by Sandi (new)

Sandi (sandikal) | 1212 comments Jeff wrote: "Just finished the Whispersync tag-team on The Way of Kings. Started a little slow for me and really didn't get into it until about 1/2 way in. Then I wanted to read/listen. Enjoyed it but kinda fri..."

If you want light and fun, try The Iron Druid Chronicles by Kevin Hearne. It a book that's really enhanced by the audio production. The narrator does such an awesome job. Hearne posted on Facebook today that the e-book of the first installment, Hounded, is available as an ebook for $2.99 right now, but I still would recommend the audiobook. It's very fun.


message 145: by LegalKimchi (new)

LegalKimchi | 112 comments Feast for crows (yeah, i am catching up) I just finished Wise Man's fear (it was good... not great). I am still wondering what is up next for me.


message 146: by Jeff (new)

Jeff Namadan (jnamadan) | 218 comments Sandi wrote: "Jeff wrote: "If you want light and fun, try The Iron Druid Chronicles by Kevin Hearne. ..."

Yeah from what I've seen around, I'm going to give the Hounded audiobook a whirl. Thanks for the recommendation!


message 147: by Sandi (new)

Sandi (sandikal) | 1212 comments I just finished listening to The Gone-Away World. I'm debating between giving it four or five stars. It's kind of like The World According to Garp meets Catch-22 meets Slaughterhouse-Five, meets.... Well, you get the idea. It's absurd yet thoughtful. The narrator was excellent too.

I'm now listening to Open Season, the first Joe Pickett mystery by C.J. Box. I've read a couple of his stand-alones and enjoyed them. I chose it because I should be able to finish it tomorrow and not carry anything over the weekend.

In text, I'm almost done with The Killing Moon. I'm also still working on A Clash of Kings. When I need a change of pace, I'm reading American Rose: A Nation Laid Bare: The Life and Times of Gypsy Rose Lee. I don't read many biographies, but this one is pretty interesting.


message 148: by Laura (new)

Laura (conundrum44) | 109 comments I finished Foundation and Empire and I'm now half done with Throne of Jade.


message 149: by Nancy (new)

Nancy O'Toole (temporaryworlds) | 135 comments I'm halfway through Rae Carson's The Crown of Embers, the second book in her Fire and Thorns series. I am REALLY enjoying it so far. I especially like the setting, which has an attractive Spanish air to it.


message 150: by Tamahome (new)

Tamahome | 7234 comments Peter F. Hamilton's political short story 'Footvote' has some amusing 'new rules' for a new world order, from Manhattan in Reverse.


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