Q&A with Josh Lanyon discussion
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What Are you Reading?
Josh wrote: "Calathea wrote: "Josh wrote: "Maybe in the book of the month club we should sometime do the Rifter series? Because I love it so much. "
How I about we do it for December? Rifter, Christmas Coda an..."
I love this idea, especially since it's a great incentive for me to get back to it. And I already have the full ebook set and the first two print books, so I'll order the third and be on board!
How I about we do it for December? Rifter, Christmas Coda an..."
I love this idea, especially since it's a great incentive for me to get back to it. And I already have the full ebook set and the first two print books, so I'll order the third and be on board!
I read Harry Potter along with my younger daughter (now 24). She grew up with the characters, graduated high school the same year the series ended. My older daughter had no interest until she and a cousin read the first book in French. : ) The books matter to me because of how we read them, from reading aloud to each other, to reading separately after the midnight sales' events with a living room full of their friends and cousins. We agreed that the epilogue was awful. Watching it was almost more awful. Anyway, we've enjoyed lots of discussions about the author's and filmmakers' choice over the years.
I've got
on pre-order and I'm reading
.
I've got



You're doubtless right, I was skimming by the last couple of books.
I'm in a massive book slump. I'm 3 for 3 on anticipated books that I have taken zero enjoyment from. I need to jazz myself up before The Ace Of Skulls comes out because I really don't want to ruin that for myself by being grumpy. Anyone got a sure thing for a book slump?

You're doubtless right, I was skimming by the last couple of books.
I'm in a massive book slump. I'm 3 for 3 on anticipated b..."
I would recommend your excessively enjoyable book (which I just finished last week), but I don't know if that will help you. :)
I just finished fellow fanyon Lou Harper's Dead in the Desert, very enjoyable sequel to Dead in L.A.. Very fun reads for those who like mysteries.
Besides the wonderful The Magpie Lord, I also finished recently the free online dystopian m/m novel Esperanza. I thought it was well done and creative, albeit a little grim for me. (Not a grim ending though--no worries there.) I had never read Eve Ocotillo before, and I was very impressed with her writing. (I'm kind of shocked that book is still free online.)
I can't remember if I already recc-ed the free LHNB stories The Lion and the Crow (medieval historical m/m) or the The Lodestar of Ys (high fantasy m/m). Both were great reads.



That's no good, I already know what happens. :(
(Thanks, really glad you liked it!)
Those look like good recs, thanks! Will load up the Kindle and hopefully bootstrap out of this slump. There's loads of things I want to read, I just can't seem to get my head in the right place at the moment. Onset of winter and dark days, or something.


Eve was here on the thread for a while.
I warmly recommend her

Susinok wrote: "Calathea wrote: "I'm going to buy and read Fall Hard by JL Merrow tomorrow. It will be my reward for the work-related stress I have to survive tomorrow. :)"
Mine is pre-ordered. Can't wait!
(Almo..."
Whale you air from Oklahoma, ain't ye?
Mine is pre-ordered. Can't wait!
(Almo..."
Whale you air from Oklahoma, ain't ye?
Becky wrote: "Valerie wrote: "Becky wrote: "Right now I'm reading The Magpie Lord by K.J. Charles. I keep seeing people raving about it. Only 15% into it so far, but it's a great start! I think I'm going to real..."
Yes! this is my problem with everyone in M/M using the same narrators. Ack.
Yes! this is my problem with everyone in M/M using the same narrators. Ack.
KC wrote: "This week i'm reading Whitley Gray's suspense/mystery High Concept, which i find intriguing, and also Sara Gran's mystery Claire DeWitt and the City of the Dead which i'm really enjoying. Next, i'l..."
I love Sara Gran.
I love Sara Gran.
Charming wrote: "K.J. wrote: "The thing I hated most about the Harry Potter epilogue was... well, hands up who wishes they were married to their first crush right now? Ginny Weasley had literally no life whatsoever..."
I didn't get the Ginny thing. She seemed so utterly secondary all the time.
I guess that was the point.
I didn't get the Ginny thing. She seemed so utterly secondary all the time.
I guess that was the point.
ttg wrote: "K.J. wrote: "Charming wrote: "In Ginny's defense, she did have other boyfriends."
You're doubtless right, I was skimming by the last couple of books.
I'm in a massive book slump. I'm 3 for 3 on ..."
I'm so glad Oco finally released it. In fact, she wrote me a week or so ago and didn't even mention it!
You're doubtless right, I was skimming by the last couple of books.
I'm in a massive book slump. I'm 3 for 3 on ..."
I'm so glad Oco finally released it. In fact, she wrote me a week or so ago and didn't even mention it!
Na wrote: "I consider all epilogue as the Extended HEA. I view it more as a optional chapter to satisfy our reader unconscious feeling to have an HEA for every stories. I always imagine there were a wishful d..."
I struggle with the epilogue concept. I struggle with the ohmygodthisissosappy concept. But then reading Rifter has been a very good reminder to me that -- assuming you're halfway competent -- it's not overload to the reader. The reader can't get enough of this payoff. Given how hard they've had to work to get here...
I struggle with the epilogue concept. I struggle with the ohmygodthisissosappy concept. But then reading Rifter has been a very good reminder to me that -- assuming you're halfway competent -- it's not overload to the reader. The reader can't get enough of this payoff. Given how hard they've had to work to get here...
K.J. wrote: "Charming wrote: "In Ginny's defense, she did have other boyfriends."
You're doubtless right, I was skimming by the last couple of books.
I'm in a massive book slump. I'm 3 for 3 on anticipated b..."
Read in a COMPLETELY other genre. In fact, abandon fiction and go to non-fiction. I've been there a million times.
You're doubtless right, I was skimming by the last couple of books.
I'm in a massive book slump. I'm 3 for 3 on anticipated b..."
Read in a COMPLETELY other genre. In fact, abandon fiction and go to non-fiction. I've been there a million times.

You may be right. I've just boughtAgamemnon Frost and the Hollow Ships because I loved book 1, but if that doesn't float my boat in the first chapter, I'll get back to the gigantic history of the Plantagenets that I abandoned halfway through Edward I. There's a threat.


Oklahoma is where I LIVE, it's not where I'm FROM!!!
But the accent has rubbed off a bit. That was an honest typo, but made me laugh.

You've made it further than me in that series. For some reason I am stalled at New York to Dallas. I don't know why I can't get through that book.

Well, it's not an easy one to read if you were ever invested in the characters. Plus, since most of it is in Dallas, the secondary characters we love so much barely have any page time.

Threat? or treat? Sounds like a fun history to me.

Well, it's not an easy one to re..."
Yes, I think it is probably a combination of that and the fact that I listened to most of the series one after another so have reached saturation point. I seem to have this problem with most long series.

Kind of both, it is huge. The Plantagenets: The Warrior Kings and Queens Who Made England About 680pp. Very good, but Edward I has worn me out and there's the utterly miserable Edward II to come next. I recently read the magnificent She Wolves: The Women Who Ruled England Before Elizabeth, which has a huge section on Edward II's queen Isabella, and I'm not sure I can take that ghastly story again. (Especially as I've tickets coming up for Marlowe's Edward II at the National Theatre...)

Kind of both, it is huge. The Plantagenets: The Warrior Kings and Queens Who Made England About 680pp. Very good, but Edward I ..."
Sounds wonderful! Does anyone know if there's been m/m fiction set in Plantagenet England? I mean, there's Richard and others...

I regret to say that according to the Dan Jones book, Richard almost certainly wasn't gay and the stuff about him sharing a bed with the French king has been wrongly interpreted. Which doesn't stop me suddenly wanting to seek out Richard/Saladin fanfiction.

I regret to say that according to the Dan Jones book, ..."
Bah, historians frequently miss the mark. Trust me. ;) Oh, Richard/Saladin is a potential goldmine. Let us know if you find something worthwhile.

I'm glad you liked She-Wolves: The Women Who Ruled England Before Elizabeth! I have that book. I'm still with Matilda though, so I haven't gotten too far yet.


I started reading yesterday but fell asleep after the first few pages. Which has nothing to do with the story and everything with the long day I had. I can't wait to get back home and go on reading. :)
I sneaked in a few pages of
last night, knowing I couldn't officially start yet as I've promised to read some other things first. But I really enjoyed the start of it -- very intriguing. Looking forward to when I can really sit down and read.


Oh, wow... I have to read this one. Not only because of the location but I love the old Icelandic saga's. This era of history is so fascinating to me, this is the golden age, after 1400 the country went into isolation, a download spiral where life really was rather gloom, deceases, poverty, all kind of natures disasters and art or any kind of enjoying life was repressed.

Cool! I can't tell you how many books on Scandinavian history and literature from that era are on my shelves. I have a LOT! I've read Egil's Saga and Njal's Saga (twice!) and one or two more.
Then Beowulf a few times too.


I know I'm late to the party on this one, but Josh, you were asking for books like the Rifter (was it on this thread or another?) a few days ago. I would recommend anything by Carole Cummings. She a FABULOUS author, and her work is complex and completely immersive and well as fantasy/spec fiction. You might want to give her a try. I highly recommend
Guardian or Ghost. They're multi book series, but I can't say enough about them.

Me too!!
My grandfather and my great grandfather were total history nerds and very much into preserving old things/times. Plus I grew up in a place where one of those old stories took place so maybe there's no wonder I have this as a hobby. My most favorite thing is to bring our history alive to children.... because this is so much fun and so interesting if served right to kids it can lighten their enthusiasm throughout life.

History is a great favorite of mine. I especially love pre-history and studying how the cultures lived their lives. I was so envious of a friend of mine who actually got an archaeology degree. It wasn't available at the college I went to.

Bluesimplicity wrote: "Josh wrote: "I sneaked in a few pages of
last night, knowing I couldn't officially start yet as I've promised to read some other things first. But I really enjo..."
Okay! I'll make a note. The author is not familiar to me.

Okay! I'll make a note. The author is not familiar to me.

I recommend it!

I just finished it too, and second the recommendation! Very well written, good mystery and Iceland really comes alive in the book. And Viggo, so adorable :)


I really liked Viggo; I liked the fact that he wasn't stereotypical and that we slowly discover just how careful he is being with Paul and his amnesia. (Trying to avoid spoilers here!)

You're right, of course. I was probably just not in the mood for careful Vikings. ;-)

Nothing wrong with a Viking kitty ;)

I would love to see the Yggdrasil tattoo!


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In Ginny's defense, she did have other boyfriends.
But, yeah, the epilogue was sucky.