SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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When SciFi and Fantasy Get Old
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I find an alternating ratio of 1:1 or 2:1 keeps my SF/F reading feeling fresh as well, as reading 400+ page dense fantasy tomes can leave me feeling a bit burned out if they're not fantastic (no pun intended) reads.

However......I do take an occasional vacation from text oriented books and get out some of those coffee table books with all the lush, full color illustrations. Mostly non-fiction stuff; architecture, art, history of fashion design, collector guides for antiques, pottery, toys and vintage costume jewelry.
Probably the weirdest of my literary quirks is reproductions of antique floor plan books.........





And I slip a literary classic in their once in a while, just to 'expand my horizons'.

Sounds good - but the modern british detective trend is very dark and gritty, I am being severely put off some of it . . .
However: My own favourite is Stuart Pawson - find some of my reviews here
Nice light stuff, some nasty criminals but not much violence, mostly police procedural with gentle Yorkshire humour.
Sadly, Stuart Pawson died about a year ago. A great loss.


Sounds good - but the modern british detective trend is very dark and gritty, I am being severely put off some ..."
I'm talking Atkinson's Jackson Brody and Galbraithe's Cormoran Strike. Both of those I quite enjoy. (I liked older Agatha Christie, too, though I haven't read a ton.)
Thanks for the link, Alan! I'm excited to have more potential novels to read. I just enjoy the British voice, the dryness of it, plus the different vernacular.

That one's been on my list, Andrew. I'll bump them up! Thanks.

And where possible he uses real places . . .
I think it is in The Judas Sheep, quoting from memory "... some of the local place names seem to have lost some letters - and others have found them. I'm looking at Thorngumbald . . ."
Yes its a real place name, just east of Hull.
And in one of the last of his books, he mentions a pub called The Boar's Head, known locally as The Whore's Bed. The pub is real, and is in the real village described - but can't answer for how it is known locally.

Romance usually focuses more on characters than the other Non SF/F genres, I think, and I do like my characters. I also read character-focused mysteries and thrillers when I can get them.
I read non-fiction only in short bursts, and I tend to prefer articles or chapters to reading NF books in one go. Classics are usually ignored, as the combined forces of IRL forces, long TBR lists and short attention span work against me on those.
//prepares to be judged


After fi..."
In general due to my reading habit/addiction, or just odd way I go about it, I never need to change up, since I am in that process all the time.
I tried an experiment I heard about to increase my short term memory. Read a Chapter in a book, move to another book and read a chapter and keep going until you can't remember what you read in the first book.
So I can (and do) read 25 books at the same time of different types. Slows me down on finishing, but I tend to finish books in job lots. But I never say I am tired of anything. Just can't read one book start to end. So don't recommend this to anyone.

:D
I actually really like well-written romance (it's not any differen from well-written books in other genres- it mostly has to do with understanding the pros and cons of genre and working with instead of against it) and tend to rate them at par with well written SF/F. Everything is juged on "how hard did it hit my emotions"?
@Dj
I do a version of this too. Just not to the degree of 25 books- 10ish is max. By the time I reach 10 I abandon the re-reads or the ones I got bored of. I have a specific "half-read limbo" tag for it too.
It doesnt really help with the genre fatigue though. When I get tired halfway through a book I just add a new one from another genre to the currently reading pile.
Oh also- middle grade/kids books and comics help with genre fatigue. Once I finish something and talk about it, the fatigue settles down a little. So if I can finish something fast...





I have started listening to The Big Sleep on audio.
My favorite 19th c novels are:
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (read earlier this year)
The Woman in White (read last year)
Bleak House (read several years ago)
My favorite historical novel (written in the 1990s, set in 1849) is probably Freedom and Necessity by Steven Brust and Emma Bull. I know both of the authors have written fantasy, but I haven't read their other books.
Beth wrote: "My favorite historical novel (written in the 1990s, set in 1849) is probably Freedom and Necessity by Steven Brust and Emma Bull. I know both of the authors have written fantasy, but I haven't read their other books. "
An excellent book! I loved the characters so much!
An excellent book! I loved the characters so much!


Military History WWII

Urban Myth/Fantasy? (fun whatever it is)

True strange facts

Urban Fantasy

WWII military history

Russian Fairy Tale revisited?

Mice victorious...Fantasy

Science Fiction

WWII military history

Cozy Mystery

Supernatural Mystery

Classic?

Kids book
So the range is wide and sometimes the books change, they are different from the ones that I read at home, so I may get tried of a book, but generally not the genre.

Up next is Woman in the Nineteenth Century, my last book for the Back to the Classics challenge (hosted at Karen's Books and Chocolate).

Since I am also interested in science , I usually fit in some science journals as well and that is it.
Books mentioned in this topic
An Instance of the Fingerpost (other topics)Woman in the Nineteenth Century (other topics)
Arcadia (other topics)
Across the Fourwinds (other topics)
The Dark Prophecy (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Steven Brust (other topics)Iain Pears (other topics)
Emma Bull (other topics)
Ben Aaronovitch (other topics)
Ben Aaronovitch (other topics)
More...
It's being published with Luna Press in a couple of weeks from now - I'll zing you the link when it's available! "
Just checking back in to see if this is ready for reading. :-)