SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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What Else Are You Reading?
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What Else Are You Reading in 2018?

I'm with you.
To quote my own review there were 'cargo bays full of exposition and some incredibly clumsy writing.' Also my head hurt from the author bashing me over the head with her 'themes'.

I’m on the second story now, but won’t have time to read today as I’m getting two guinea pigs with a friend after work :) But I can see there are two more Murderbot Diaries to look forward to after this, yay!


NARRATOR: And that was the moment Dawn realized that was the phrase she would be associated with until the end of time.


What did you think, Gabi???
Gabi wrote: "Just finished "The Obelisk Gate", now on to "The Stone Sky". Is there a thread for this? I couldn't find one (but I must admit that I'm a social media dummy, so the odds are that I just did a wrong..."
We haven't read Stone Sky together unfortunately. If you'd like to start a thread for it in the "What Else Are You Reading?" Folder, you're welcome to!
We haven't read Stone Sky together unfortunately. If you'd like to start a thread for it in the "What Else Are You Reading?" Folder, you're welcome to!

Obelisk Gate discussions
The search isn't working at the moment, that's why you couldn't find it.
edit: Unless you meant Stone Sky? In which case Allison already answered your question :)

Anna, thanks a lot! So relieved that it's not my inability (for once ;) ), yes, I was looking for an Obelisk Gate thread.

My wording was misleading, indeed.

Cold War: An International History
Satchmo Blows Up the World: Jazz Ambassadors Play the Cold War
Cinematic Cold War: The American and Soviet Struggle for Hearts and Minds
1965: The Most Revolutionary Year in Music
Fall-Out Shelters for the Human Spirit: American Art and the Cold War


NARRATOR: And that was the moment Dawn realized that was the phrase she would be associated with until the end of time."
I'm just glad to be remembered for *something* :3

Anyway... It's neither particularly good or bad, so far. I'm at page 106 and we're still at the set-up phase, so I'm mostly just waiting for things to get going.
(I'm so impatient anymore. Like... I don't need 150 pages of set-up to get me to what I'd already guessed from the blurb.)

The House with a Clock in Its Walls by John Bellairs


Same for me. I loved A Closed and Common Orbit, though, and am looking forward to the third one coming out in a couple weeks.



That series is fantastic.


volume 2 of the Louise Cooper series, Inferno, and my review - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2449661955.
volume 3 of the Indigo series by Louise Cooper - Infanta - and reviewed it - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2456839594.
volume 4 Nocturne which was a lot better than the others to date - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2456857195.
and a break from the Indigo series, Cuckoo Song by Frances Hardinge - reviewed - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2449554413.


volume 2 of the Louise Cooper series, Inferno, and my review - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show....
volume 3 of the Indigo series by Loui..."
wish that series was available on Kindle....
I'm still going through The Complete Wheel of Time and am currently on Book 12 The Gathering Storm

Is there a group discussion on it at all? I didn’t know whether the search function was working...
Started The Stone Sky last night but I was tired and didn’t make much progress. I’m deeply curious to see how everything in Jemisin’s profoundly ambitious story resolves. And also sad that it’s the last of her Broken Earth books. I’ve loved them so.

But now I have the problem of what to choose next, cause I will certainly unconsciously compare it with the Broken Earth trilogy.
With my boys I'm rereading the whole of Terry Pratchett's work. (first time in German, since they don't understand English. Which is a bit strange, cause I think Pratchett fully works only in his native language).
Inbetween I will start with re-reading the complete short stories of Theodore Sturgeon. This author was my gate to SFF when I was around 15 years old, and I'm curious if after all these years I still feel the same awe that I felt back then.
As for the next novel … I read about so many recommendations in the threads here in this group, that I already have quite a list for future reads. I guess I'll join the buddy read of the Tamír Triad. I started reading those books ages ago, but I stopped in the middle of the second one, and I can't quite remember why I didn't read on.
Thanks to this group for rekindle my love for reading.

There is such a good atmosphere here in this group. It's a pleasure to be here.

Go break the tie! We can't have a tie, we don't know what to do if we have a tie!





Station Eleven: liked it a lot, especially its structure, but ultimately it felt a bit too "light" and left me slightly dissatisfied. Four stars
Disgrace by JM Coetzee: Fantastic book. Love Coetzee's style. Short but meaty. 4.5 stars
The Remains of the Day: Ishiguro is so elegant and understated. This book is close to perfection. Five stars
Waiting for the Barbarians: More Coetzee. Again a short novel but with a lot to digest. Still thinking of this book several weeks after I finished it. 4.5 stars
Never Mind: St Aubry is a great writer but this novel is filled to the brim with loathsome characters and ultimately pointless. 2 stars
Borne: I looooved VanderMeer's Southern Reach trilogy but was rather disappointed by this. Pacing issues and rather light plot made this a mere three star read.
The Lighthouse: Weird, creepy little book which left me rather puzzled. Still not sure what to make of it: 3.5 stars.
Spiderlight: Needed something light after all this earnest stuff. Found this thanks to a recommendation in this thread. Fun but forgettable: three stars
The Tea Master and the Detective: Nope, not my cup of tea: 2.5 stars.
Sing, Unburied, Sing: Fantastic book. Contrary to many reviewers I liked the fantastic elements. 4.5 stars
Currently reading: City of Bones: Not enjoying this. 70% done and started skim-reading at around 50%. 2 stars I guess unless the end saves it (which I doubt).
Still undecided what to read next. On my list are Weaveworld, Grey Souls, Perdido Street Station, The Promise of the Child, The Child Finder, and The Rift. Will probably have to roll a dice.

Now on to The Bone Doll's Twin.

My review of Down Among the Sticks and Bones by Seanan McGuire

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

Gabi wrote: "Now on to The Bone Doll's Twin."
Hope to see you in the buddy read discussion!

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

I blazed through The Stone Sky and decided to head back to Pern. Even though I didn’t love the first two books in the series, I was encouraged by blogs and folks online to keep going, that it gets better as Anne McCaffrey improves as a writer. So I started Dragonsong and in the early going I can tell she’s grown a great deal. I wanted something a little lighter after the power and intensity of The Broken Earth trilogy. That trilogy is one of the very best series I’ve ever read; I couldn’t recommend it highly enough.
Prophet, I agree with you on Station Eleven! So good and just a liiittle off somehow.
I really must just buy my copy of Bone Doll's Twin. But i'm'a pout about it.
I hope your next book is better, Jess!
Anthony, that is a decent palate cleanser for Broken Earth :) I read the Pern books years and years ago. It sounds like maybe they don't hold up extremely well, but I do think her storytelling and world were fantastic.
I really must just buy my copy of Bone Doll's Twin. But i'm'a pout about it.
I hope your next book is better, Jess!
Anthony, that is a decent palate cleanser for Broken Earth :) I read the Pern books years and years ago. It sounds like maybe they don't hold up extremely well, but I do think her storytelling and world were fantastic.

I finished it this weekend, I thought it was entertaining, if perhaps not as fun as the first one. But still a nice read! Definitely looking forward to the next two Murderbot Diaries!
In the meantime my love for robots and AIs have been rekindled, so I read Adrian Tchaikovsky's Dogs of War over the weekend. Very gripping and interesting story of Rex, a modified dog designed for military use who is cut lose from its master and finds itself needing to make decisions it wasn't designed for.
Right now I'm reading Isaac Asimov who I for some reason never read. I'm over halfway through his Robot Dreams and loving every moment! Like with Ursula Le Guin this is the kind of philosophical, science heavy scifi I love! Between the two I'll have enough reading material for the rest of the year, haha.
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I'm completely off topic here, sorry, but this reminds me of how almost all the stories I grew up hearing/reading are so depressing and da..."
Should stop reading Disney Stories. LOL. Every kid seems to be an orphan.