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?

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

I finished it last night, and it wasn't nearly as good as the other two McHughs. The start was great, but then it was just a thriller, with very little underwater feels after the promising start. So much bank talk and running away from gansters, which is what I was trying to get away from (Jade City). I'm not sorry I read it, but I wouldn't recommend it to anyone, unless they're on a mission to read all of McHugh.

Since my last posting I finished:
So Far, So Good, by Ursula K. Le Guin (her last book of poetry) - So good!
Space Atlas, by Tom Jackson, which is a pretty detailed non-Fiction - beautiful!
STEAM stories - The BackYard Build - Engineering a Kids book. So-So.
Littlest Lovecraft - The Horror Collection - I love all of the books in this series: Lovecraft stories as graphic novels in verse!
I love holidays! I can get so much reading in!



I admit it is a weakness in myself, but I have a really hard time reading poetry. I prefer it sung.
Might have to give the LeGuin a look though.


by N.K. Jemisin. I read the Broken Earth trilogy in summer and I didn’t understand/know what they are doing(sigh). I felt a bit happy that I might slightly know what is going on now:) I was also quite shocked for the introduction>_< And I also want to read The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin. I don’t quite like the previous two books. Maybe this one might be different:)

I am a big time Rush and Jethro Tull fan, their songs generally tell stories. So...Poetry, sung. LOL.

by N.K. Jemisin. I read the Broken Earth trilogy in summer and I didn’t understand/know what they are doing(sigh). I felt a bit happy th..."
I found The Left Hand of Darkness is one of the top ten books on my reading list. I am not sure that I have read any of the books that came before it.

by N.K. Jemisin. I read the Broken Earth trilogy in summer and I didn’t understand/know what they are doing(sigh). I felt a ..."
I'm a bit scary because everyone's review is so high. I want to be on the same page too:)

Snow White, Blood Red
Black Thorn, White Rose
Hotel du Lac
The Debut
Also read Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich. Very interesting and makes a good case.

It is a stand-alone. It is in a shared universe, so there are common races and technology, etc., but the books can be read in any order.

Dread Nation - I never really got into zombie. However, I am liking the alternative history. And having Bahni Turpin as narrator is a great plus.
The Well of Ascension. Just discovered the wonderful Brandon Sanderson! I love how he writes for a young female lead.
Why the Germans? Why the Jews? Learning how such a cultured evolved people could succumb to the evils of extreme anti-semitism.

Year One & Of Blood and Bone - Turned out to be a fun Dystopian/PNR series. Year One was a multi-faceted setup for the plot. Steady story progress, solid characters and easy to imagine settings. Some cool things about making due in a world turned upside down.
Of Blood & Bone - I really liked this book! One of the weaknesses for the first book was all the people you get to know and setting up their various roles. That's done. Good foundation. The story focuses on Fallon in this book and it's like an old school quest story. Well done. I liked it. I decided to ignore the flagrant "magic wand" aspect of the story and enjoy the character driven plot.
Rolling in the Deep & Into the Drowning Deep - Finally got around to this series and I enjoyed it a lot! It was like watching Jurassic Park or Deep Blue Sea movies. There were fun marine science stuff, cool creepy crawler merpeople and a diverse cast. I would call this light horror because death & destruction happen but it's not done in a overly graphic manner. It's more like an adventure story that you know will go awry.

What is "PNR" ?

I bailed on NOS4A2. Too many kids getting hurt, not enough woo woo spooky stuff early on for me to be able to stand it.
Ka: Dar Oakley in the Ruin of Ymr was really atmospheric and ambitious, I think it was just a little above my head. Which makes sense, Dar is a bird and I am not.
The Sorcerer of the Wildeeps was a lot of fun, I really liked what it did, except for that confounded ambiguous ending! I hate that!
Future Home of the Living God was one of the worst books I've ever read all the way through. I should have bailed. It isn't anything about what it says in the blurb, which does it no favors.
Slaughterhouse-Five was as brilliant as everyone says. Bleak AF and man am I done reading WW2 stories as a general rule, but this was a great one.
China Mountain Zhang was totally not what I expected. I loved it. So much deeper than I anticipated from the blurb. That's why I love this group, we find so many great things I wouldn't normally try on my own!
Ka: Dar Oakley in the Ruin of Ymr was really atmospheric and ambitious, I think it was just a little above my head. Which makes sense, Dar is a bird and I am not.
The Sorcerer of the Wildeeps was a lot of fun, I really liked what it did, except for that confounded ambiguous ending! I hate that!
Future Home of the Living God was one of the worst books I've ever read all the way through. I should have bailed. It isn't anything about what it says in the blurb, which does it no favors.
Slaughterhouse-Five was as brilliant as everyone says. Bleak AF and man am I done reading WW2 stories as a general rule, but this was a great one.
China Mountain Zhang was totally not what I expected. I loved it. So much deeper than I anticipated from the blurb. That's why I love this group, we find so many great things I wouldn't normally try on my own!

I'm going to spend the last days of 2018 reading Wundersmith: The Calling of Morrigan Crow and Tor.com short fiction. Typical of me to finally get into short fiction mode with under a week of the year left.
Allison wrote: "China Mountain Zhang was totally not what I expected. I loved it. So much deeper than I anticipated from the blurb. That's why I love this group, we find so many great things I wouldn't normally try on my own!"
And I love that I get to sneak some of my favorite books onto the group shelf so that I can read everyone's wonderful comments about them!

Re: And Then There Were N-One, that was one of my favorite reads from 2018, such a fascinating premise and well written with humor and humanity.
Christopher wrote: "Re: Slaughterhouse Five, I read it over 20 years ago, but I still think about the description of how the Tralfamadorians describe their perception of time relative to humans — humans experience tim..."
Yes! I said in my review it's one of my all time favorite uses of "4th dimension/time travel" tropes. Really quite clever and approachable.
Yes! I said in my review it's one of my all time favorite uses of "4th dimension/time travel" tropes. Really quite clever and approachable.

by N.K. Jemisin. I read the Broken Earth trilogy in summer and I didn’t understand/know what they are doing(sigh)..."
Oh, I can see where that would add some intimidation. For me I just mark them the way I see them and call it good. So the down side of that is I give much lower ratings than most other people unless it feel new and fresh or if it is very well done.
Although I do have a higher tolerance for average tham most. LOL
Hope you enjoy it.

It is a stand-alone. It is in a s..."
Ah, that makes sense.

Dread Nation - I never really got into zombie. However, I am liking the alternative history. And having Bahni Turpin as narrator is a great plus.
The Well of Ascension. Just discovered ..."
I have an issue with Zombie stories as well. So few of them have a Necromancer. Just seems wrong to have undead with no Necromancer.
Just sayin
Dj wrote: "Marie wrote: "I'm reading
Dread Nation - I never really got into zombie. However, I am liking the alternative history. And having Bahni Turpin as narrator is a great plus.
The Well of Ascension. Ju..."
lolll
Dread Nation - I never really got into zombie. However, I am liking the alternative history. And having Bahni Turpin as narrator is a great plus.
The Well of Ascension. Ju..."
lolll

So you're not a believer in the disease theory of zombification ;)

So you're not a believer in the disease theory of ..."
Oh I blieve in it well enough, I just find it boring. LOL.
I don't want to much reality invading my fiction.
Of course I don't want to much fiction invading my Military History either. So it seem fair.

So you're not a believer in the disease theory of ..."
ooo, I loved World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War and I normally hate zombie books


The Prefect - This may be my first book by Reynolds. I like it! I got it on a whim from the library and pleasantly surprised to find a detective story set in the future. Almost to the end and curious to see how the story will wrap up.


It was really down to earth with the spin being Conlan's a shapeshifter baby. I loved the baby talk, reactions, etc. The food conversation: (view spoiler) Hahahahha
I would adore reading a short story about Kate & Curran and a house full of rascals. Can you imagine the chaos? Bwahahaha

May I recommend The Cage (free from Tor.com!), which has a ridiculously adorable shifter baby? There's some more serious stuff as well, but I thought the baby was definitely the star of the story.




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

Ha, now I too want to read a book about toddler shapeshifters...

That looks fine. Have TBR'd it.


I'm going to get one more book in for 2018 today. Then I'm calling it done! =D

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

I've been reading through Aliette de Bodard's Xuya stories, and started On a Red Station, Drifting today. Like other series I've read by the author, I am really drawn in by her world-building and characters. I'm planning on finishing Red Station tonight, but I'll be continuing to read in this universe into the new year.
I read a couple of books from the group shelf recently: Slaughterhouse-Five was a re-read, but as excellent as ever. There were a lot of things that I liked about Broken Monsters, but also some really frustrating things (my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...). And I've started A Canticle for Leibowitz, but don't anticipate finishing until next year.
Other recent reads:
The Price of Salt: Deservedly a classic. I enjoyed reading this a lot.
Baker Thief: I wanted this to be so much better than it was (my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...)
The Thief: A lot of fun! I plan on continuing the series.
Super Bass and «Légendaire.»: Finished up my read through the Wildeeps universe with these very enjoyable short stories.
Other things I'm currently reading:
Kiss of the Fur Queen: This has been really interesting so far. I'm hoping to finish up today or tomorrow - this should be the last book I finish this year.
Provenance: Started this early so I'd have time for the audiobook, since I love Adjoa Andoh as a narrator.
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Books mentioned in this topic
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Authors mentioned in this topic
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