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 2019?
This year I have read solar lottery by philip k dick, and red planet blues. I am currently reading six wakes and sorry to bother you.
Trike wrote: "MadProfessah wrote: "@raucous I am with you on NINEFOX GAMBIT I abandoned it around page 5 or so in the first chapter. I don’t regret it but very puzzled by all the love it gets."
Later in the boo..."
I actually didn't figure out the world until book 2. The joy is in learning who these characters are and a pretty stellar bit of twistery that changed how I perceived events in the first 2/3 of the book. 1/3 I was confused and in it just for the cool sounding words. Second third I wanted to understand what was going on. Final third I realized what was happening wasn't as important as why, and by then I was in love with Jedao.
Later in the boo..."
I actually didn't figure out the world until book 2. The joy is in learning who these characters are and a pretty stellar bit of twistery that changed how I perceived events in the first 2/3 of the book. 1/3 I was confused and in it just for the cool sounding words. Second third I wanted to understand what was going on. Final third I realized what was happening wasn't as important as why, and by then I was in love with Jedao.
Brandon wrote: "This year I have read solar lottery by philip k dick, and red planet blues. I am currently reading six wakes and sorry to bother you."
Is sorry to bother you a book? If not, no bother!! Let us know what you think of Six Wakes, that was a group read in 2017.
Is sorry to bother you a book? If not, no bother!! Let us know what you think of Six Wakes, that was a group read in 2017.

That sums it up well for me except I am pretty sure I still don't have it figured out, I just liked the weird world.
Hank wrote: "Allison wrote: "I actually didn't figure out the world until book 2. The joy is in learning who these characters are and a pretty stellar bit of twistery that changed how I perceived events in the ..."
Haha! I thought about clarifying that I am not sure I actually understand it all, but then thought that sounded scary. Book 2 was more linear, so I could piece together how the important-to-the-story stuff worked, let's say it that way?
Haha! I thought about clarifying that I am not sure I actually understand it all, but then thought that sounded scary. Book 2 was more linear, so I could piece together how the important-to-the-story stuff worked, let's say it that way?

Besides other group reads, I finished two other books this month:
The Hallowed Hunt 4 stars
Exit Strategy 5 stars
Exit Strategy was probably the weakest of the Murderbot novellas, but I loved the series enough that even the weakest chapter still earns a 5.

I'm just starting A People's Future of the United States: Speculative Fiction from 25 Extraordinary Writers, and I stayed up later than I meant to last night reading the first few stories. Which is a good sign as I usually have trouble with short stories. Also still plugging away on Stars Uncharted. It's a good book when I'm listening, it's just not one that I feel super motivated to pick back up and I find myself reading other things first.


And now I have to consider if I start late to the Frankenstein party and as a result will be completely late for the A Stranger in Olondria BR, or just stick to short stories and get back on track with my BRs ...

I loved it from the beginning as well! I tend to love books that just completely drop you in it and let you figure it out as you go.

In other news I ordered Library at Mount Char off the net yesterday. Also ordered The Invisible Library. I usually don't do that but I've been looking for them for over 12 months and enough is enough. Can't even find torrents of them. Oh and I joined a library. Very library orientated yesterday. Since I've pretty much ended up permanently moved here to the beach I thought I'd better join the local library. Got 3 books out. Dark Matter by Blake Crouch, Dumplin' and C is for Corpse. Wide range of genres. And I reserved The Immortalists by Chloe Benjamin.

The Immortalists was interesting. I especially loved the first half of the book. I'd be curious to know your thoughts.
Also - yay for libraries!

This sounds great, Sarah. Magical realism is something I've come to very recently, but the couple I've read, I liked a lot. Onto the "want to read" it goes!

This sounds great, Sarah. Magical realism ..."
I hope you love it as much as I did! It's one of those books you want to shout from the rooftops and shove into every reader's hand just to get them to look at it.


It drives me CRAZY when libraries put all of their fiction in one place!! It makes it too difficult to browse and unfortunately both of my libraries are like that. The result is I have to know what I want before I go in and almost never end up just browsing. Well- I do browse but usually it just gives me something to add to the TBR for next time since what I wanted has already been reserved and picked up for that trip.

Lately I've been starting books and liking them and I put them down at the end of the day and I don't go back to them. Which is annoying. I don't know.....my attention span just isn't what it used to be and what I felt like today I won't feel like again for who knows how long. Oh well. I am determined to finish more books this month. We'll see how that goes for me eh

Yeah, I'd be interested to hear as well. I picked The Raven Tower for my hyped new read this week, so I'll be waiting a bit for Priory.
I am really enjoying Raven so far. Since it's narrated by Adjoa Andoh, I decided to listen to it, which was a good decision because I think the second person narration is easier for me to deal with in audio. And there's some strong folklore/mythology elements that it feels really fitting to hear spoken aloud rather than read.
Jordan wrote: "Rachel wrote: "Re: Ninefox- am I then the only one who loved it from the get-go?"
I loved it from the beginning as well! I tend to love books that just completely drop you in it and let you figure..."
Me too! I had already read Conservation of Shadows before starting it (which I don't necessarily recommend, as there is at least one story in there that contains spoilers for the trilogy, but I didn't realize that at the time), which may have prepared me a bit for Ninefox Gambit, but I often enjoy starting stories without much idea of what is happening.
Sarah wrote: "Yes- I’m currently searching for it too. I’m weird in that I usually only buy physical copies of books I’ve already read, and this one is good enough to own."
This is definitely me too. I guess it partly comes from being spoiled by having an excellent library, but I just don't really like buying books that I'm not pretty confident I'll re-read.

But I mean, if you like your books to have second halves, maybe give this one a miss.

No, I did too. But then I was already a fan of the author. Plus, I had already read the prequel short story, "The Battle of Candle Arc" beforehand.

There's a fascinating amount of Phillip K. Dick-ish conceptuality to this, I think, and I also enjoy the offhand references to Asimov's Foundation trilogy.
Listening to it, of course, because that seems to be a lot of what I do nowadays.
In digital print, I'm also a few chapters in to Ancillary Sword, but just like Justice, I'm having a hard time jumping in. I didn't find Provenance to be this hard to start, so I wonder what exactly it is about the Imperal Radch trilogy that's doing it to me. I am looking forward to breaking out of the beginning into what is sure to be a massively cool space opera, though.

That makes three for Sixth Sense already. Go me! (I'm not expecting the streak to stay this strong from here on, unfortunately)
Up next: Valor's Choice, Katanagatari 1, chipping away at The Iliad of Homer

I'm slowly working through A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe. It's not bad although the NASCAR vibe beginning kind of threw me off. I'm only on chapter 4 but it seems decently paced.
My light nighttime read is And Then Came Paulette and my audiobook is Leviathan Wakes.

I'm planning on reading it later this month!

I finished Scorpio, Volume 1: Scorpio & Scorpio Rising which was very interesting dealing with parallel worlds and time travel and aliens and humans and popes and queens


That's why I generally don't ever accept a facebook sign in offer. It is bad enough Amazon and Netflix thinks they can tell me what I want. And sometimes they are right.

Movies? The..."
I don't mind that so much as long as they keep the feel and the intention. Ready Player One was like that. The book was amazing, but in parts would have made an awful movie if they had stayed to that image, instead they changed almost everything while still keeping true to the feel and the intent. I was most impressed.
To bad, it usually doesn't work that way.

I really enjoyed the Miss Fisher series. I hope the modern version shows up on Netflix so I can give it a look. Will probably lose something with her not being quite as rebellious seeming as she was placed in the '20s.

I think that Martin got distracted and Rothfuss lost his train of thought.

Really? I read the Amber series when I first went into the Army and then tried to read it again about twenty years ago. The second time I found that I didn't care if any of the characters died, and found myself wishing at times that the main character would so that the story could come to an end. Only Random seemed to have any redeemable qualities about him.
Now because I will admit that I am not the easiest person to please and everyone has different views I would be interested in hearing what you enjoyed about it.
I will not judge. After all, every opinion has worth unless you're a political pundit. Then your opinion is just trash. LOL.


Along with reading Les Misérables, I really, really need to find a pleasurable read...

Same. Opening Atlantis was both dumb and dull and when Robin Hobb murdered the puppy in Assassin's Apprentice it immediately ruined my day. She can go straight to Hell as far as I’m concerned. The comic book Sidekick, Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 was also grim, so I feel like I’ve been wallowing in shit all week.

The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon
Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid
The Scholar by Dervla McTiernan
The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie
The Three-Body Problem by Liu Cixin
The Grace of Kings by Ken Liu
The Other Wife by Michael Robotham
The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton
I'm actually supposed to be buying new clothes for the upcoming Winter season but I can't find anything I like so I'm buying books.

Currently reading A People's Future of the United States: Speculative Fiction from 25 Extraordinary Writers and Rogue Protocol. I can't get enough of Murderbot. <3
Lol Jacqueline! Books will keep you warm, too :D Great list!
Jordan, yay!! I'm so glad you liked it, and to hear that Raven Tower is good. I'd seen some mixed feelings. I really can't wait to get back to Murderbot either!!
I just finished Black Leopard, Red Wolf and...eesh. So many great things but I don't think it was cooked long enough.
Jordan, yay!! I'm so glad you liked it, and to hear that Raven Tower is good. I'd seen some mixed feelings. I really can't wait to get back to Murderbot either!!
I just finished Black Leopard, Red Wolf and...eesh. So many great things but I don't think it was cooked long enough.


I think for the movie format it was a perfect choice to up the action, but I also liked that more of the characters were involved in solving the problems that came up. Seemed less of a one-person show that was.
I did have a small problem with everyone being in the same city, took away the international feel, but I can see why it was easier for the movie to do it that way.

(view spoiler)

It’s flintlock fantasy and there’s a heavy focus on military action. Sometimes I enjoy that and sometimes I don’t, but this was a case where I enjoyed it pretty consistently. I thought the author wrote it well and managed to keep it interesting and easy to follow, and also kept the focus on the characters throughout. I liked the characters very much. There are a couple pretty strong female POV characters, one of which doesn’t show up until the second book. There’s also a good bit of politics, at least from the second book onward. There’s some magic and the main plot revolves around that, but it isn’t a huge presence in the series because most of the people in the fictional world don’t believe magic is real and the people who do find out about it keep it quiet.
Anyway, I enjoyed this series and I thought the ending was satisfying. Below are my longer reviews:
Book 1
Short story (The Penitent Damned)
Book 2
Novella (The Shadow of Elysium)
Book 3
Book 4
Book 5
Next up, I’m planning to read Deathless by Catherynne M. Valente. I tried her work for the first time in Fall 2017 with In the Night Garden and its sequel and I really enjoyed those.

[spoilers removed]"
So people say. In which case, the way she did it was just as despicable, because she wants us to believe the dog is dead. They have a psychic bond, the old guy tells someone to take the pup away and kill it, and then Hobb writes, “There was a sudden flash of red pain, and then Nosy was gone.”
How. Is. That. Better?
Saving abused animals is what I do, and this video is quite literally the least traumatic experience I’ve had in animal rescue: https://youtu.be/cGV-Fzo5jQk (It has a happy ending. Mostly.)

I still love the books immensely though.

April 2019 SciFi poll
April 2019 Fantasy poll
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Later in the book the weirdness clicks into place, and I suspect the reason people like it is because they have that satisfying frisson of figuring something out and thereby feeling smart. It didn’t save the book for me, but I can see why that feeling of “Oh! I get it!” would boost enjoyment for many people.