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?

Now that I've finished the monthly group reads, back to free-read time!
I'm almost done with a A Closed and Common Orbit and I'm really loving it. I think Chambers learned a lot from her first book and has made an even sweeter, more tightly woven story.
About to start The Rage of Dragons, which I'm excited to get to.
I'm almost done with a A Closed and Common Orbit and I'm really loving it. I think Chambers learned a lot from her first book and has made an even sweeter, more tightly woven story.
About to start The Rage of Dragons, which I'm excited to get to.

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

I'm not great at articulating why I love something, but the authors did a great job of making the multitude of settings across time and space accessible to readers. The pacing was perfect for me and I loved the main characters. It's awesome to stumble across an amazing read (probably a new favorite) completely unexpectedly.


It's good to see somebody having read this one. So I can ask: I gave up at around 17 %, cause I couldn't get into it. Is the beginning typical for the rest of the story? I'm not sure if I should try again or If am I not the right audience if I didn't get hooked so far?




I'm also struggling my way through The Eye of the World by Robert Jordan. I am committed to finishing it! I will finish it no matter how dense and slow-paced it is! Ha.

The Time Machine = completed
The Invisible Man = completed
The Island of Doctor Moreau = haven't started
The War of the Worlds = almost completed
The First Men in the Moon - haven't started
The first 4 are 1890s and the last one is 1900s
ETA: they're all surprisingly readable and fast paced unlike Jules Verne. I've enjoyed the two I've completed and the one I'm working on so far


Peters not Peterson's but yes, those books are good. The author also wrote as Barbara Michaels

I 'm also trying to finish The Eye of the World. I just can't relate to the charakters...


Since I'm perhaps the only one who've never read The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood, I corrected this shortcoming while crossing off one more book from the group shelf. I loved the dystopian setting and the narration structure.
And one more time something Anna wrote made me pick up a book off the beaten mainstream path. And one more time it was a hit! (Anna, I'm sorry, but I will be stalking you ;) ) Terra Nullius by Claire G. Coleman was perfectly down my alley. Yet, as warned, it is difficult to tell why without taking away from the reading pleasure.
I've already bought the second book by this author. - so, folks still unsure what to vote for in the current poll - this one's a good choice.

(Sidenote: This is a great case study for how YA tends to be as much about the gender of the author as it is about the actual book. This one has so many of the YA fantasy elements [coming of age narrative, orphaned kid gets powerful, school/training setting, romance subplot] that I imagine it would be categorized YA if its author weren't a man.)
Carolyn, I really loved Closed and Common Orbit! Just the sort of thing I needed to get me out of my bad reading mood.
Stratos, you are very much not alone with that impression of Wheel of Time...gosh that was a lot of words to read for I'm not quite sure what!
Krystal, I look forward to your thoughts. I absolutely loved Daughter of the Forest, but I feel that I haven't connected as much with Marillier's books since the original trilogy. I would love to feel that again though!
Gah, Gabi, that's such a tantalizing review of Terra! I've changed my vote!
Nooo...I just started Rage of Dragons and I'm already a bit peeved at it. I really want to fall in love with an epic fantasy again gotdammit!
Stratos, you are very much not alone with that impression of Wheel of Time...gosh that was a lot of words to read for I'm not quite sure what!
Krystal, I look forward to your thoughts. I absolutely loved Daughter of the Forest, but I feel that I haven't connected as much with Marillier's books since the original trilogy. I would love to feel that again though!
Gah, Gabi, that's such a tantalizing review of Terra! I've changed my vote!
Nooo...I just started Rage of Dragons and I'm already a bit peeved at it. I really want to fall in love with an epic fantasy again gotdammit!

I re-read The Oathbound with some friends, and discovered that it's full of rape and misogyny, and just generally unpleasant, which has turned me off Mercedes Lackey for a while.
I enjoyed but wasn't blown away by both Foundryside and Strange the Dreamer - I didn't enjoy the writing style in either (although they are very different) and I was cranky about the romances. Another unexpected overlap: moths.
I did really like The Forgotten Beasts of Eld, which is a gorgeous fairy tale. It reminded me a lot of Le Guin's Wizard of Earthsea.

Halfway through Heroine Complex and loving it. Anything that references The Heroic Trio so much automatically wins my heart. It's just a super fun read in general.
I have about a third left on my audio for The Eye of the World. I forgot quite how much travelling and stopping at every single inn they did. Also how much people say "light" and "blood and ashes". But I still love it anyways.
Almost done with The Way of Kings. I think I'm about 80% of the way through. I already have the next book on the way so I can jump right into it.

And I'm sold! XD
Allison wrote: "Krystal, I look forward to your thoughts. I absolutely loved Daughter of the Forest ..."
This will be my first book of hers, as Daughter of the Forest has been sitting, neglected, on my shelf for a while! I'm hoping this one will entice me to read it.
Okay, I think I need a few books that have zero sexual assault in them to stop being so grouchy. Until then, I might read like I have moods. I've given up my present plan for Rage of Dragons (not because of the content, I just wasn't feeling it and I dislike trying new things when I'm not in a place to give it a fair shake) and have switched to No Time to Spare: Thinking About What Matters. Figure, I'll drop the genre entirely and spend time with a woman I admire, and see what the world looks like afterwards.
If, however, I come here saying I'm about to start a book this month for something other than group reads or BRs and it has stuff in it you think might turn me back into Grumplestiltskin, please say so! I won't blame you, and you likely won't dissuade me from *ever* reading it, just protecting me from throwing my iPad onto the ground.
If, however, I come here saying I'm about to start a book this month for something other than group reads or BRs and it has stuff in it you think might turn me back into Grumplestiltskin, please say so! I won't blame you, and you likely won't dissuade me from *ever* reading it, just protecting me from throwing my iPad onto the ground.

Me too! Part of the problem, actually, was that I had really high expectations, so the excessive exposition and draggy pace at the beginning were a big disappointment and probably colored my feelings about the (much better) end of the book. I would still like to read the next one, though.


Anna wrote: "I was looking at the list of books I'm thinking of picking up soonish from the group shelf. I have it narrowed down, but I just wanted to say what a tragedy it is that I can't read [book:Bezüglich ..."
*instinctively starts drawing a bath*
*instinctively starts drawing a bath*

Gabi wrote: "XD! Easier way is to get the German version and look at the cover while reading the English one."
Lesson one, Anna, this is the sort of German practicality the language may impose upon your thinking. ;-D
Also, Gabi, there's something somewhat risque about the idea of getting a book to look at while you read a somewhat different book.
Lesson one, Anna, this is the sort of German practicality the language may impose upon your thinking. ;-D
Also, Gabi, there's something somewhat risque about the idea of getting a book to look at while you read a somewhat different book.

I guess I could get the audiobook and gaze at the German cover while I listen?



and
Foxglove Summer, fifth in a series by Ben Aaronovitch - reviewed - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2963683666.

That sounds like the perfect summer beach read. Oh. Wait...
But the first one is currently a free download so why not? Thanks.

Thanks for the tip Raucous. I just got books 1-3 free on Amazon.


I know it is hurricane season, but I thought I'd go on vacation to the Caribbean.

I am hoping I haven't read this. I think not, but with Michener, I never know.

I thought I was done after Texas, but I've read other tales of the Caribbean (pirates and the Brit Navy), got a Kindle deal on Caribbean, so will give it a shot.
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