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?
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HeyT
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Oct 12, 2019 11:30AM

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HeyT wrote: "Took a detour into non-fiction and finished Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs?: Big Questions from Tiny Mortals About Death which was charming."
haha "charming" is a funny adjective to read after this title. What made it charming?
RJ, how timely!
Jacqueline, woof! You are more patient than I am! 200 pages to wait for it to get good?? I'm glad it was worth it though.
haha "charming" is a funny adjective to read after this title. What made it charming?
RJ, how timely!
Jacqueline, woof! You are more patient than I am! 200 pages to wait for it to get good?? I'm glad it was worth it though.


It's because of the way she tackles everything with humor. She states the facts in a conversational tone. It also has these amazing illustrations.




New Yorker goes back to New York 1882. I like time travel stories but this one .......the method of time travel is just absurd and the story goes very slowly. Page after page of detailed descriptions of all manner of everyday 1882 life -- clothes, food, transport, decor, social mores, etc.etc. There's no bibliography so I guess we're supposed to take it on faith that it's all true and Finney did all this research. I wanted to like it but I can't recommend it.

Wanted to read Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury last year for a Popsugar prompt but couldn't find a copy. Picked up a second hand one last week so I started reading it today. Between that and A Night in the Lonesome October I've got Halloween covered. I also have a few Stephen Kings (The Institute, The Shining, Doctor Sleep, Mr Mercedes, Salems Lot) and a Joe Hill (Strange Weather) in the bottom shelf of my Book Mobile (grey metal three tiered trolley thing on wheels :) ) to read over the next couple of weeks while Hubby is here. Or as many as I can get in anyway. Not that it's Halloween in Australia. It's actually Beltane but what can you do. Halloween is really at the end of April here.


People have only started getting into Halloween lately. Mostly kids who like to annoy people for lollies. There used to be nobody out and about but last year there were a lot of little kids and their parents wandering the hot streets of our Outback town. It’s 40C and they are walking the streets. But I suppose we also celebrate Yule in the middle of a 40 degree Summer with depictions of snow covered everything and a man in a fur suit. It’s all a little topsy turvy lol

There are things I'm not enthralled with, and it's certainly not a light-hearted romp or anything. But after so many deep, dystopian, soul-searching stories, it's almost a relief to read about half-orcs dealing out head-thumpings.
(I'm sure there's more to it than that, but only a few chapters in—heads have been thumped.)



How can you move Halloween? The word literally means “All Hallows Eve,” as in the day before All Saints Day, which is November 1st.
I mean, moving Samhain I get, as that’s specifically a harvest festival. The Catholic Church coopting it and similar festivals for their celebrations aside, it was tied to seasons, which dictated the religious observance. Upside down seasons makes moving it sensible.

Southern Hemisphere Wiccan here.....not practicing lately I must say but still.

Glad to hear it. Looking forward to the rest.

I sort of liked The Prey of Gods, but not really, and I disliked Temper, so I was ready for this to be the one I really like, but I don't think it's going to happen. Way too disgusting for me.
But it's weird and biological, so Gabi should check it out? :D


Nice! What did you think? I read the first 5 books of the series last year and really enjoyed them.

Somewhat related, there's actually a petition to "move" Halloween to the closest Saturday, so that the 9-5 type parents don't have to worry about getting home from work or shipping their kids off to school the next day...
I feel like if they ever did a thing of that variety, they'd have to leave Halloween on Oct 31st and maybe have a "Halloween Observed" on the closest Saturday.

Some places have Beggars Night, which is for trick-or-treating for young kids.

Some places have Beggars Night, which is for trick-or-treating for young kids."
Yeah, Beggars Night was usually the Saturday before Halloween in Ohio when I grew up. Moving to New Hampshire was a bit of culture shock in that trick-or-treat is always on Halloween.
I received quite a few perplexed looks the first year I lived here when I asked “When is Halloween?” Clarifying that I meant Beggars Night did NOT clarify anything. 👻

And you should also not hate young people in very, very tangled romantic situations.
I didn't know it was going to be so gory and icky. It's what I thought Stars Are Legion was going to be, when everyone kept warning everyone else about That Chapter. I had to read That Chapter several times and try to guess what people were talking about. This is literally ichor all the way through. Yuck.


For the romance- is this romance didguised as scifi or is the romance secondary?


Somewhat related, there's actually a petition to..."
I hope they just leave it as is. I am the "Halloween Scrooge" and am not keen on having it over more than one night--my husband and one of my kids love to give out candy, etc, but I dislike the fact that so many people drive to our neighbourhood to get candy because there's is no good (doubles or triples our cost and I don't like this much anyway) when there are so many mall ones and trunk or treat ones (some on Saturdays to boot).


*Contented sigh* I just finished Too Like the Lightning again and found it just as interesting the second time. I thought the audio narrator did a creditable job. His accents weren't the most flawless or unique, but his Mycroft is spot on.
Also took a sojourn through Heads of the Colored People which were captivating, thoughtful short stories that I'm not sure were for me (in the sense of audience, not enjoyment), but which I'd hope would resound more with other people.
Starting my first Rushdie with Midnight's Children! This is not actually the one my friend told me to start with but it was in an Audible sale and I am weak, so here goes.
Also took a sojourn through Heads of the Colored People which were captivating, thoughtful short stories that I'm not sure were for me (in the sense of audience, not enjoyment), but which I'd hope would resound more with other people.
Starting my first Rushdie with Midnight's Children! This is not actually the one my friend told me to start with but it was in an Audible sale and I am weak, so here goes.



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Now I'm intrigued... I haven't read Stars, but I like the creepiness of Hurley's work in general. Less sure about the flaily first love part, though.

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