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?
Yeah, wow I'm surprised at just how many people love this book! Don, I think I'm in agreement with you haha


You’re about to get into a bunch where Pratchett really hit his groove - filled with great characters, excellent puns, and in a lot of ways more meaningful stories. There’s still a lot of fluff, but you’re going to get a lot more like Guards! Guards! And Wyrd Sisters and Small Gods...
Wow. What a great experience to get to have....

Agreed! I used this book last year to talk with my boys about if they want to be baptized or not.


Strange sexually transmitted city book... I don't know."
Thanks, Allison. I have wondered about Palimpset. It doesn't sound like one I will enjoy
Thanks, Raucous for posting the link to the Art of Discworld. I'm a huge fan!
For Discworld shopping, I recommend The Discworld Emporium!
https://www.discworldemporium.com
Candice
I am not reading Discworld in any sort of order. I am the chaotic good moderator, and I read what I have when I want. I'm sort of intentionally leaving Guards! Guards! because I think I'm gonna love it and I want to have another thing to look forward to. I'm now 2 into Witches, 2 into Death, 1 into Rincewind, and Small Gods.
Thomas, yay!! Glad to have you, even gladder to be right (which is, of course, a common occurrence for me haha!) and excited to hear what you think of the rest of the series!! Will you be getting to them soon, do you think?
Candice, Palimpsest was definitely an exeperience. I think I'll like her other books more. I adored Deathless.
Thomas, yay!! Glad to have you, even gladder to be right (which is, of course, a common occurrence for me haha!) and excited to hear what you think of the rest of the series!! Will you be getting to them soon, do you think?
Candice, Palimpsest was definitely an exeperience. I think I'll like her other books more. I adored Deathless.

Wow, what a thoughtful way to approach this topic. Your kids are lucky! Certainly better than "you do thing, or else" that I got.

If you live in Oregon I suggest you go to Falls City on some weekend and go to the Bakery, which opens at 2PM and order some Pizza, it was truly awesome. And their Cinnamon Rolls were the size of a brick.


There is a place called Little Big Burger, that gives you a Quater Pound Hamburger on a slider bun. There fries are massive and they are Truffle Fries. Very tasty. Not all that expensive.

* slider
(‘sli-der’)
a small yummy sandwich, typically no bigger than three inches across and served on a bun.
Slider (S), approx. 3 oz, or Full Size (FS), approx. 6 oz
website: https://pdxsliders.com/menu/ don't drool too much when looking at the pictures



But then again I burnt my hamburger bun the other week and ended up having a sandwich not a hamburger.



You can tell me your preferences re: buffet vs snacks in the other thread!

Maybe you could change the thread title so the range of subjects is clear. Although I realise now the connection is sort-of obvious, it would never have occured to me that the language thread was the place to discuss food traditions.

I have updated the language thread in the hopes that will clear it up some!
I also finished:
Small Gods which was just as lovely as you all said. Perhaps not quite as funny as some of the others I've read, but witty and poignant.
I also breezed through In Search of the Lost Feminine: Decoding the Myths That Radically Reshaped Civilization which was a decent assertion on the role stories played in solidifying patriarchal society, but not anything particularly shocking, other than some of the assumptions.
Now starting one of the BOTMs for next year and Beggars in Spain.
I also finished:
Small Gods which was just as lovely as you all said. Perhaps not quite as funny as some of the others I've read, but witty and poignant.
I also breezed through In Search of the Lost Feminine: Decoding the Myths That Radically Reshaped Civilization which was a decent assertion on the role stories played in solidifying patriarchal society, but not anything particularly shocking, other than some of the assumptions.
Now starting one of the BOTMs for next year and Beggars in Spain.

I’m currently reading Children of Time and absolutely loving it. I don’t think I’ve ever read anything quite like it. But...spiders...blergh. :)

The Golden Compass: my boys liked Lyra and the book a lot, even though my eldest told me "it shows that a man wrote this" :D. We're now on the second book.
Coraline had me unimpressed, the boys were equally lukewarm about it, so it goes onto the been-there-done-that pile.
I finished a short story anthology Sisters of the Revolution: A Feminist Speculative Fiction Anthology. Even though the title is too sensational for my taste the stories themselves were in majority good to very good. A really great overview over female speculative writers from the 1970ies to today. I found some names where I definitely want to read more of.
For my nerdy side I read Dead Endless, a tie-in novel for my favourite Star Trek series, featuring my favourite characters. To my utter relief it was way better than what I've read so far in terms of tie-in novels and I couldn't stop listening to it. (Had to re-arrange my day with earplugs)
The last two books I finished were A Deepness in the Sky and Embassytown - and though both had some really good SF ideas the difference couldn't have been greater. While "Deepness in the Sky" had me fighting loss of attention throughout all of the 28 hours of listening, I was glued completely alert to "Embassytown". Miéville's book was perfectly paced, no scene too long or distracting, highly focused. While Vinge meandered through multiple POVs, flashbacks, political intrigues, pages of explanations and had me completely lose interest in any of the characters (some of them I couldn't even distinguish, cause they felt the same)

I think this was/is on sale today for $0.99 in the US Kindle store? Not for me (in Finland), but maybe if you're in the US and it sounds good, check now!


Ooh, I've heard mixed opinions on that one, glad to have another point in the win column.
I've got about 50 pages left in The Farthest Shore (which is absolutely gorgeous so far), so I should finish that either later today or tomorrow, and then wrap up The Summer Tree sometime this week.


Is it weird that my phone predicts that I’m going to type Murderbot after just typing mur? Anyhoo.....

LOL I like how you Christmas shop, Jacqueline XD
Yay for a Murderbot, Le Guin and Station Eleven end of the decade!!
Yay for a Murderbot, Le Guin and Station Eleven end of the decade!!


I loved this one as well. I just finished the last one in the trilogy The Winter of the Witch, it didn't grip me as much as the first book, but still the trilogy is worth a read. I liked the mix of Russian fairy tale, real history and the cold atmosphere.

I find it somewhat unusual, especially for a bestselling author.
If you have read it, what were your impressions?

back in my younger golfing days, we came up with a drink for our flask during the cold months of winter play, we called it a Slider, drink was a mixture of half rum and half jack daniels or jim beam. And it was goooooooood.
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Strange sexually transmitted city book... I don't know.