SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
What Else Are You Reading?
>
What Else Are You Reading in 2019?



@David: Thanks a lot for the information. I'm reading the second book at the moment, so that means I can take a break before the third one to get group reads/BRs in.
@Allison: I'm, too, starting Candle in the Wind in audio now.
I haven't gotten to Tad Williams yet! I'll have to contemplate where to start.
Gabi, I hope this one is more moving for you :)
Gabi, I hope this one is more moving for you :)


Great books :)

Love Agatha Christie! They're like potato chips -- bet you can't read just one ;)


I was recommended this one (but skips the commentary part) elsewhere. I just needed to refresh my memory of book 1-3 and I've read the summaries of book 1 now, and it does a good enough job of that.
Axel wrote: "Allison wrote: "My goodness, it seems everyone is doing short stories and epic fantasy lately, how very trendy of you, Axel! Which is your favorite summary-provider for WoT?"
I was recommended thi..."
Nice! I've liked the Tor guides for Malazan so far, too.
I was recommended thi..."
Nice! I've liked the Tor guides for Malazan so far, too.

I just finished The Winter of the Witch, and it was wonderful. I hope you continue with the series! In an Absent Dream is next on my list.

In terms of pacing this is basically the opposite of Wheel of Time. The book is really fast-paced right from the start. And I'm really loving it so far. Will most likely write a more detailed review of this one once I'm done (which will go up on r/Fantasy)

Oh, I'm definitely continuing the series! I've heard nothing but good about it and the first book was really intriguing.
Hope you enjoy In an Absent Dream, I really loved it!




Earlier this week I read Once Upon a River and I still can't get over what a perfect story it was. It had an enticing mystery at it's center, a fun cast of characters, and the magical realism made it feel like a real life fairy tale.
I'm currently reading The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle and at only about a quarter of the way through, I'm 100% in. It's a mystery unlike anything I've read before. Honestly the less you know the better. I'm looking forward to staying in on Friday night, procrastinating cleaning, and finishing this book.





That’s one I’m going to have to reread. I haven’t read Brave New World for around 40 years. I read it and 1984 in Year 10 at school and I have reread 1984 a few times but not Brave New World. I did buy it late last year so I could (my son bought it at the same time as Fahrenheit 451 actually along with 1984 because he wanted the 3 big ones in his collection and he has read them recently as well).


Both are correct. The NSA is recording everything we say and do, and this week it was revealed that Facebook was intentionally spying on people who weren’t even connected to FB’s app, by getting teens to agree to share everything on their phones with FB. It was, essentially, corporate malware.
Then there was Apple’s FaceTime screw-up, which allowed people to secretly eavesdrop on other people’s conversations. But was it an accident? Some internal Apple scuttlebutt says this is a feature no one was supposed to know about.
The Russians meddling in US elections combines both of these things in a perfect storm of corporate-government collusion. If the Trump administration weren’t so hilariously incompetent, they might have been able to completely undermine American democracy the way Putin has done to Russia.




Wow, Eric, that is a marathon! Congrats!
I'm starting both the books of the month today (well, likely not at once. Probably I'll start Brown Girl first but we'll see how sassy I'm feeling).
I just finished Preludes & Nocturnes which was the sort of Gaiman I enjoy reading and Witches Abroad which I thought was really, really clever. Now thinking about my next audiobook. I'd have picked Deadhouse Gates, but I'm cherry-picking what sections of that I read which makes audio difficult.
I'm starting both the books of the month today (well, likely not at once. Probably I'll start Brown Girl first but we'll see how sassy I'm feeling).
I just finished Preludes & Nocturnes which was the sort of Gaiman I enjoy reading and Witches Abroad which I thought was really, really clever. Now thinking about my next audiobook. I'd have picked Deadhouse Gates, but I'm cherry-picking what sections of that I read which makes audio difficult.

On Tuesday I finished The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North. Harry August is reliving the same life over and over, and he retains all his memories from his previous lives. This was my second book by the author, the first being Touch last summer. Of the two I preferred Touch slightly; I think it had a bit more depth and moral ambiguity. They were both really good though, and both give the reader things to think about. My longer review.
I’m currently about 150 pages into Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson. The author sure does like his similes, to a distracting degree, but the story is holding my interest so far and I’m curious to see where it goes.

On Tuesday I finished The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North. Harry August is reliving the same life over and..."
I love Claire North and I've got Harry August on my Kindle. I just need to make time for it. That's a great review.
I read snow crash a couple months ago, and had mixed feelings about it, but there were aspects of it I really liked a lot. It was definitely entertaining all the way through either way.

I suspect I may end up with some mixed feelings of my own on Snow Crash.




On Tuesday I finished The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North. Harry August is reliving the same life over and..."
If you enjoyed Harry August, I would suggest Replay which won the World Fantasy Award in 1988.
I read Snow Crash back in the late '90's and loved it. Not sure how it would hold up, but I still think about some of the concepts introduced to me there, so there's that.

I finished two club reads from 2018 -- The Calculating Stars (4 stars) and The Consuming Fire (3 stars). I just noticed that they are both of the form "The [gerund] [noun]". Stars, to me, was the stronger of the two. At several points I got what millennials call "the feels" with that one although I'm not sure how much of it was unique to this story versus just being inspired that humanity has made it to the moon, NASA, etc. Still, it was well written and I enjoyed it overall. Fire was going to only merit 2 stars and was nearly a DNF early on for me as it had more violence than I prefer and felt more soap opera than space opera. I was encouraged to carry on and it did indeed pick up in the last third of the book to the point that there's a reasonable chance I read the next installment. What changed? I guess mostly just things happened and some new concepts were introduced (which is what I'm often looking for in SF).
I also finished Brazen: Rebel Ladies Who Rocked the World (5 stars). It provides brief (2-4 page) illustrated biographies of various women who led interesting lives. I felt like I learned a lot and I enjoyed the condensed format. Not sure I would have picked up a full volume biography of any one of these individuals' lives, so this was a nice way to learn the gist of their stories with a smaller time commitment.
I'm currently reading Salvation in my effort to catch up on 2018 published SF and The Hallowed Hunt in my quest to finish Lois McMaster Bujold's World of the Five Gods series.



Hiro Protagonist's name for the WIN!

They already succeeded 20-30 years ago when they seeded the America educational system with their socialist agendas:)

YouKneek - lol for "circle back around"

What helped me make the connection between the two novels was Charles de Lint's review in the July/August issue of "Fantasy and Science Fiction which can be seen
here (it's the second review - he highly recommends it)


So I'm going to jump into Smoke & Summons, which I read the amazon preview for, and go back to BatN after.


This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
One-Night Stands with American History: Odd, Amusing, and Little-Known Incidents (other topics)Prudence (other topics)
Terminal Uprising (other topics)
Terminal Uprising (other topics)
Chanur's Legacy (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Gail Carriger (other topics)Adrian Tchaikovsky (other topics)
Adrian Tchaikovsky (other topics)
Adrian Tchaikovsky (other topics)
Elizabeth Moon (other topics)
More...
Good series and one of my favorite authors"
A very good series but I think it's not on the same level with Memory, Sorrow and Thorn.