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Bobby
(last edited Mar 23, 2019 03:36AM)
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Mar 23, 2019 03:36AM



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Now I'm going to continue my ongoing Forgotten Realms reread with Servant of the Shard


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
War Cry by Brian McClellan was a really good novella & quite different than his Powder Mage series, although still fantasy. It's only a novella, but he really painted an interesting world. I hope he does more stories in it. My 4 star review is here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
The Short Stories of Gordon Randall Garrett are really good. Written in the 1960s, these 3 short SF stories have really interesting points of view. I doubt they're for everyone, but I appreciated them. My 4 star review is here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
And now I'm working the 5th in the Daisy Darymple cozy mystery series, Damsel in Distress. No murder so far which is a nice change of pace.


▪The Firebrand by Marion Zimmer•Bradley
▪A Shade Of Vampire 72: A Conspiracy Of Realms by Bella Forrest
▪ The Stone Crusher by Jeremy Dronfield

One of my GR friends rates every single book he reads either 5 or 4 stars. He rated this one 3 stars. That's what I'd call a red flag, so I think I won't even try this one.


The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham

Neil Gaiman And Charles Vess' Stardust by Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess


The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham
John Wyndham was one of the very few science fiction authors that ever made it on to school reading lists when I was in high school (mid 70s). He really is an excellent author.


The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham
John Wyndham was one of the very few science fi..."
In school we read The Chrysalids so about 20 years later he's still on high school reading lists
I just finished a non-SFF book, now to get back to reading the Time Quartet with Many Waters by Madeleine L'Engle. I figured I'd finish that series within the first couple months of the year, you know just breeze through them as they are short and for kids, but other stuff kept getting higher priority so it's starting to drag. Only one more after this.

Andrea wrote: "In school we read The Chrysalids so about 20 years later he's still on high school reading lists..."
Thank you both! I am extra-pumped to read it now. I also noticed that at least a couple of Wyndham's books have been re-released by the NYRB which gets him some Legit Points in my ledger.

One of my GR friends rates every single book he reads either 5 or 4 star..."
Where were you two months ago with this information!!
Ah well, they can't all be winners. (And I think you're wise to pick something else.)
I'll be following your reviews of Wyndham!

Found the Canadian.

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

Found the Canadian."
*studies the quote* You are indeed correct but I can't figure out from that line how you determined that :) I didn't use the "ou" spelling where Americans have just "o", and that could have made me British. Or is Wyndham particularly known to be only on Canadian school reading lists?

Since that was on my eReader, my next selection is another of Baen's free books, an anthology called Werehunter by Mercedes Lackey. I pretty much picked that one because I had accidentally opened it once and my eReader now keeps showing it on the main page as 2% completed so figured now is as good a time as any to complete it.

I've never heard anyone but Canadians talk about Chrysalids as assigned reading. It was for me too, and it always struck me as a bizarre choice. Lewis isn't even a Canadian author and its far from his best known book.
But I guess it's one of the only reasonably well-known novels set in Newfoundland & Labrador, so it made its way onto the reading list somehow.




I also finished the issue of Analog with The Mountains of Mourning in it (May 1989), I thought I could read a short story a day, but it's actually made up more of novellas and novlettes so they needed their own dedicated time to read :)
Now I'm reading The Riddle-Master of Hed by Patricia A. McKillip for the next group read.
I also decided to start on The Lore of the Unicorn by Odell Shepard for my pre-1950 slot. I realized it could also serve for the genre blender, as it's a "non-fiction fantasy" which is about the weirdest combo if you think about it. I figure this isn't something that I'll read right through, but rather a chapter here and there, after all it is a textbook and not a story.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Riddle-Master of Hed (other topics)The Lore of the Unicorn (other topics)
The Rithmatist (other topics)
Calamity (other topics)
Sea of Swords (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
C.L. Polk (other topics)Odell Shepard (other topics)
Patricia A. McKillip (other topics)
Kate Atkinson (other topics)
Drew Hayes (other topics)
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