The Sword and Laser discussion
OK, fine. No sword and sorcery!
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A.M. Dellamonica's Indigo Springs and its sequel were brilliant so this one is on my to-read list as well.
Her novella The Cage was recently narrated for the tor.com podcast and can be read online here.

Bitter Seeds
Dreams Underfoot
The Dervish House
Faust
The Divine Comedy

Bitter Seeds"
This one got read back in 2010, discussion is here.

Ah, my bad.
I knew it was a book I'd skipped, it was a The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi, another hard to pronounce/oft-mispronounced name!

You would've hated it. The science is imbecilic in the extreme.

This a great suggestion in case we need another non-"swords and castles and shit" book for next time.
For superheroes type stuff I'd suggest Vicious. Though "heroes" is used quite loosely here. It uses a lot of the tropes (origin stories! Mad science! Close friends turned bitter rivals! Good and evil! ) but loses all the stereotypical moral simplicity and turns the whole thing several degrees off kilter.

Better than Seven Wonders. Better than Soon I Will Be Invincible. Even better than Velveteen vs. The Junior Super Patriots (and that one's painful to admit).


You would've hated it. The science is imbeci..."
I disagree. What makes you come to that conclusion?

A) The springs have a level of efficiency that is physically impossible.
B) Think about how much energy they waste transporting those heavy springs all over the city. Energy that they could've kept by harnessing animals directly to the turbines.
C) But why use animals at all? Just because the world runs out of fossil fuels doesn't mean we're out of fissionable material. Or wind. Or sun. Or water.
D) Not to mention, the level of genetic engineering in that world should be sufficient to create bacteria that excrete fuel.

A) The springs have a level of efficiency that is physically impossible.
B) Think about how much energy they waste transportin..."
So nothing worse than in your average science-fiction space travel story then. Huh, I always assumed those "the science is awful!" comments for that book were related to the bio-engineering parts of the story, since that is the part that actually matters to the plot. That'd explain that why despite my background in science (biochem/tech) none of it ever bothered me.


Good points. I wasn't calling you out, it was a genuine question.
A. Yes, you are right there for sure.
B. Also true.
C. Just cause the tech exists doesn't mean it's used, for political or monetary reasons. They have sailing ships, but probably a lot of other stuff doesn't get used for political/financial reasons. Lobbyists for the spring faction, etc.
D. Also a good point. Maybe they just don't want to pursue that, ala point C.

It's a bit out there, extrapolated and taken to the extreme. Basically what every sci-fi book does with other types of science. The book is really about the social aspects of the effects of the science rather than the actual science anyway. And it has fantasy/religious elements which are much more out-there than the science anyway. So: "meh".

Throne is set in an Arabian Nights-like secondary fantasy world. Alif is set in a modern day unnamed middle eastern country.

Throne wasn't my favorite book. I wanted to like it more than I did. I loved Alif. I recommend you give it a second consideration. :)

Leesa wrote: "I just finished The Golem and the Jinni. I thought it was fantastic."
If we're doing jinn, Golem & Jinni would be a good alt pick.

That said, and I know it's already been picked this month, but has the group ever read an Andre Norton book? The Queen of Scifi and fantasy?

That's like saying, "I didn't like A Game of Thrones, therefore I'm not going to read American Gods."

That said, and I know it's already been picked this month, but has the group ever read an Andre Norton book? The Queen of Scifi and fantasy?"
Not yet. I hope we rectify that. I read some of her stuff when I was in middle school and would love to read it now as a "better" reader.


I don't know. Her bibliography is immense, hard to know where to start, though I've always meant to read Beast Master. Maybe someone else has a suggestion.
This one looks like what several people are asking for as a read, but I don't know anything about it. Imperial Lady
Of course, there's the issue of older books and accessibility. I do know Baen does reprints from some of her work.
I just think she's someone to keep in mind!

I love this idea. Barker is definitely not the tropey fantasy that comes to mind when you think 'Sword' of Sword and Laser. There are castles, magic and shit in Imajica, but so much more. Or at least a castle, if memory serves. Definitely magic. It would be a years-later re-read for me, but I wholeheartedly endorse this idea.
Reading the thread, I've realized just how late I am to this particular party, but maybe consider this for a future Sword pick. I've found the Sword picks lately hit or miss (Rothfuss yay!, Dalglish awful!), but none have swung too far away from the typical fare in my opinion, and there are lots of great books out there that I think would fall under Sword.

Swords and Deviltry or Death Angel's Shadow orGloriana

I would LOVE for the group to read some Clive Barker. Imajica, Weaveworld, The Thief of Always, Abarat or The Great and Secret Show would all be great picks.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Great and Secret Show (other topics)Abarat (other topics)
Imajica (other topics)
Weave World (other topics)
The Thief of Always (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Helene Wecker (other topics)Helene Wecker (other topics)
China Miéville (other topics)
Paolo Bacigalupi (other topics)
A.M. Dellamonica (other topics)
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(Oops it's already been picked. Didn't see that)