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 2020?

Thanks for that caution. I have a mental shelf holding books that I liked as a teen and suspect that I wouldn't enjoy now. This series is on it along with some of the other foundational works in the field.
I'm also reading Abaddon's Gate. I usually like space opera and the Expanse series has many enthusiastic fans. The series overall just hasn't been exciting me though and this entry is no exception. The level of casual violence I'm seeing doesn't really work for me.


I found Foundation heavy going even when I was younger but there wasn't must else out there.
Then I came on GR and people kept on recommending new scifi writers I had never heard of.
When I tried out a few the difference was breath-taking.

Christopher wrote: "I read all the Foundation books when I was younger and loved them, but also had a bit of a letdown when I went to reread the first one several years ago. The primary thing that I liked back in the ..."
That's exactly my feeling, Christopher. It's a classic because it was a novelty back when it was written. But the prose is kind of mediocre and Asimov had a serious problem with women - you would think they don't exist in his world, rarely ever are women even mentioned (I'm at 80% and there were 3 mentions and one named character who was present for 2 pages as the bickering wife). Also, this one time, the obviously evil guy and his son had 'dark eyes and hooked noses' and ... yeah, teenage me was so blissfully ignorant of things like that.
That's exactly my feeling, Christopher. It's a classic because it was a novelty back when it was written. But the prose is kind of mediocre and Asimov had a serious problem with women - you would think they don't exist in his world, rarely ever are women even mentioned (I'm at 80% and there were 3 mentions and one named character who was present for 2 pages as the bickering wife). Also, this one time, the obviously evil guy and his son had 'dark eyes and hooked noses' and ... yeah, teenage me was so blissfully ignorant of things like that.

Anyway, I've just finished Shadowshaper, which is one of our group reads for the month. I'll leave my review out of this thread in order not to spoil any of the experience for others.
Still continuing Gideon the Ninth and The Shadow of What Was Lost, which I don't have on audio book so it's taking me longer to read them (need sit-down time). But I'm really loving them so far.
@Raucous: I haven't read the Expanse series, but agree that casual, unnecessary violence by the protagonists can be a big obstacle to relating to them and sympathizing with them strongly.

My thoughts on Radicalized: I’m realizing more I prefer the length and format of a novella vs short stories as there’s enough text to build up characters, plot and a satisfying conclusion without being a full blown novel. Radicalized was published in 2019 but the themes of the 4 novellas were way too relevant for it to be for escapism reading. 1) social mobility, immigrants, with a mix of new technology and capitalism, 2) superman trying to save a man from systemic racism, 3) healthcare and terrorism 4) the end of the world for the rich.
Mixed reviews on here but I really enjoyed reading it. Like full episodes of Black Mirror. I didn’t plan to read this and don’t actually know Cory Doctorow. But I have a habit of reading kindle samples and not being able to stop. :)

I really enjoyed Walkaway by Doctorow, and I enjoy his op eds/blogs and so on. Is Radicalized scary and gross like early Black Mirror? Or more just focused on deep social issues?

It's more social issues. None of the early seasons of Black Mirror scary and gross stuff.
Adding Walkaway to my reading list then!

I'm surprised actually I haven't seen more buzz around his stuff. I enjoyed Radicalized. All the 4 novellas hit the 2020 social issues, including a pandemic mind you, so I can't tell if I was just distracted from these issues last year and just paying more attention now because of the lockdowns.

Thanks for the article link btw!
Grace wrote: "Allison wrote: "I really enjoyed Walkaway by Doctorow, and I enjoy his op eds/blogs and so on. Is Radicalized scary and gross like early Black Mirror? Or more just focused on deep social issues?"
..."
Cool, thanks, then I'll have to check out Radicalized :)
..."
Cool, thanks, then I'll have to check out Radicalized :)

Ken Liu is as great as everyone says he is and I enjoyed the stories.
I was less enthusiastic about the way the collection was organised.
The Hidden Girl and Other Stories
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


I gave up after the first installment. It's hard to believe people get so excited about "vomit zombies."

I gave up a..."
Sounds perfect for me.
LOL. J/k. Sort of. Not really.

Who is? I am a series fan. That particular element came and went. It was OK, but things moved on a long time ago.

Yeah, but Reynolds is big name so the publishers aren't going to let him adopt a penname now. There would go sales.
But he's written in several styles in the past so I'm not sure why anyone would be surprised when he did a science-lite space adventure fantasy YA space opera book.
I try not to have expectations from authors. I mean, look at someone like Greg Bear, who has written hard SF, military SF, fantasy, serialized novels (in the Halo universe), all the way out to posthuman weirdness. Many of the authors I've read don't stick strictly to one formula.
I just wish people could drop expectations of authors pigeonholing their books into one limited style and let the books speak for themselves.

It's not just the readers, it's the publishers as well. I had a friend who was a romance writer (she died in 1998) who started out writing romances set in Scotland and her publisher/editors didn't want anything but romances set in Scotland from her. She really wanted to branch out from both the setting and the time period.


Then I came on GR and people kept on recommending new scifi writers I had never heard of.
When I tried out a few the difference was breath-taking.
It took me a while to read Foundation because the synopsis sounded boring. But I absolutely loved them. I rank them (as a series) above Lord of the Rings and Dune. Just my opinion.

He was hard enough to hear/understand when he was playing acoustic... (An attempt at gentle ribbing for the home town boy.)
Back on subject I'm also currently reading Artificial Condition. I wish that I could make not caring an art form like Murderbot does.


he was accused of being a sell out. The same thing happened with Country artists who went electric. The Ken Burns series Country went into that
Back on topic, I finished all 4 of Adrian Tchaikovsky's short story collections set in his Tales of the Apt Universe. They wee quite good.

So I just started Senlin Ascends and this is legit terrifying to me! 3 chapters in and this is absolutely the most scared I've been while reading a book in a long time! Is this supposed to be horror? Because I'm horrified but can't look away!
Anthony wrote: "What led you to read it at this moment?"
I had it on my Kindle, and it's been well received so I thought now was as good as any time! But ah mah gah it's stressful! Gonna glue my spouse to me next time we travel.
I had it on my Kindle, and it's been well received so I thought now was as good as any time! But ah mah gah it's stressful! Gonna glue my spouse to me next time we travel.

It says something when the style of an author is so good that a mammoth long book is relaxing and enjoyable.

Now onto Shadowshaper.

I've read one the other books in the series and loved it (Bring Up the Bodies) and am waiting for The Mirror & the Light to go down in price. The Shardlake Series by C.J. Sansom is a bit more accessible and more of a mystery series. It's set during the same time period.





Of course, if you like vomit zombies, Illuminae should be right for you. It also has a really neat lying, manipulative computer.

I finally got back to Catfishing on CatNet, which I am enjoying immensely. I remember liking it when I started it originally. I think it just got put aside because I had too much going on.
Also started Terminal Uprising on audio for some light fun on my commute. I loved the first one and I'm definitely excited to see how the trip to Earth goes with this one.
And I'm planning on finishing The Cybernetic Tea Shop during my slow hours at the desk today. Which has been very cute so far.

Oh, darn it, I guess I'll have to find some other way of reading a story about an alcoholic cop who's obsessed with the dead woman at the center of his latest case. Do you suppose that's ever been written about before?

On that note, if you have an android phone, it's amusing to ask Google to "open the pod bay doors."

I really liked Senlin, Allison. It's such a terrific idea and world. The second installment isn't quite as good unfortunately.
Ah that's a bummer, RJ. I'm liking the concept and world a lot--luckily this is the visceral fear and not the "unreasoning panic" fear, if that makes sense lol
ETA: just saw your response, Anthony! I'll try to take it easy. Anna gifted me a book about a dapper capybara pirate that I have queued up in case I'm too spooked!
ETA: just saw your response, Anthony! I'll try to take it easy. Anna gifted me a book about a dapper capybara pirate that I have queued up in case I'm too spooked!



The Book of Koli by M.R. Carey is definitely my favourite 2020 release so far. This is wonderfully solid writing: great pacing, interesting worldbuilding, suspenseful plot, good character development and a kind of "Bildungsroman". And the best thing: book two will be released in September and the last one of the trilogy is scheduled for next March. This is how a series should be written and published.
Dark River by Rym Kechacha also was a good read, but it often felt like the debut novel that it is. With its structure of two similar fates in two different timelines (Neolithic Age and future England) against the backdrop of climate change it reminded me a lot of Maja Lunde's "Klimakvartetten" without ever reaching this author's genius.
But I felt with the characters, two mothers who want to protect their loved ones gainst overwhelming odds, and I found the prose quite immersive. If Rym Kechacha releases another book I will certainly read it.
And since it is available on storytel I finally read one of our last months' books The Many-Colored Land by Julian May. :) I would love to get behind the reasoning for some Jury decisions, since it was nominated for Hugo, Nebula and Locus award. Let's say, the good thing about the book was the frequent mentions of Kaiserstuhl, Feldberg and the source of the Danube, cause these are the areas where I often went hiking with my best friend in my teenage time and where I have the fondest of memories of.
ETA: I've finally tackled Pandora's Star by Peter F. Hamilton. Since the physical copy I own just was too terrifying for me to start I switched to the audio version. After 17 hours of listening I'm halfway through the first book and I have to admit that it really is as good as I was told. I'm absolutely no space opera fan, this much I figured after 2 years of reading through the subgenres, so I expected another too many POVs too many characters me spacing out experience. Yet, even though it has way too many characters and starts with 9 different POVs I found myself listening intently and enjoying myself (even if I still couldn't exactly tell which name belongs to whom).


"Julian May’s The Many Coloured Land is what I’d have voted for in 1982, and now I think it’s the weakest book on the list. It was so exactly to my taste then and so little to my taste now that you could use it to graph precisely how my tastes have changed. It’s about people in a multi-planet future with psi powers who have a one-way gate to the Pliocene of Earth, through which people can go into Exile, and when they get there they discover to their astonishment a society of Celtic aliens. There are sequels, which I kept reading for far longer than I should have. It’s not in print and it’s not in the library, but if anybody’s interested I remember exactly how all the magic-enhancing torcs worked and the names of the different kinds of psi."
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The Testaments by Margaret Atwood
Rating: 3 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and I started reading:
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