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What We've Been Reading
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It's 2015!! What are you reading in Jan?
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For those interested in what's coming out in SF&F this month,...
Tor.com offers:
January Releases in Fantasy
January Releases in Science Fiction
which is hardly comprehensive, but covers the major releases.
And Kirkus Reviews weighs in with
The Best Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Reads for January
which is limited to what they've reviewed.
Tor.com offers:
January Releases in Fantasy
January Releases in Science Fiction
which is hardly comprehensive, but covers the major releases.
And Kirkus Reviews weighs in with
The Best Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Reads for January
which is limited to what they've reviewed.


Just started in on The Mirror Empire - months after the group read it, but hey, I've heard pretty good things.

Currently reading:
City of Stairs by Robert Jackson Bennett
A sort of Gaslight Fantasy that has really grabbed me in the first 50 pages.
And I've already dipped my toe into our upcoming short story Anthology discussion topic for next week,....
The Ape's Wife and Other Stories collection by Caitlín R. Kiernan
and I'm reserving judgement for our upcoming discussion, so you'll have to tune in then. (No, needs to be grabbier. Maybe, "G33Z3R is reading The Ape's Wife, and you won't believe what he says about it!" :)
As an Audiobook, I just finished listening to the old classic,...
The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells
(So short it didn't last the morning's housework.)
For some reason this made me think again about last year's movie "Transcendence".
Lastly, coming outthis next Tuesday is...
The Providence of Fire by Brian Staveley
Sequel to last year's The Emperor's Blades, I plan to squeeze it into the reading schedule PDQ.

A sort of Gaslight Fantasy that has really grabbed me in the first 50 pages.
And I've already dipped my toe into our upcoming short story Anthology discussion topic for next week,....

and I'm reserving judgement for our upcoming discussion, so you'll have to tune in then. (No, needs to be grabbier. Maybe, "G33Z3R is reading The Ape's Wife, and you won't believe what he says about it!" :)
As an Audiobook, I just finished listening to the old classic,...

(So short it didn't last the morning's housework.)
For some reason this made me think again about last year's movie "Transcendence".
Lastly, coming out

Sequel to last year's The Emperor's Blades, I plan to squeeze it into the reading schedule PDQ.

So far it has been very satisfying with finishing great stuff that I had been holding off for no particularly good reason other than not making the time.
Not sure what you will make of the Kiernan G33z33r - its often darker fare than you normally choose as well as drifting into weird.
But you must do much more housework than I do if you can listen to a whole audio book whilst doing it... but then I use some of my disability money to pay for a cleaner so I dont do all that much.
With all the buzz around City of Stairs I am really tempted to give it a try but I was very middling about his debut Mr Shivers so not quite sure - if it got a book of the month pick I would definately give it a chance but otherwise I might read a few other things first.
With clearing the reading decks I finished the wonderful Kij Johnson collection, the very satisfying Ballingrud collection (well end of last month with that one) and am finishing off 3 Kiernan collections (all great). Will finish off The Magician in the next few days and make a start on The Three-Body Problem.
Depending on how easy going my baby is I might get a few short novels/ novellas read including Yesterday's Kin, The Divinity Student, Shadows For Silence in the Forests of Hell etc. And having reread some Brooks, Williams and Feist lately I might be tempted to give Steven Erikson a try (never read him).
I'm reading "Smarter than us: the Rise of Machine Intelligence". I'm curious to see what kind of miracles are going to happening in a maybe near future :).

When I finish, I'm moving on two other books in the same vein:
You're Next by Gregg Hurwitz
Just One Look by Harlan Coben
Alexandra wrote: "I'm reading "Smarter than us: the Rise of Machine Intelligence". I'm curious to see what kind of miracles are going to happening in a maybe near future :)."
Getting ready to grovel before our new silicon overlords?
Ben wrote: "My reading list got a bit cluttered with short story collections, poetry books and non fiction and I was up to reading something like 25 books at once. Working on slimming that number..."
I usually have a number of magazines & anthologies "open" — short stories are like between-meal snacks — but I can't do more than one story at a time (plus an audiobook of a different genre).
Ben wrote: "you must do much more housework than I do if you can listen to a whole audio book whilst doing it......"
"The Invisible Man" is quite short; novella, almost. 190 pages in print, in audiobook less than 3hrs at 2.5x playback speed.
Getting ready to grovel before our new silicon overlords?
Ben wrote: "My reading list got a bit cluttered with short story collections, poetry books and non fiction and I was up to reading something like 25 books at once. Working on slimming that number..."
I usually have a number of magazines & anthologies "open" — short stories are like between-meal snacks — but I can't do more than one story at a time (plus an audiobook of a different genre).
Ben wrote: "you must do much more housework than I do if you can listen to a whole audio book whilst doing it......"
"The Invisible Man" is quite short; novella, almost. 190 pages in print, in audiobook less than 3hrs at 2.5x playback speed.
G33z3r wrote: "Alexandra wrote: "I'm reading "Smarter than us: the Rise of Machine Intelligence". I'm curious to see what kind of miracles are going to happening in a maybe near future :)."
Getting ready to grov..."
No, If I can judge AI by the automatic suggestions for new readings , I'm quite confident humanity will always prevail :))). The author instead is very worried this can happen.
Getting ready to grov..."
No, If I can judge AI by the automatic suggestions for new readings , I'm quite confident humanity will always prevail :))). The author instead is very worried this can happen.
Alexandra wrote: "No, If I can judge AI by the automatic suggestions for new readings , I'm quite confident humanity will always prevail :))). The author instead is very worried this can happen. ..."
That amusing Kritzer short story is a cure for AI anxiety, online free in this month's (January's) Clarkesworld: Cat Pictures, Please
The Sterling short story it references, originally published in Japan, is reprinted online free from an old Lightspeed Managzine: Maneki Neko. How it affects AI anxiety depends on which kind of person is reading it. :)
There is a story by Bruce Sterling, “Maneki Neko,” that was originally published in 1998. In it, a benevolent AI directs networks of individuals to do favors for each other. So one day you might be buying yourself a bagel, and your phone might ring and instruct you to buy a second bagel and give it to the person in the gray suit you see at the bus stop. Another day, you might be stranded in a strange city, and a person you’ve never met would walk up and give you a map and a subway card. I like this story because all the people in it do what the AI tells them to do.
- from "Cat Pictures, Please" by Naomi Kritzer
That amusing Kritzer short story is a cure for AI anxiety, online free in this month's (January's) Clarkesworld: Cat Pictures, Please
The Sterling short story it references, originally published in Japan, is reprinted online free from an old Lightspeed Managzine: Maneki Neko. How it affects AI anxiety depends on which kind of person is reading it. :)

Also reading Autumn in Carthage, which I got as a free kindle book. It is just interesting enough to keep me continuing on, though I am not tempted to read it while home with other books to choose from. I find the narrator's outlook on other people remarkably arrogant and unkind and it seems to be taking forever to get anywhere.

However I do think Enders Game is a book that can be seen radically differently on a different reading. As radical as say a child reading the Narnia books compared to an adult reading them. There is some excellent scholarly analysis of Enders Game free online - including the famous John Kessell article "Creating the Innocent Killer" and there is even free video playback of mythguard universities course on it (its very long although not to my mind as interesting or scholarly as some of the shorter written articles) http://www.mythgard.org/academy/ender...
But that might be a rabbit hole you dont want to go down.


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
G33z3r wrote: "Alexandra wrote: "No, If I can judge AI by the automatic suggestions for new readings , I'm quite confident humanity will always prevail :))). The author instead is very worried this can happen. ....."
These stories seem very interesting , thank you :)!
These stories seem very interesting , thank you :)!

I'm in the last stages of editing my current work in progress, and as a result I plan to start reading The Earl of Brass by Kara Jorgensen in the next week or so.

Then, looking for something light, I read Jacqueline Carey's Agent of Hel books. I don't think they really stand out very much from other, earlier-begun urban fantasy series (of those I've read, they're probably most like Briggs with a potential werewolf paramour, with some hints of Butcher and Harris), but they were surprisingly quick page-turners for their size, and I appreciated that the most recent release, Poison Fruit, actually built up to a significant final act.
Now I'm just starting Three Parts Dead
Hillary wrote: "Now I'm just starting Three Parts Dead ..."
I've really enjoyed Gladstone's Craft novels so far. An interesting take on magic. (All three books so far have been set in different places with different characters, but share the "magic as contract law" view.) I'm looking forward to Last First Snow later this year. Hope you like Three Parts Dead.
Hillary wrote: ", I read Jacqueline Carey's Agent of Hel books. I don't think they really stand out very much from other, earlier-begun urban fantasy series..."
By loved Carey's original Kushiel Phaedre trilogy, though after that (Imriel & Moirin) she hasn't really wowed me. Amazing world just enough like Europe to seem familiar yet bizarrely twisted at the same time. Seems she's joined a number of fantasy authors in shifting to Urban Fantasy, which is where I presume all the action is these days.
I've really enjoyed Gladstone's Craft novels so far. An interesting take on magic. (All three books so far have been set in different places with different characters, but share the "magic as contract law" view.) I'm looking forward to Last First Snow later this year. Hope you like Three Parts Dead.
Hillary wrote: ", I read Jacqueline Carey's Agent of Hel books. I don't think they really stand out very much from other, earlier-begun urban fantasy series..."
By loved Carey's original Kushiel Phaedre trilogy, though after that (Imriel & Moirin) she hasn't really wowed me. Amazing world just enough like Europe to seem familiar yet bizarrely twisted at the same time. Seems she's joined a number of fantasy authors in shifting to Urban Fantasy, which is where I presume all the action is these days.


Read The Dragons of Dorcastle by Jack Campbell.
The year is only one week old and already I have read the worst book I will read in 2015.
The year is only one week old and already I have read the worst book I will read in 2015.

The year is only one week old and already I have read the worst book I will read in 2015."
Oh No!!

I read a bunch of Regency romances that were free through Kindle Unlimited - I love Marion Chesney/MC Beaton for the really short fun fluffy reads.
I picked up The Perilous Life of Jade Yeo a short story/novella about a Chinese/English girl in 1920s London. It was really good.
I started A Talent for War then put it aside because I wasn't in the mood - will pick it up later.
I read the first two In Death books -Naked in Death and Glory in Death - these are good and sexy, but the "SF" bits are pretty pathetic lol. But I'm there for the sexy times so who cares?
I listened to We Have Always Lived in the Castle - very creeptastic. I liked Hill House better though.
I tore right through Agatha H. and the Voice of the Castle, book 3, which just came out. I love this series! But dangit, it ended on a huge cliffhanger so now I gotta wait.
Almost finished with Midnight Riot and I'm really into this one, love it and plan to read more in the series.
Next up is Galapagos Regained: A Novel and Annihilation.
Wow, I've been a busy little reader-bee!

Blue Heaven by C.J. Box
Djibouti by Elmore Leonard
Batman, Vol. 2: The City of Owls by Scott Snyder
Just One Look by Harlan Coben
The Moving Target by Ross Macdonald
Currently reading: Shatter by Michael Robotham

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

Also qualifies as historical fantasy I think, in a strange, satirical, Gormenghasty way: The Knight on the Bridge. Because his The Last of the Templars is one of my most-admired ever. These books, written in a mannered style, beautiful to a few, sunken into obscurity.
Books mentioned in this topic
Imperial Lady: A Fantasy of Han China (other topics)The Knight on the Bridge (other topics)
The Last of the Templars (other topics)
South (other topics)
The Moving Target (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Lance Charnes (other topics)Elmore Leonard (other topics)
Scott Snyder (other topics)
C.J. Box (other topics)
Ross Macdonald (other topics)
More...
I tore through Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children and I liked it, even though it turned out to be a much different type of story from I was expecting.
Read Throne of Glass today, a bit silly and romancey, fun fluff.
Have Nexus audio ready to start when I go to work this morning.