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 2021?
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YouKneeK
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May 14, 2021 02:49PM

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


Happily, I’ve gotten a lot better at pushing through an audiobook with a narrator that doesn’t work for me. I may rant about all my complaints in my reviews, but I’ve found that after listening for several hours, the issues are no longer as grating because I’ve gotten used to them.
I haven’t yet felt the urge to try changing the speed, although I have thought about it. I probably ought to just try it, but my ears listen slower than my eyes read, so the normal speed seems to work ok for me. Especially since my brain is at least a little bit occupied with following my cross-stitch pattern. I may try speeding it up the next time I’m listening to one I’m not really enjoying. Three Parts Dead would have been a good candidate, but the narrator was already kind of fast compared to other audiobooks I’d listened to so I left it alone.

Number of things read in 2021 (including short fic, these aren't all novels):
39 January
35 February
29 March
13 April
5 May
The trend :(
The good news is that I've read a couple of things this week, and not hated them! So maybe I'll be dragged kicking and screaming back into the world of actually reading a book?
* Doesn't whinging just sound so much more dramatic than basic whining?


I love the word whinging

Now to get back to packing up my childhood home. It sold within a couple of weeks of going on the market at full asking. 4 generations...64 years....one person....less than 2 weeks to do it.

This is kind of dry but, Stephen King's "On Writing".


Yeah it’s a long time and the intention was to never sell it but things change and it’s time to move on. By selling it I get to keep the farm which is really the first time I’ve picked where I want to live. Every other house we’ve owned either my parents picked it or Hubby wanted it. I was the one who stood under the trees near the front gate looking down the driveway thinking “this is it” just like Dad did when he stood on the front verandah looking out into the dark and the rain way back in 1957 when they inspected this place on a cold wet night after they finished work for the day. After my parents bought it in 1957 Mums parents pretty much lived here on and off as well. They had their own house in Sydney but my Uncle and his wives (one at a time btw) used to live there as well until he and his second wife bought their own house in the late 60s. I came along in 63. Dad died in 97 and Mum in 01 so I’ve owned it ever since. Anyway it’s now full of my grandparents stuff, my parents stuff, my stuff and my kids stuff. We’re buying a shipping container to store it all in on the farm. Then my kids can sort through it and probably throw it all out when I die.

Just starting Liberte by Kaitlyn Greenridge. an unforgettable story about one young Black girl’s attempt to find a place where she can be fully, and only, herself. Takes place just after Reconstruction in Brooklyn.

Anyhoo...maybe I can listen to more audiobooks when I’m supposed to be walking after the op. That would be nice.



That said, I recently finished Fugitive Telemetry, as Murderbot is the perfect slump-buster, as well as The Galaxy, and the Ground Within, which was exactly the comfort read I needed. Currently on The Witch's Heart, and going to continue to prioritize comfortfluff and hope things pick up this summer.

I wish I could make light novel recommendations, but I haven't read a ton myself. I really enjoy キノの旅 I for its androgynous lead character, and its tour of eu/dystopian lands. Some stories land a bit on the nose, but as a compilation I've enjoyed them. Just not sure if I can recommend the English, as you said, the translations can be pretty clunky. :/





I haven't read the light novels behind it, but I've seen the anime adaptation of My Next Life as a Villainess: All Routes Lead to Doom! (Manga) Vol. 1 which was adorable, heart-warming and funny.

When I first started with audiobooks, I didn't veer from 1.0 speed at all, ever, but as a couple of years has gone by I've relented a little. Some narrators are excessively slow even for my slow brain. In one case, a narrator was grating until I sped it up to 1.15 and it became a spritely, cheerful voice. Many people can listen at 2x or even faster, and that just seems impossible to me. Everybody's different!
At least with digital technology, it isn't like speeding up a LP and the pitch of the narration stays the same even if it's going much, much faster.

I've seen the anime, and read the first light novel that covers about half the story that the anime does. The LN has an iffy translation but conveys "Bakarina's" sweet cluelessness better, imo. The anime does some course correction from the book by eliminating some of its repetition, and agreed, it's funny, super cute and wholesome. :) It might be a good starting point for an anime newbie.

I usually listen at 1.5 because most narrators read very sedately. However I have just had to turn Hamnet back to 1. The narrator sounds as though she is in race and losing at the faster speed.

I may have to check out My Next Life as a Villainess in one form or another. :)



I read the first Percy Jackson years ago around the time the first movie came out. I needed something to read waiting for a plane and on the plane when I was coming home from visiting my eldest while he was at uni. The trailer for the movie was out and it looked good so I picked up the book in the airport bookshop. Loved it. It was finished by the time Hubby picked me up from the airport on the other end. Read the next ones in the series before I saw the movie. They were great, the movie....not so much.

I have read My Next Life as a Villainess: All Routes Lead to Doom! Volume 1 and was not overly impressed. The plot holes kept bothering me.


I wish I could make light novel recommendations, but I haven't read a ton myself. I really enjoy キノの旅 I for its androgynous lead character, and its tour of eu/dystopian lands. ..."
I've had the anime of that on disk for ages, but never got around to it. I'll consider this, though I'm not a big fan of short stories or vignettes. Usually I "get it" after the first one, and after that I'm bored.
Mary wrote: "Manga perhaps? There's the Aria: The Masterpiece Volume 1 series, which is light slice-of-life, Albeit (soft) SF and with a trace of magic."
I enjoyed the Aria anime. It's almost too slice of life leisurely at times--it can make grass growing look like an action flick. Gorgeously produced though! If you like the idea of a pristine Venice on terraformed Mars, with cute teenagers piloting gondolas as the main characters, then this is the show for you.
In any case, I've read plenty of manga. What I'm really longing for is a light novel that never once makes me cringe, whether due to careless translation or sexism.
Mary wrote: "I have read My Next Life as a Villainess: All Routes Lead to Doom! Volume 1 and was not overly impressed. The plot holes kept bothering me."
Many light novels that are professionally published in Japan were first published online on amateur writers' sites (kind of like the original fiction portions of AO3), and at times they feel like they were lightly edited between their net and pro publications, if at all. So I wouldn't doubt that this particular one had a plot hole here and there...
Anyhow, I don't intend for this thread to become a light novel thread. It's a niche interest even among people who are also anime fans so wouldn't be of interest to most.

The Galaxy, and the Ground Within. This is very much a comfort read for me. I love these books so much. I'm very tempted to go reread the rest after I finish this one.
Shadow and Bone. I started this because I was watching the tv show. Which means I know have the two versions inextricably mixed up in my head at this point. Oops.
Project Hail Mary. Even though I hated Artemis, I'm giving this one a try. It's much more along the lines of The Martian so far, which I did enjoy. I'm just worried that it'll end up being a Martian copy completely though.
Oh, Jordan! So sorry to hear things are tough. I hope you enjoy your books at least! I just got Project Hail Mary and can't wait to start!

I tired of him with Texas but I must have missed Poland. Texas was a definite DNF for me and I had just moved to Texas so I was interested in the topic.
I just read through the Tordotcom Publishing 2021 Debut Sampler sampler and couldn't find one I wanted to read. Sadness - I must be getting picky again.
I'm still working on The Tiger and the Wolf by Adrian Tchaikovsky and enjoying it plus I'm reading Live Free or Die by John Ringo which is a bit too much isolationist (think posse comitus types) , right wing, conservative for me. It's part of my TBR challenge, so I'll soldier on


I missed The Covenant too. I think the last one I really liked was Chesapeake and that's because it basically had my family history in it (Quakers, slave owners, rebels, loyalists, fighters on both sides of the Civil War. The imaginary town it was set in was about 10 miles from where my father's family had been living since before the American Revolution.

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