SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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What Else Are You Reading? > What Else Are You Reading in 2021?

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message 101: by [deleted user] (new)

I just finished reading The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro. It was a relatively quick read and has a thought-provoking ending. Very worthwhile. I hadn't read anything by this author before. I appreciate the recommendation from a librarian!


message 102: by Travis (new)

Travis Foster (travismfoster) | 1154 comments Pamela wrote: "I just finished reading The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro. It was a relatively quick read and has a thought-provoking ending. Very worthwhile. I hadn't read anything by this author before. I appre..."

I really loved that book too.


message 103: by Allison, Fairy Mod-mother (new)

Allison Hurd | 14221 comments Mod
Yay for librarians!! Glad you enjoyed it--I keep meaning to read another by him, I really enjoyed Never Let Me Go


message 104: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments I've been meaning to read Buried Giant since it came out, but still haven't. It's likely I'll get to Klara and the Sun first, because I'm very eagerly waiting for it!


message 105: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments I have it as part of the Alphabet Challenge for I, so I will be reading it this year


message 106: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments CBRetriever wrote: "I have it as part of the Alphabet Challenge for I, so I will be reading it this year"

Buried Giant? I have Klara :D


message 107: by Kevin (new)

Kevin | 10 comments HeyT wrote: "I started back in with the Alex Verus series by re reading Fated. I read the first few books back in 2013 so I felt it was best to start from the beginning and then catch up. I enjo..."

Great series!


message 108: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments Anna wrote: "CBRetriever wrote: "I have it as part of the Alphabet Challenge for I, so I will be reading it this year"

Buried Giant? I have Klara :D"


yep Buried Giant


message 109: by Phrynne (new)

Phrynne I have read three of Ishigoro's books including the Buried Giant. He writes beautifully but somehow never captured my interest.


message 110: by Phrynne (new)

Phrynne I keep seeing Emergency Skin mentioned on here so I had to give it a go. Loved it!
My review https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 111: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments I devoured Little Eyes by Samanta Schweblin today! It was so horrifying and fascinating at the same time. I only paused once (to use a blender, can't audiobook at the same time), and now I'm sitting here completely unable to focus on anything else. I don't know how to categorize it, speculative social horror? Near future tech enabling people to be their horrible selves? An all too realistic contemporary look at social media? All of these things? Compulsively listenable!

Gabi, I think you'd like it! :) It's on Storytel.


message 112: by Allison, Fairy Mod-mother (new)

Allison Hurd | 14221 comments Mod
I really really want to read a Schweblin, I keep hearing great things


message 113: by Anna (last edited Jan 13, 2021 04:18PM) (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments I want to read Fever Dream, but I can only get a physical copy from my library :(

edit: Oh! I can get the Finnish translation on ebook from my library! ^_^


message 114: by Jemppu (new)

Jemppu | 1735 comments I have Little Eyes on my shelf, too. Seems uniquely fascinating indeed :)


message 115: by Gabi (new)

Gabi | 3441 comments Anna wrote: "Gabi, I think you'd like it! :) It's on Storytel...."

Thanks, Anna! I have it on my TBR for quite some while now. It is great to hear that it had such an impact on you. Now I'm even more looking forward to reading it!


message 116: by Woman Reading (new)

Woman Reading  (is away exploring) | 75 comments I finished The Humans by Matt Haig The Humans by Matt Haig. Maybe some would consider this Sci-fi lite, but I really liked it.

My review - www.Goodreads.com/review/show/3762318602


message 117: by Anne Hutchinson (new)

Anne Hutchinson (ephalent) Rereading the Harry Potter series! 😊


message 118: by Don (new)

Don Dunham just finished "The Dry" by Jane Harper. Detective/Thriller. It was good, I liked it.


message 119: by Mystic (new)

Mystic (mystify) | 38 comments I finished Behind Her Eyes Behind Her Eyes by Sarah Pinborough by Sarah Pinborough. Presence of supernatural elements make it different from other psychological thrillers.

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

Planning to read some classic Sci-Fi books I found on the SF Masterworks Series soon.


message 120: by Jacqueline (new)

Jacqueline | 2428 comments The movie is excellent Don. Definitely does justice to Jane’s book. And as I have said elsewhere the cinematography was beautiful. Really shows the drought conditions we have been living with for many years. The contrast between what was and what is now. It was so beautifully shot.


message 121: by HeyT (new)

HeyT | 504 comments I finished up Babylon's Ashes which I was kind of putting off because the installment before it was kind of a miss for me but I happily enjoyed this one much more. I'm back to reading Alex Verus with Taken. I'll probably read the next one after that before heading back into the expanse.


message 122: by T.S. (new)

T.S. Yates | 3 comments I got the EarthSea Collection this holiday season so I can't wait to read that this year.


message 123: by Allison, Fairy Mod-mother (new)

Allison Hurd | 14221 comments Mod
ooo what a great gift!


message 124: by Beth (new)

Beth (rosewoodpip) | 2005 comments My audiobook luck has been terrible during isolation, DNF after DNF, few or none of which are the books' fault. I started City of the Lost and here's finally a book that I've gotten past the first couple of chapters, and it's in a genre that I typically have no interest in. Hey, whatever works!


message 125: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments Sometimes a complete genre switch is the only thing that works!


message 127: by Eric (last edited Jan 14, 2021 04:15PM) (new)

Eric | 463 comments I finished Kushiel's Dart (Phèdre's Trilogy, #1) by Jacqueline Carey Kushiel's Dart to get me into the New Year. Gave it three stars. Much is borrowed from Medieval and Norse history, as well as Greek mythology (Poseidon). Heavy on masochistic sexual behavior.

For a lark tried, The Wizard's Butler The Wizard's Butler by Nathan Lowell . What a blast. Fun read! Thought I'd read another by Lowell. Ravenwood (Tanyth Fairport, #1) by Nathan Lowell Ravenwood.


message 128: by Bobby (new)

Bobby | 869 comments I just started Iron Prince and am really loving it. I was having trouble finding something to really sink my teeth into, and this is already right up my alley. I can tell I'll have a lot of fun with it, and at over 1,000 pages, it is just what I was looking for.


message 129: by Tamara (new)

Tamara | 271 comments CBRetriever wrote: "Tamara wrote: "I'm reading Dragonsbane, after a recommendation someone in this group made to me last year. (Characters in their 30s-40s, who aren't always mothers or divorced or hav..."

Someone actually recommended it directly, during a discussion about YA books. I should probably go back and have a look...
I did really enjoy it - except for some extreme gory-ness during one of the battles near the end. Insightful and honest.


message 130: by Tamara (new)

Tamara | 271 comments Don & Michelle: What is it about Lois Bujold's books/Penric books that you like so much? Is it just that they're a break from heavier things, or do they perhaps get better as the series goes on? I listened to 'Penric's Demon', and was underwhelmed. It was nice, and unusual, but I didn't feel anything really captivating about it. It's probably just different tastes, but I want to know if I should give them another go, if there's more good to find.


message 131: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments Tamara, we have a thread for all things Penric and another one for the novels in the same world! :)

But in short, if you didn't like the first one, you won't like the rest.


message 132: by Rachel (new)

Rachel | 1405 comments Re: Penric - maybe try eye reading - I read the first but tried listening to the next and I HATED the voice/wat of speaking the narrator used. Would have completely ruined the book for me and changed what Penric sounded like in my head.


message 133: by Gabi (new)

Gabi | 3441 comments I second Rachel: Grover Gardner's voice is one I don't like either. Still I liked the first book in the series best so far.


message 134: by Rachel (new)

Rachel | 1405 comments I could handle him as Miles Vorkosigan but Penric is just not not NOT the way he voices him.


message 135: by Gabi (new)

Gabi | 3441 comments He also made Vorkosigan difficult to get through for me.


message 136: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments I love him as Penric :D


message 137: by Don (new)

Don Dunham Tamara, The Penric stories likely strummed a tone with me right now because of the year 2020 when I read them. Things I enjoyed, Penric was happy to lead a simple, well charted life but he didn't whine too much when that drastically changed. Lois McMaster Bujold's writing for me engages the transport function. The Unfolding of Desdemona's and Penric's association is to me interesting and subtle.


message 138: by Don (new)

Don Dunham watching the News in 2020 made morally ambiguous less interesting.


message 139: by Don (new)

Don Dunham Regarding Audio books, I think the industry might be starting to understand that having more than one narrated version might be good for sales, I like the Penric stories narrator fine but there are other narrators who drive me off of any story they do.


message 140: by Karin (new)

Karin (karinz) | 70 comments I just finished a reread of 'Salem's Lot. It was the first Stephen King book I ever read back when the paperback edition came out. I remember everyone in the family passing the copy around as it was a "you gotta read this" book. It held up very well.


message 141: by Ines, Resident Vampire (new)

Ines (imaginary_space) | 424 comments Mod
Karin wrote: "I just finished a reread of 'Salem's Lot. It was the first Stephen King book I ever read back when the paperback edition came out. I remember everyone in the family passin..."

Karin, I reread it last year and found the first half a bit slow, but the second half was amazing.


message 142: by ~ Giulia ~ (new)

~ Giulia ~ | 146 comments I finished The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul. I think I liked it more than the first even if the ending confused me. Up next is Waking Gods.

On the side I'm reading Skyward, which is delightful - if you can say so about something so full of war and loss. Probably not. So... it's like taking a bath in the warm blood of your enemies while surrounded by their cries of agony?


message 143: by Don (new)

Don Dunham Salem's Lot is amazing and something I will not read before bedtime.


message 144: by Gabi (new)

Gabi | 3441 comments ~ Giulia ~ wrote: "... On the side I'm reading Skyward, which is delightful - if you can say so about something so full of war and loss. Probably not. So... it's like taking a bath in the warm blood of your enemies while surrounded by their cries of agony?
"


:D This is the perfect Spensa description! Love it!


message 145: by Gabi (new)

Gabi | 3441 comments This week I read

A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik which was lame and a real letdown after her "Uprooted" and "Spinning Silver" which I liked. And to my utter dismay it doesn't even count for the popsugar prompt "dark academia", cause I understood this prompt wrong (how can one keep up with the daily changing hip trends?)

Bear Head by Adrian Tchaikovsky, the sequel to his novel "Dogs of War", which feels a lot like a direct commentary to the current political and social environment set in a cyberpunk future on Mars.

Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami, also read for the Sugarpop Challenge (prompt 'title which is also a song'). I will forever adore this author's style. But the story itself here is cringeworthy in its antiquated and fetished take on women.


message 146: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments I have no idea why some of Adrian Tchaikovsky's books don't seem to show up on amazon.com for US readers. Neither of the Dogs of War books are available in Kindle format for US residents on amazon.com. It is on amazon.fr however....

Anyway, I'm working on The Chronicles of Tornor Trilogy: Watchtower, The Dancers of Arun, and The Northern Girl which is fairly quick and easy reading so far.


message 147: by Gabi (new)

Gabi | 3441 comments CBRetriever wrote: "I have no idea why some of Adrian Tchaikovsky's books don't seem to show up on amazon.com for US readers. Neither of the Dogs of War books are available in Kindle format for US res..."

He is writing for four different publishers and I think some of them are only UK distribution.


message 148: by Beth (last edited Jan 15, 2021 03:22PM) (new)

Beth (rosewoodpip) | 2005 comments CBRetriever wrote: "I have no idea why some of Adrian Tchaikovsky's books don't seem to show up on amazon.com for US readers."

I came across this with Cage of Souls. I was able to order the British edition in paperback from US amazon (it shipped from Book Depository, iirc), but there is not an ebook for it on that site.


message 149: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments Cage of Souls was also available on amazon.fr in Kindle format and I bought it September 2019


message 150: by Jordan (new)

Jordan (justiceofkalr) | 403 comments Gabi wrote: "This week I read

A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik which was lame and a real letdown after her "Uprooted" and "Spinning Silver" which I liked. And to my utter dismay ..."


So much agreement about Norwegian Wood. I love his other stuff but I have been trying to finish this one for months now and it is a struggle.


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