SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
What Else Are You Reading?
>
What Else Are You Reading in 2021?
message 1701:
by
Don
(new)
Sep 29, 2021 05:16PM

reply
|
flag
Colin wrote: "Beth wrote: "Colin wrote: "Finished "Harrow The Ninth". I am not entirely sure what I think. It may take a while to digest. Complex and multi-layered, that's for sure, with plenty of open issues fo..."
Not only allowed, encouraged! Summon forth your so far latent necromantic powers and ressurect this post!
Not only allowed, encouraged! Summon forth your so far latent necromantic powers and ressurect this post!

No, no, it didn't. I just wanted to express my agreement that we both don't like them. 🙂



The commonality between the work of Sid Vicious and Becky Chambers isn't super obvious, for sure. :D

Last prompts:
alien presence: Brightness Reef by David Brin - this was the only one from the bingo books that I didn't enjoy. Brin does fantastic worldbuilding, no question, but his plot, character writing and story structure already tired me in another book I've read and it was downright sleep-putting in this one.
popular/hyped: Axiom's End by Lindsay Ellis - this was a cute surprise. It had such a strong x-files vibe that it got me all nostalgic and I enjoyed reading this aliens-visit-earth-government-cover-up story a lot.
steam punk: Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve - this one has such a good worldbuilding with cities that roam around the land and hunt each other (municipal darwinism), keeping in mind that the writing is more for a MG audience the story is really good and exciting. But there is a lot of death in the later part.
classic/older book: Some of Your Blood by Theodore Sturgeon - I think this is the only Sturgeon that I had never read before. For readers who enjoy his high level quality writing this is quite interesting. For readers who look for an exciting plot it probably is downright boring.
short story: The Visit by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie - a fun little read set in a Nigeria of the future where men are expected to stay at home and be good, devote house-husbands.
and to my utter joy I found two pearls (although both on the depressing side - since it is me):
recommended to you: Hummingbird Salamander by Jeff VanderMeer - this author is a writer par excellence. I was in awe about this story of a character slowly falling apart while hunting clues that apparently came out of nowhere. I was so deep in the skin of this woman, whose real name we don't know, that I physically felt the oppression and anxiety. What an author!
global south: The Old Lie by Claire G. Coleman - I was already completely sold by Coleman's first novel 'Terra Nullius' and she does it again with this one. The reprocessing of the hurt and pain of the colonization of her aboriginal community is projected into a military SF where Earth is but a minor non-citizen ally to a mighty federation in a galactic war. She writes so blunt and visceral about the idiocy of war that it hurts. Perfect!

And happy to hear that Hummingbird is good! I really wanted to read it when it came out, but since it took its sweet time coming to Storytel, I wasn't in the mood anymore. I'll get to it eventually.

And happy to hear that Hummingbird is good! I really wanted to read it when it came out, but since it ..."
Anna, the audiobook narration for Hummingbird Salamander is spot on. But I'm not sure if it needs a warning. I had some real-life anxiety attack over reading it, because I identified so much that it became nearly unbearable.

Multimillion-dollar beach property taken from Black owners in Jim Crow era is cleared to be returned
By Cheri Mossburg, CNN
Updated 11:05 AM EDT, Fri October 01, 2021

Everyone who is *not* reading it (yet), it's not too late to join the Daily Read 2021!
(Yes, it's very last minute, that's why I haven't done a show and dance this year.)

Is it a series worth reading?



A Closed and common orbit was amazing, arguably better than the first book in the series.
Mother of Eden was not quite as good as Dark Eden, but it was still a very good book.
The Well of Ascension wasn’t as good as Mistborn: The Final Empire, but it was still a good book.

I’m currently doing a reread of Closed and Common Orbit. Well a relisten anyway. It’s my car audiobook. I relistened to Long Way to a Small Angry Planet a few months ago and found I had the next two as well. I eye read all of them years ago but they make me feel good and are perfect for long car trips. I hear lots of stuff that I missed last time when I read it. I suppose I am guilty of skimming over a lot when I eye read sometimes.

I did read most of the series a few years ago, but yeah, there is plenty of UST and lust along with the adventure so be warned. It's a popular series with paranormal romance readers.
Unfortunately it was one of those series that started off with some great ideas and characters, but the writing and plots deteriorated as the series wore on. I eventually gave up and I never got around to finishing the last couple of books.
I haven't made up my mind whether to try this new book and see if it's a return to early form, or just to let it lie.
Maybe you could try the first book and see what you think of the world? Nice work on winning a book, anyway :)

The commonality between the work of Sid Vicious and Becky Chambers isn't super obvious, for sure. :D"
So glad I wasn't drinking anything, would have been cleaning the monitor off for a week. LOL

My 5 star ratings:
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo
The First Mountain Man
My 4 star ratings:
The Crown Tower
Midnight in Chernobyl: The Untold Story of the World's Greatest Nuclear Disaster
Watership Down
The Last Mountain Man
My 3 star ratings and below, descending in rating:
Shadow and Bone, 3*
The Epigenetics Revolution, 3*
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, 3*
Stoner, 2*
Siege and Storm, 1*
Kissing the Coronavirus, 1*, this was part of a bet, so go easy on me, 🤣.
The Final Girl Support Group, 1*
I don't think I've ever read 13 books in one month. And I think I've posted reviews for every single one. It was amazing.
October won't be so easy though. I'm aiming for 4 to 5 books. I started The Rose and the Thorn a few days ago, on my e-reader, and yesterday I also started Lonesome Dove. That one will take me a while.

Yay Nikki! That's an amazing range of content. This one is perhaps more disturbing. I wonder what it's like to be a model for these covers.
Oh - "readers also enjoyed" Baby Beluga, Dream March: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the March on Washington, and Put Me in the Zoo: A Book of Colors. At least that last one makes some kind of sense.




Instead I've decided to finish Jim Butcher's Harry Dresden series starting with White Night and so far it's been far more interesting than the Pillars of Reality series.




Me too Don. A powerful and wonderfully written book. Unforgettable characters.

thanks for the recommendation - I've been holding off on it but as it's cheaper than most new Kindle books ($9.99 vs $14.99) I've been tempted

I hadn't thought much about the "punk" part of the term "cyberpunk" until recently. For me the cool part of cyberpunk was the cyber part. I didn't much notice the punk aspect at the time. I noticed some criticism of capitalism and corporations but just thought of that as normal SF.
But this year I read an issue of a French magazine devoted to one of my favorite authors Bifrost n°97 : Sabrina Calvo : cybermagicienne. And one of the articles said something about how she keeps the "punk" in "cyberpunk". Thinking about it a while, I do now see the "punk" in the original cyberpunk and in Calvo's writing. Especially the most recent two novels. In both cases it is low-income people living under pressure from gentrification, etc., and fighting back.
I still don't understand why the title says Cyber magician, though. She's punk, and magical, but not cyber.

https://www.futureconsf.com/futurecon...
I didn't watch most of it, but did tune in for the discussion "WHAT PUNK ARE YOU? Past, Present and Future Trends in Anti-capitalists Science Fiction"
If you are interested, you can still watch the recording.
One thing that all of the participants (I think!) agreed on was that "Steampunk" has nothing to do with punk, but all the other "punks", including "solarpunk" are legit. I don't think I agree. Steampunk has been taken over by the mainstream culture as just a type of dress-up, but that happens to any genre/style that becomes popular.





Y: The Last Man series in preparation for the streaming television adaptation. Not sure how well live-action Yorrick Brown will do against the version of his voice that's inside my head...
I found dead-tree book editions of Marvel Zombies: The Complete Collection, Vol. 1 (and 2 and 3) in my local library, and am attempting a reread in October...
I have a challenge to finish a book of 150+ pages this week, and it so happened that the Maryland One Book for 2021 is The Book of Delights by poet Ross Gay, so trying to knock _that_ off my Friday midnight... (but it is a delight in itself, so this one is easy).

A lot of self-pub cover images are from stock photo sites*, so much so that I've frequently seen the exact same image on multiple covers. The models might not have any idea what uses their photo from that modeling session years ago, might have been put to.
*I am convinced a lot of them come from adult sites, too, photoshopped to conceal the naughty bits.


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

This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Shadow Rising (other topics)Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones (other topics)
Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams (other topics)
Leviathan Falls (other topics)
The Jekyl Island Club (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Brent Monahan (other topics)Stephen King (other topics)
James S.A. Corey (other topics)
Robin Hobb (other topics)
Susan Palwick (other topics)
More...