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 2101:
by
Jacqueline
(new)
Dec 06, 2021 05:01AM

reply
|
flag


A bit like living through 2017-2021 in Australia, actually...🤦🏽♀️😂

The contrast was even more stark since right before that I read "Gather, Darkness" by Fritz Leiber, released 8 years earlier and light years away concerning quality writing. So old age is no excuse.
Whatever, this even made Robert Jordan's character writing look decent and I'm thinking about going on with the WoT books, after I've abandoned them with book 8 and just read the summary on some wiki page. I've fallen head over heels in love with the screen adaptation and I could imagine that I like the books better now that I have faces in mind while reading.


A bit like living through 2017-2021 in Australia, actually...🤦🏽♀️😂"
Yeah that's been a bit hectic too lol


I'm also not minding The Way of Kings, like I was afraid I would - given the beginning, I thought it might be very violent, but so far, it's more interesting and thoughtful than that.


Adding to The Way of Kings...I'm a fan of Brandon Sanderson's work, especially Skyward and Starsight and just bought the recent release Cytonic. I haven't read The Way of Kings yet, but it's on my list.


That was her first novel and is bad.
She was also a screenwriter known for The Big Sleep (1946), Rio Bravo (1959), and The Long Goodbye (1973). She also worked on an early draft of The Empire Strikes Back (1980), elements of which remained in the film; she died before the film went into production. She was the first woman shortlisted for the Hugo Award.
Her Eric John Start books were fairly good space opera tales. The Long Tomorrow is pretty good for the times and is supposedly the first post nuclear holocaust book ever written.

Don't hold back, tell us how you really feel. LOL

It's funny b/c I had read a light space opera book by Heinlein earlier this year - The Rolling Stones - and assumed that was his style of writing. Boy was I wrong.



I think book 3 gets even less subtle!
I just started the just-published Cyber Mage by Saad Hossain. I enjoyed a novella from him earlier this year so I'm eager to try this other book.


I think book 3 gets even less subtle!"
I rather enjoy his books but when he wants to make a point then subtle he is not!

There were very few books I'd read in the nominations this year. Someone in another group commented that they were very US centric. Not sure if this is so, but it was an interesting comment.

Me too, Leonie. I didn't end up voting at all. I'd read and enjoyed Project Hail Mary, but didn't love it enough to want to vote for it as 'best' SF read of the year. *shrugs*

Me too also, about this book.



The next one better be the promised improvement.

The next one better be th..."
It seriously does get better Gabi. Hang in there. And it is great to be able to say you have read them all!!!
I thought book 10 was the weakest link. By book 12 I started giving them 5 stars.


https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...
ETA: it was a bit of a slog, but not as bad as The Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind


@The Joy of Erudition: this is the wisest of ideas. I was actually doing this when I gave up reading the series in the first run, but then when the screen adaptation started I just was too curious to read Nynaeve and Lan scenes (which are rare anyway)

Thanks for that last.

I just finished Connie Willis's To Say Nothing But The Dog, an enjoyable book, not too earth-shattering, but an entertaining read!
Now, on to Philip Jose Farmer's lone hugo win, reading River World, which for book one, has his winning 'To Your Scattered Bodies Go'. I'll read the full thing even though the 2nd half didn't win ("The fabulous Riverboat").

My review of Romancing the Inventor by Gail Carriger

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

Yeah, that´s true. I also only voted on one category.


Same here. Plus a couple more I had read but they weren't good enough for a "Best" bite.
It's GR Choice "Best Books of the Year," not "Books I would like to read."
Must I read all these comments and believe them and not believe that those are are people's best books of the year?



I also finished the audiobook of A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters, by Julian Barnes. While not entirely SFF, it has chapters that edge into these genres a little. The chapter set in the Afterlife really reminded me of the 'Heaven' that Missy creates when gathering dead humans for her cyberarmy, in the Doctor Who show.

Also eye-reading The House on Mango Street, which I’m enjoying too.

The book itself I've had a tricky relationship with. My. WORD. is it slow out the starting gate, which previously to now has made for many DNFs over the years. In any case, I'll burble about all that in a review later on. :D (review)
Next up in audio is my second listen-through (and 3rd reading) of Hogfather, narrated by Nigel Planer. This seems to have fallen out of license on audible U.S., which makes me happy I managed to pick it up when I did.

I listened to a bit of the Andy Serkis narration of Hobbit or LOTR (don't remember which although yes I can tell them apart lol) and I didn't dislike it or like it, it just didn't feel like something I wanted to listen to at the time. I will probably eventually try again, just to see what they're like. At the very least I want to get to Gollum :)
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...