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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CBRetriever
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Dec 15, 2021 11:34AM

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On the surface, Forty Thousand in Gehenna is not the kind of book I'd enjoy. No character was given the spotlight for long enough for me to develop an attachment to them, the timeline (300 years in about as many pages) is rather abrupt, people are much more treacherous and rivalry-obsessed than nice to each other, etc. But I really liked the spare, almost impressionistic feel of the book, and there was enough else going on conceptually and/or human drama-wise to keep me turning the pages. (review)
Next up in paper I think, is Planetfall. I'm not typically much of a SF reader, but this one should be different enough from 40K to overcome that. If it doesn't, Witchmark, perhaps, which has been pending for a while.

I am reading:
Malice by John Gwynne
Night Slayer Boxed Set Books 1-3, An Urban Fantasy Action Adventure: Midnight War, Monster Quest, Shadow Plague by William Massa
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling
Haunted Florida Boxed Set by Gaby Triana
and
A Bloody Christmas by Brian G. Berry

Me too
Quag Keep by Andre Norton - traveling/car book
Inspector Maigret Omnibus, Volume 1: Pietr the Latvian; The Hanged Man of Saint-Pholien; The Carter of 'La Providence'; The Grand Banks Café by Georges Simenon
A Liaden Universe Constellation: Volume I by Sharon Lee - part of a Humble Bundle
The Book of Isle: The Complete Series by Nancy Springer
A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century by Barbara W. Tuchman

Me too
Quag Keep by Andre Norton - traveling/car book
[book:Inspector Maigret Omnibus, Volume 1: Pietr the Latvian..."
I don't feel so bad or alone now. I was thinking it might have been just me. lol :)


My review - www.Goodreads.com/review/show/4353709378

Moon Called
and
Moon Called"
Yeah you're right.
Devil in Disguise
and
Devil in Disguise
I was waiting on a new book from both authors, and ironically they released books with identical titles within a few weeks of each other this year. The first one was really good (historical romance - yeah, I love them). I've stalled on the second one - not one of this author's best. I may finish it eventually. (contemporary romance, yeah, I like those too).

I love the idea of people living on the moon and the struggles that they might face. I also like the idea of catapulting pieces of it at Earth in their fight for independence.

Luckily the last book A Memory of Light also was the best one in the series so that the long way found a satisfying ending (hell I had to wait some 12.000 pages to get a decent Lan Mandragoran POV). But I would recommend the series only to readers who dearly love great worldbuilding and aren't bothered by mediocre prose and clichés without end.

Ha ha. Damned with faint praise. I do admire your perseverance. Not sure whether I'll go there. Might try the series one day?

After that I plan on reading A Memory Called Empire.

@Jan: yeah, sorry ^^'. But I just bounced off so hard on some of the writing quirks. Ruined more than one character for me.
I only went through with it because I stubbornly got hooked to two characters in book 1 (and with my luck he was nothing but a footnote for the majority of the books and she had POVs, but the fewest if the main characters)

Luckily the last book A Memory of Light also was the best one in the series so that the long way found a satisfying ending (hell I had ..."
Congrats! That is such a huge series!

I honestly feel rather spent now and it's the first time that I can think of, that I don't feel compelled to pick up any book to go on with reading. I think I will put in some days of actual non-reading for the end of the year (??? must be a first ???)







Ooo, that sounds pretty cool.

"
The descriptions of the chariot races are worth the price of admission.

But seriously, congrats. :) That's a huge series to finish in as short a time as you have. The updates I saw solidified other second hand impressions that it has both its highs and its sloggy lows.

I read it earlier this year. I took a while to warm up to it, but once I was in, I was very impressed by it and felt it well deserved the Hugo. Hope you enjoy.
I have purchased the sequel A Desolation Called Peace but somehow haven't yet felt ready to begin it. It's just sitting there waiting on Mount TBR.

Luckily the last book A Memory of Light also was the best one in the series so that the long way found a satisfying ending (hell I had ..."
Quite a feat. I would never have persevered, based on what you say about the books. Even if I liked them it would probably have taken me years to get through them.

I've always wondered about this. Do I place books that I want to read soon in the foothills where they're easy to reach, or do I put them at the summit of Mount TBR so I see them every time the mountain is out (as we say here in the PNW)?
I was quite impressed by A Memory Called Empire. It took me a very long time to buy into the characters and situations in A Desolation Called Peace.

I'm also continuing on with A Liaden Universe Constellation: Volume I by Sharon Lee. I like some of the stories (the ones with Moonhawk & Lute) but some of them weren't quite my cup of tea

I've been re-reading Destiny's Conflict in the War of Light and Shadow series. Once I'm finished I'll be caught up on my re-read. She's still writing the last book, and I hope it won't be much longer!!

Luckily the last book A Memory of Light also was the best one in the series so that the long way found a satisfying ending (hell I had ..."
Let me add my (slightly belated) congratulations on that achievement. You have both amazing reading speed and endurance. I could never do a marathon like that.
I did read the books as they came out and, initially, loved the world so much I lugged the hardcovers on plane trips so that I could read them as soon as possible. By book 10, however, I couldn't take it anymore (the bookmark is still where I quit). Each book felt like a new quest in an RPG and the repetitive description was too much. When the last one came out, I did read that and didn't feel I missed anything despite skipping 3 and a half huge volumes.

Stephen - I think books 6-11 are really such a chore that it is perhaps better to read the summaries and then go on with the Sanderson finale. I was listening to the audiobooks and I guess that helps a lot in stubbornly persevering.




Luckily the last book A Memory of Light also was the best one in the series so that the long way found a satisfying ending..."
I've just begun a bit of a reread of WOT. It's been interesting starting all over again, as it's been years since I read them. I'm finding myself skipping big chunks that I know don't have much bearing on the story, even in Eye of the World.
Will be interesting to see how far I get, or whether I skip some books completely. A good editor would probably have helped. The scope of the story, and the concepts are fabulous. The characters are also excellent - but I'm finding myself preferring the more peripheral ones, rather than Rand, for example.

I think I probably won't read more Pullman any time particularly soon, but neither do I regret diving into it.
In the meantime I'll probably pick up Ship of Magic next before getting to Empire in Black and Gold. I've got due dates to keep up with lol.



I just finished what must have been this same version not long ago. In fact my post about it is on this page (message 2204). Agreed, it's a wonderful performance! :)

I won't read The Mists of Avalon or any other of the author's works because of the information in this thread
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...



I read that this year in the graphic novel version Robert Silverberg's COLONIES: RETURN TO BELZAGOR. Loved it.


Onto a Christmas present.

I'll continue the Nexus series after.
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