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?

I read two non-fiction books side by side, both about plant physiology and the interconnections of life, the influence on humans and the importance for saving the environment. Both were excellent.
Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds & Shape Our Futures by Merlin Sheldrake highlights the many different fields of fungi science (and not so science). Mindblowing ideas that left me with the impression that you definitely need no alien lifeforms if you have fungi. So good!
Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants by Robin Wall Kimmerer combines plantphysiology with the wisdom of American indigenous. Wrote in a beautiful poetic style and filled with melancholy and sadness why we just can't see the right way. Very profound!
Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton was my pick for the popsugar prompt "shortest book on your TBR". I've never read Edith Wharton and was a bit doubtful, cause tragic love affair isn't exactly my cup of tea. But the prose was really good and deep and she managed to suck me in. She told the drama between the lines of tradition-bound stiff New England characters. I was impressed.
The Green Man's Foe by Juliet E. McKenna is the second book in the Green Man series. Not my usual kind of book, but quite a feel good read. It landed on my TBR cause Adrian Tchaikovsky promoted the author on Twitter (they both worked together on short story collections), and I really like the rural England mystery crime adventures of a carpenter whose mother was a dryad.
Tender Is the Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica needs to be read with the warning to not read it on a full stomach! Very good, but icky like hell. Due to a virus animal flesh can't be digested anymore by humans, but humans want to eat flesh, so ... you can imagine where this is going. And she doesn't blend out anything.
I guess it is a bit more 'digestable' for vegetarians.
The Expert System’s Champion by Adrian Tchaikovsky was released this week, so of course I had to read it (my motto this year - no month without an AT book). The sequel to "Expert System's Brother" again excels at the description of an alien, hostile to humans, world and has some mindtwisting ideas of co-evolution. The ending could have been more poignant to my taste. But still good 4 stars.

Now, I have finally decided to plunge into gigantic Wheel of Time. Lets see if I manage to reach the end of the journey.
Meanwhile reading Murderbot#2 in parallel.


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

I think I'm a little over halfway through Shards of Honour and it's definitely going off the rails into bad romance territory fast. The planet part was interesting, the ship slightly less, and now that we've done the time jump it just is not great so far.
I'm also reading Pushing Ice, which so far is an interesting book being wrecked by some obnoxious characters. It's a shame because I usually like Reynolds, so I'll stick it out and see if it gets any better.

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


my review - www.Goodreads.com/review/show/3365362217

My review of Minor Mage
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Starswarm: by Jerry Pournelle. I liked it 3 stars.
The Oblique Approach,
The Heart of Darkness,
Destiny's Shield: By David Drake & Eric Flint
enjoyed them, 4 stars.
ReRead of: "News of the World", loved it, 5 stars.
The Dry by Jane Harper, liked it 3 stars.
The Physician of Vilnoc by Bujold, Loved it 5 Stars.
Flesh and Spirit by Carol Berg...,... I'm still thinking about it. 3 or 4 stars.
Dog Training Revolution by Zak George, liked it 4 stars.

I also just finished Gods of Jade and Shadow which I loved. I don't know why I thought it was going to be serious business lit fic so I was happy when it was much lighter and fun. Although I will say it did make me flash back to the horror of my undergrad capstone course where a fellow student had to give a presentation on the Popol Vuh and kind of failed hardcore.


Also, I looked at your shelf and after a..."
I am so glad to hear that! I absolutely love Amelie Nothomb; she is my #1 favorite author. 😊
Would love to hear what you think after reading- particularly with The Character of Rain. If you find you like that one, definitely pick up Fear and Trembling as well.

Have you read The Buccaneers, Gabi? I think it's the only book of hers I've read, but it's one of my favourites. She didn't finish it before her death, so it was completed by two different sources - one in book form, and another as a mini-series by the BBC. They ended up generally the same, but in quite a different way. I like the book version of the ending better. It's also, like the one you read, insightful about the differences and clash between the old and new (including old and new money), and here she shows it through British tradition versus American brashness and youth, growing up, innocence and naivety, love and poetry, friendship, honesty and deception, and the differences between what people want.



My first but not last le Carre novel as I loved his humor and wit and the multiple occasions of double meanings kept me on my toes.
My review - www.Goodreads.com/review/show/3820672188




Anyway, I haven't read much about these, but the first novella struck me as, coincidentally or intentionally, in conversation with Ender's Game. Not sure it's exactly a rebuttal, but a different perspective on children and war.



Anyway, I haven't read much about these, but the first novella struck me as, coinci..."
I have read the first in the series, I really enjoyed it. I’m waiting for the others to become available from the library.





Phoenix Extravagant
Sword heart
Spiderlight
(Maybe Machine by Elizabeth Bear)
Someone tell me what to do 😋

Phoenix Extravagant
Sword heart
Spiderlight
(Maybe Machine by Elizabeth Bear)
Someone tell me what to do 😋"
Machine if you're still wondering what happened to people from Ancestral Night,
else,
Spiderlight. You like Adrian Tchaikovsky's SF; try his fantasy too.
There i helped😁


Maybe I’ll read the first page of each and see which grabs me most 😊


That's a bummer! I hate it when I go through those slumps.




I have a few.
Left Hand of Darkness
Dune
Lord of the Rings
A Time for Trumpets
In general, I will read one of them again every few years.


Mine is The Name of the Wind or something by one of my favorite mystery writers (Jance, Kellerman, etc)

Anything by Terry Pratchett

anything by christopher moore but tbh i dont reread a lot of books.

"Janissaries"
"Clan and Crown"
"Storm of Victory"
All by Jerry Pournelle &
Roland Green.
Surprisingly good and delightfully free on Audible.
Just got the fourth and final to series: " "Mamelukes" by
Jerry Pournelle &
David Webster. got that one on my Newer, Larger and more improved Kindle, I had a tiny paperwhite for years... I really enjoy the larger page size.
The Janissaries Series is a portal fiction with science fiction, fantasy and military fiction elements. enjoying it very much ****4 stars

that we consider rereading.
I sometime consider rereads on:
LOTR's + The Hobbit
The Sacketts novels
Lonesome Dove

Which one did you get, Don? The Fire 10? I bought the Fire 10 years ago for the bigger screen and I love it. Except for the weight! The weight is hard on my arthritis and fibromyalgia. My daughter just bought me a really useful tablet pillow prop to hold it up.

anything by christopher moore but tbh i dont reread a lot of..."
Doesn't he write books that are kind of dark humor-ish? I've never read him. Maybe if you try an author with books on par with his. Perhaps someone in the group could recommend something along those lines for you!
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I fin..."
I completely feel you on that- If I remember, Desperate Remedies took me... maybe an entire year to read the whole thing. Not that it wasn't good, but his works just take some effort to read through.
Jemisin is more my speed as well- I also need to complete the trilogy soon