Beyond Reality discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
General SF&F discussion
>
What are you reading in June 2022?
date
newest »

I really loved Black Sun! The sequel Fevered Star was just released a few weeks ago.
I'm on Brightness Reef again after taking a break to re-read the entire Parasol Protectorate series, which I recommend to anyone looking for high-quality fluff. They are a ton of fun. I needed some brain candy!
I'm on Brightness Reef again after taking a break to re-read the entire Parasol Protectorate series, which I recommend to anyone looking for high-quality fluff. They are a ton of fun. I needed some brain candy!

I’m slowly working my way through The Briar King by Greg Keyes and then I plan to wrap up the Green Bone Saga with Jade Legacy by Fonda Lee.

So I then started on Will Destroy the Galaxy for Cash
Both have been light and fun, though I am unsure on how to describe the tone. Maybe a mixture of sarcasm and snark.
Makes me think of something I tend to say. If I stop joking, I'll start screaming.
I completely forgot that we were reading The Kaiju Preservation Society this month and I don't have the book yet. But I plan to by the time I'm done with the other.

- Assassin by Andy Peloquin
- The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi
and
- Sweep of the Heart by Ilona Andrews (the serialized version on their website)
The Briar King was a slow starter, with each chapter focusing on a different character. Once the author started returning to each of those characters, chapter by chapter, the story moved forward more quickly. Interesting characters (even the minor ones) and a twisty plot with lots left unexplained, setting up the rest of the series, I assume. 7.5/10

Started The Kaiju Preservation Society last night and so far its been fun.
I'm still slowly picking my way through Brightness Reef (not sure why it's going so slowly for me!) but I might take a break and read The Kaiju Preservation Society since it's due back at the library soon. I'm sure it'll be as quick of a read as all of Scalzi's others!
I finished the Green Bone Saga with Jade Legacy by Fonda Lee, 8.5/10. A fitting conclusion to the trilogy, continuing the movement away from a purely gangster clan story into politics, international trade, and espionage while maintaining the core focus of the multigenerational family saga. The author kept a few surprises up her sleeve, even right to the end. This type of “mafia” story will never be among my favorites, but the widened scope begun in book 2 and maintained in book 3 kept my interest. The author allowed her characters to grow and adapt. Well done!
Out of genre next with The Man Burned by Winter by Pete Zacharias.
Out of genre next with The Man Burned by Winter by Pete Zacharias.

The Man Burned by Winter by Pete Zacharias was a solid mystery, 8/10. Then I continued my intermittent reading of the Leaphorn & Chee books with Dance Hall of the Dead by Tony Hillerman, 9/10.
Now reading book 2 of The Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone, The Charnel Prince by Greg Keyes.
Now reading book 2 of The Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone, The Charnel Prince by Greg Keyes.
I finally finished Brightness Reef and am taking a break from the genre with Crazy Rich Asians before continuing on to Infinity's Shore.
The Charnel Prince by Greg Keyes, 8.25/10. This is a well-written and entertaining fantasy, book 2 in a series. The author gives us unusual magical creatures, a varied cast (royalty, monks, knights, maids, the Sefry, a composer, a windmill keeper, and the undead), intricate sword fights, wonderful world-building, and intrigue upon intrigue. Looking forward to book 3 in this series.
Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo, 6/10. Clichéd but very readable, book 1 of a trilogy. The magic of the Grishas and the world-building are two strong elements in the book, but the 3 main characters and their love triangle are really YA stereotypes, as are most of the secondary characters. I read this because June’s category is YA fantasy in the Better World Books Reading Challenge. I had not previously read any of the Grishaverse books, although I’ve heard good things about the Duology that follows this trilogy.
Next up is There Will Be Time by Poul Anderson.
Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo, 6/10. Clichéd but very readable, book 1 of a trilogy. The magic of the Grishas and the world-building are two strong elements in the book, but the 3 main characters and their love triangle are really YA stereotypes, as are most of the secondary characters. I read this because June’s category is YA fantasy in the Better World Books Reading Challenge. I had not previously read any of the Grishaverse books, although I’ve heard good things about the Duology that follows this trilogy.
Next up is There Will Be Time by Poul Anderson.

There Will Be Time by Poul Anderson reminded me of The Boat of a Million Years, our BotM from a while back, also by Anderson. This book was truly about time travelers, while Boat was about “immortals” who lived through many, many epochs of time, but both had that historical fiction feel as the characters immersed themselves in different time periods. 8.5/10
Listening Woman by Tony Hillerman, also 8.5/10, was another solid mystery set on the Navajo reservation and featuring Joe Leaphorn.
Now I’m back in Greg Keyes’s Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone series with The Blood Knight.
Listening Woman by Tony Hillerman, also 8.5/10, was another solid mystery set on the Navajo reservation and featuring Joe Leaphorn.
Now I’m back in Greg Keyes’s Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone series with The Blood Knight.
Crazy Rich Asians was pretty good fluff - not my usual genre, but someone was giving the book away on my neighborhood Buy Nothing group and I figured I'd see what the buzz was all about.
I don't remember requesting it, but at some point I must have because it popped up as a library loan this week - I just finished The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels. I wasn't sure what to expect (especially since I don't even remember where I heard about the book). It was just ok. Kind of a ridiculous premise (Victorian England, where there is an exclusive club of lady pirates who pilot flying houses while committing all sorts of crimes, and then sit down and have tea), and not well-written enough for suspension of disbelief. It was good enough entertainment for sitting by the pool and watching the kids swim!
Heaven's Reach is next.
I don't remember requesting it, but at some point I must have because it popped up as a library loan this week - I just finished The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels. I wasn't sure what to expect (especially since I don't even remember where I heard about the book). It was just ok. Kind of a ridiculous premise (Victorian England, where there is an exclusive club of lady pirates who pilot flying houses while committing all sorts of crimes, and then sit down and have tea), and not well-written enough for suspension of disbelief. It was good enough entertainment for sitting by the pool and watching the kids swim!
Heaven's Reach is next.

I finished up How High We Go in the Dark and books 4 and 5 (Late Eclipses and One Salt Sea) of the October Daye series. My book club read Sea of Tranquility, which was a decent time travel book, and we started A Winter's Promise. It's a fantasy work in translation and so far it has interesting worldbuilding and a cool magic system. I also did a quick read of Alix Harrow's new novella, A Mirror Mended.
Out of genre, I tried out The Poet X. It is one of the few YA novels that has taken me back to the feeling of being a teenager, rather than rolling my eyes a little (or a lot) at teenage priorities. Highly recommend; the book is 95% told via poems and it worked so, so well to convey the emotions of the protagonist. I also finished Infidel and Disability Visibility: First-Person Stories from the Twenty-first Century, both of which were worthy reads.
Lindsey wrote: " I also did a quick read of Alix Harrow's new novella, A Mirror Mended..."
Ooh, I didn't realize that one was out. I really liked A Spindle Splintered - off to request from the library!
Ooh, I didn't realize that one was out. I really liked A Spindle Splintered - off to request from the library!

Ooh, I didn't realize that one was out. I really liked A Spindle Splintered - off to requ..."
It's on order at my library
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Spindle Splintered (other topics)A Spindle Splintered (other topics)
Tinsel Rain (other topics)
How High We Go in the Dark (other topics)
Sea of Tranquility (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Moe Lane (other topics)Sarah A. Hoyt (other topics)
Greg Keyes (other topics)
Poul Anderson (other topics)
Tony Hillerman (other topics)
More...
All genres welcome here!