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 2023?

Sadly I found the second half a bit of a slog. The story focus shifted and for me wasn't as interesting or engaging. I did finish it, but I'm going to take a break before I decide whether to read further in the series.
Overall I give 4 stars for the first half and 3 stars for the second half, so 3.5 stars, I guess.


Today I’ve been reading The Lewis Man, 2nd in a trilogy of mystery novels set on the remote Isle of Lewis. These aren’t brilliant but they hold the attention. To some extent they are the reverse of cozies. This one involves the experiences of child characters in an orphanage, and also an elderly character with Alzheimer’s. They aren’t unremittingly grim, there are good characters and human warmth, but they do present some cruel situations.
Probably back to SFF when I finish this.


I quite liked Entry Island which is also not a cozy but has a bit of a tilt towards the SF&F genre
(view spoiler)

Partly set in the Magdalen Islands, it says. A place I’d like to visit but haven’t, yet.


I've re-read Downbelow Station this month. A question, why don't you follow the author's sugges..."
yeah, good question! I was torn on the order. At the time I was reading nothing but Hugo award winners, so I read Cyteen first thinking it wasn't part of the Merchanter universe (aka company wars). but... Cyteen is mentioned in some of the other books. And even though Heavy Time and it's successor Hellburner are published after Downbelow Station, it is set before Downbelow Station, but they really are separate stories set in the same universe. Heck, I just finished Merchanter's Luck, it could be read before DBS. But go ahead and finish Downbelow Station. Heavy Time/Hellburner are both set in the Sol (aka Earth) side of things, so it's a little more familiar in the sense that we know Earth, Mars, the asteroids, etc. so it's a bit more relatable!
Cyteen is a bigger book, and IMHO the better book overall. Very grand, but it leaves you wondering for a good while throughout the book, some good turns (I was guessing one thing, and... guessed wrong!). I'm not sure that any of the books save for Heavy Time/Hellburner play any part with other books, no historical records (since they are different times within her universe), but I may have missed a few references, but nothing that makes you think (OMG!). I've not read Rimrunner yet nor the last 2 books, although the title of the last book is mentioned in Merchanter's luck (Finity's End), so save that one for last (AFAIK).

Anyhoo, taking a break from fiction and reading Steve Jones (guitarist for Sex Pistols) biography 'Lonely Boy - Tales from a Sex Pistol'. I'm a fan! then I'll come back and read PK DIck's A Scanner Darkly, and then debating on finishing David Brin's uplift series or Dan Simmons Hyperion series (read the first already) or Cixin Liu's Dark Forest/Death's End (already read 3 body problem) or Ursula K LuGuin's Hainish Cycle (read the first half up to dispossessed (other than winter's king/Word for Forest...) Might end up throwing a 4-sided die and see which wins!

We are treading similar paths. I am currently working through PKDs opus and also reading in sequence LeGuin's Hainish Cycle. I am recommend the Dark Forest (found the final book worth reading, but also not as strong as the middle one). I find all of Simmons series to get worse in time. I remember really enjoying the first book in the Hyperion series and slowing getting more and more dissatisfied with time.

It was really good! Very atmospheric, with a large cast of interesting characters and the elements of Slavic folklore were beautifully explored. The author is really passionate about the subject and it shows.
The first volume is actually translated into English, if anyone's interested: When The Frost Comes.

Have you read Regenesis? This is a sequel to Cyteen, also a large-scale story.
I did not read the Alliance/Company books in order either and am comfortable saying that it's not necessary because she is filling in different pieces of her universe with each book (except for the Heavy Time/Hellburner and Cyteen/Regenesis pairs where there are direct sequels). The only one I have trouble with in the sequencing of events is the newest, Alliance Rising, where I can't make the chronology match the rest of the universe (at least, not in my head).

Check this out: Visual Science Fiction!
https://fotoscapes.com/lookbook/LRf9B...

ooh! I'll have to pick up regenesis!! thank you!!!
And yeah, RadiantFlux, I heard too that Hyperion series drops off as you go deeper. I'm thinking I'll finish the Hainish cycle first, rather than rolling a 4-sided die. then the three body series, curious about the tv series!



It's been a while since I had read a novel that completely gripped me from the beginning. It only took 7 pages for Hell Bent to sink its claws into me.
I've got to look into the Grishaverse now.
My Review -- https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


I would use an eight-sided, it rolls better.

It was really good! Very atmospheric, with a large cast of interesting characters and the elements of Slavic folklore were beautifully explored. The author is really passionate about the subject and it shows.
The first volume is actually translated into English, if anyone's interested: When The Frost Comes.
10 hours ago"
TBR. Working on (revising) a novel with a lot of Slavic folklore, so this is right up my alley.
Reading Victor Klemperer's I Will Bear Witness (1942-1945, vol II). Grim. I'll need something light after this.



This is a very long poem, some might say epic, about Original Sin according to the Bible. This is a subject that three of the biggest religions in the world are heavily invested in. While reading through this poem I can't really see that any truly devout follower of any of them would be overjoyed with this interpretation.
The intermixture of Greek Myth and bending of the time frame of the source material might leave them a little out of sorts in regard to the work. As for myself, iambic pentameter is not my gig and the ending left me a little miffed. Still, it is a classic, and for good reason. I have found that for me at least, classic doesn't always equate to enjoyable reads.


Now, on to PK Dick's A Scanner Darkly!


For me, this was a truly unique read on the Russian Front. Very few works on the Eastern Front take a close look at the soldiers that fought it. There are a number of reasons for this, not the least of which was the lack of access to such individuals. This work shows the divisions of the Soviet Army that are normally unseen in overview histories of the war. This is the same for any works of any nation, but most of the other countries have better views of the common soldiers due to the, mostly, open access to those sources.
An excellent read and one I would highly recommend to others.


If you'd like to see a Soviet civilian perspective on WW2, I recommend trying Svitlana Aleksiievych books, e.g. the first part of Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets


If you'd like to see a Soviet civilian perspe..."
Don't know if I would say I like them, since I have only read this one. However, I will be giving the one you mentioned a look. Thanks

I agree. At one point, they lost the plot and stuck with the incomprehensible "science" and "technology".

Now, on to PK Dick's A Scanner Darkly!"
A dark novel of drug abuse and paranoia, as I recall.

I listened to When Women Were Dragons and LOVED it! It's about strong women and family relationships, queerness, and dragons, so... what's not to love.




Cool! I have it on my kindle, but the book queue is long ;) Yes, yes, I will read it one of these days...

Good to have books to look forward to. Enjoy, whenever...

finally got to Green Grass, Running Water, and I... didn't get it. something about the inevitability of Indians and colonization maybe?

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

I loved the Lady Trent series. Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries just went up my TBR list. Thanks for the recommendation!


leaving his weird world behind, and going to Ursula K Leguin's The Word for World is Forest, part of her hainish universe!

“ There was also the challenge of transmuting the events into "science fiction", as Dick felt that he could not sell a mainstream or literary novel after several previous failures.[citation needed][10] Providing invaluable aid in this field was Judy-Lynn del Rey, head of Ballantine Books' SF division, which had optioned the book. Del Rey suggested the timeline change to 1994 and emphasized the more futuristic elements of the novel, such as the "scramble suit" employed by Fred (which, incidentally, emerged from one of the mystical experiences). Yet much of the dialogue spoken by the characters used hippie slang, dating the events of the novel to their "true" time-frame of 1970–72.”

The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison which is excellent
and
Dragonfly Falling by Adrian Tchaikovsky which is also excellent
and
Ancient Light by Mary Gentle which is pretty good, but long
and
Age of Myth by Michael J. Sullivan which isn't as good as the Riyira series
and
Next to Last Stand by Craig Johnson which is focused on Custer and a painting of the battle that's gone missing
and dabbling in
The Big Book of Science Fiction

The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison which is excellent
and
Dragonfly Falling by Adrian Tchaikovsky which is also excel..."
The Goblin Emperor is one of my favourites, and Adrian Tchaikovsky is a favourite author :))) The rest sounds interesting!

The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison which is excellent
and
Dragonfly Falling by Adrian Tchaikovsky which is also excel..."
I didn't like the Legends of the First Empire series nearly as much as the Riyria series, either.

I think it's the characters - too many main ones and they're not quite as developed

I think it's the characters - too many main ones and they're not quite as devel..."
It's not as lighthearted, either!

Now reading various short stories of her in the Hainish universe. She is a great writer!
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I've read only the first three, the first was great but later... they were ok, solid reads but no punch (pun intended) of the first one - for me at least