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?
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Ozsaur
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Apr 12, 2023 02:35PM

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My review ;)


That's what I did! I would alternate each book with serious historical fiction, fantasy and science fiction.

There is definitely a Gobbelino London fan club in this thread. I have book #4 ready to read soon. And Kim Watt is talking about book #6 which I think she's (nearly?) done writing.


This book can double as a weight training aide..."
Silent Service does go into the Torpedo issues and the fact that it seems most of the fixes came from the commands involved in the Pacific as opposed to the Bureau of Weapons. A book going into greater detail could be well worth the read though.


I'm also slllowly working my way through the audiobook version of VenCo, and while it's okay, I keep pushing it aside and picking up other books instead. Not a good sign, but I'm still giving it a chance.

When you are done playing with Gobbelino, be sure to check out Kim M. Watt's


Her characters take on a life of their own. Cats, Green snake and Dragons (Beaufort Scales Mysteries).



I have the audio for book 2 on hold at my library!

I've read this one last year :) It does sound lovely - so if you want to create a thread, I'll be happy to follow the discussion and (hopefully) contribute.


Oh yes, I will absolutely try out Beaufort Scales series. It sounds like so much fun!



They're on my TBR, but I was extremely bored by the two dragon books I've read by her, so they've moved down quite a bit on my list :( I'm not sure if it was the audio narration, but they were my bedtime audiobooks for months, because I kept falling asleep immediately when I pressed play :D

They're on my TBR, but I was extremely bored by the two dragon books I've read by her, so..."
Oh no 😂

They're on my TBR, but I was extremely bored by the two dragon books I've read by her, so..."
Audio cannot read between the lines and that is where Watt's humor and wit lies. In my opinion. 🙃


Can I just say I 100% support anyone who wants to make an appreciation society for a prolific author. LIVE HAPPY! let us join in your joy!
hell yea! Brownie points for Meredith. You may cash them in for a crisp high five
(I'm excellent at high fives, I have a fail proof method)
(I'm excellent at high fives, I have a fail proof method)

(I'm excellent at high fives, I have a fail proof method)"
High five accepted!
*dances around living room singing 'We are the Champions.' *




Now back to babel-17!

Right before that, I read the first volume of Paper Girls, Volume 1 by by Brian K. Vaughan, which I also enjoyed. I was introduced to the story through the recent tv adaptation. Since they canceled it after one season, though, I thought I might be able to at least learn the end of the story by reading the books. The books (graphic novels) are definitely different than the tv version, but both are good.

I'd suggest continuing on with the series as they're all pretty good

Thanks, CB! That's good to know.

Anyhoo, the book itself is set in the distant future, humans have spread out to multiple galaxies. THere was a war going on between the Alliance and the 'invader'. The protagonist was a young woman who was famous across the galaxies as a poet, but she earlier worked as a code breaker. She was tasked to break a code called Babel-17. The novel is basically her trying to solve it, and associated issues related to Babel-17.
It may be too, if you read it, go back and re-read the last 10-15 pages, you may miss something (or not!)
Now, I'm going back to Ursula K Le Guin and some short stories in the Hainish universe...

Starting on No Ordinary Time (the Roosevelts and the home front) and The Black God's Drum. Latter is only 108 pages - I wish P. Djeli Clark would write longer books. The premises are too good for just novellas.

Note that her name intentionally rhymes with the first part of "... it is my country" slogan

Gonna start Anathem now. Stephenson is one of my favorites so I have high hopes going in.

Much better I presume? For levels go in both directions :)

I am currently 30% into The Flight of the Aphrodite by S.J Morden and it's kind of, well... meh. There are too many moving pieces, it doesn't have great character development, and includes a lot of politics. None-the-less the story is interesting enough to keep me reading.
I have The Mountain in the Sea by Ray Nayler on my list of books to read next. The idea of a sentient society of Octopus really tickles my fancy.


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