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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Colin
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May 29, 2023 05:41AM


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Wonderful! I adore T. Kingfisher, but I have yet to read this one :)


Colin I'm going to have Simon and Garfunkel in my head for days now.





Enjoy that one!!!

I will! It's pretty good so far.

It's also been a while since I last read T. Kingfisher, so I'm also getting started with Bryony and Roses and, to nobody's surprise, I'm loving it already.



The more improbable Watt becomes, the more normal are her imaginative fantasies.

Wonderful news, Georgann! I'm so glad one came through for you and I hope you enjoy this book as much as I did. :)

This was one of my absolute favorite books I read in 2022. I'm so glad to read that you enjoyed it as well, Kaia. It was such a sad, beautiful, moving story.
ETA: Kaia, have you read The Map of Salt and Stars? It reminds me of Fragile Waves. Another difficult, magical story about war, refugees, immigrants, persistence. Highly recommend, especially if you loved On Fragile Waves.

I read The Final Girl Support Group last year and thought it was so much fun and cleverly meta - I really enjoyed the 80s horror movie tie-ins - grew up watching many of those in middle school, when my friend and I would rent them from our local Blockbuster. :) I don't think her mom realized what we were checking out...

Thanks for the recommendation, Sarah! That definitely sounds like one I would like - I’ve added it to my TBR list.

I've also read Bryony and Roses a few months ago, and loved it :)))



Oh, good!


A Perilous Undertaking by Deanna Raybourn. The second of two books I read in quick-ish succession about an adventurous woman and set in Victorian England. This one had some emotional moments, but on the whole was a fun, sometimes tawdry romp. (review)
A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers: an itinerant monk and a robot on a road trip. Nice scenery and a light tone made this a good read for a holiday weekend. (review)
also: 14 manga volumes. Feel free to browse my "manga" shelf if you're at all interested in what I've been reading in this category. :)

This particular book has an interesting and unusual publishing history compared to other novels by Dick I have read. The story originally appeared in Fantastic Magazine in 1964. The story rights were then bought by Ace Books but Dick's subsequent revisions to bring the manuscript up to novel-length were rejected and the original story was published two years later, as part of one of those ever-present Ace Double original paperbacks.
Years later, in 1983 the expanded story was published by Berkley Books. Dick had been revising the material to include his original 1963 expansions (some pages of the 1963 manuscript were missing, leading to continuity problems), before his sudden death in 1982, leaving the revision incomplete. The original story was published, with Dick's revisions, as Lies, Inc. The missing pages were found and published in the Philip K. Dick Society Newsletter #8 from 1985. In 2004 a new edition of Lies, Inc was published which included the found pages--in other words, that's the version I just read.
This book is about a future in which a one-way teleportation technology called "telpor", making star-cruising obsolete, encourages 40 million people to emigrate to a colony on a planet in the Fomalhaut star system, having similarities to our world, which advertisingese shows as a lush green utopia; however, as it is a one-time venture, the only means of returning is an eighteen-year starship journey. This expanded version I have read includes a new first chapter and about one hundred pages of additional exposition, all the previously unpublished material beginning at Chapter 8.
No wonder this book was poorly received by the Goodreads community, but I think it was an interesting read nonetheless.






I read Hart’s The Somme a few years ago. I was just looking for a good overview of the battle and it seemed to meet the need.

The Light Brigade, by Kam Hurley. I enjoyed (mostly) following the bendy-time travel aspect of the story and Hurley's social commentary was w..."
Just an FYI: I found a play list on Spotify for The Ballad of Perilous Graves that I really enjoyed, since I was unfamiliar with much of the music mentioned.

Now, reading David Brin's final? part of his uplift universe. Apparently there are 6 books, books 2 and 3 winning Hugos. In this universe, literally all but one sentient star-faring race has been 'uplifted' by other sentient races, where a race might find a species on other planets who show promise in sentience, and uplift them, kinda like how we uplifted dogs from wolves, only instead of just breeding, they can also modify them genetically. An uplifted race is indentured to the race that uplifted them for a long time period, but once that period ends, they become peers to the other races. That is, until humans uplifted not only themselves, but also uplifted chimpanzees and dolphins, a big no-no! Anyhoo, book 4 is set on a planet that previously housed a star-faring race but was then deliberately abandoned kinda like how a farmer might let a plot of land go fallow, don't plant anything and let the land rejuvenate so sometime later, re-cultivate. All peer races agreed to leave the planet alone. but some races-in-exile have been living there trying to not draw attention to themselves, and basically backsliding, de-evolving in advance, some literally devolving, living simpler. Some humans joined in (is it the remnants of the human race overall? dunno!). A big and so far interesting book.

I'm also working my way through The Magician’s Daughter, which I'm quite enjoying, despite the uber-cliched title.




My review is here ;)

Atalanta is good so far, but it's been so long since I read Ariadne that I can't remember what happened in that one, let alone compare the two.



I've been listening to The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss, which I loved when I first read it, but this time around, I'm finding it frustrating in some ways, waiting for it to get to the point. I've never been a great fan of stories within stories within stories - you know, the 'old story/fairytale' of the culture that illustrates the point in the book - and there are a lot of them in this book, and they seem to be very long. I'm reserving my judgement, because I am starting to enjoy it more many hours in.
I'd be interested in hearing what others of you who've read it/listened to it, think.

That's happened to me, too, although not with that particular book. I was rereading a series that I loved and had read twice before. But the third time? I found that I was not enamored at all. I thought maybe it's because I'm older now and some of my bookish tastes have changed a bit.

I did wonder if it was just me being a few years older, and my tastes changing, actually. But having said that, I'm a compulsive re-reader, and lots of my books from that era are still marvellous on a re-read.
It's a conundrum!

I recently read Fourth Wing and do not get the hype. It was way too much angst and pining, way too predictable and I did not enjoy it. I will not be continuing the series which I understand will be 5 books.

I read it recently and felt the same way. After reading such a thick book I felt like not much happened. But I guess I got to enjoy being in the world that the author created even if the plot moved slowly.

Moving on to Caliban's War!

I don't buy many new books, but I remember buying Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell because I thought I'd get my money's worth...since the book is like 1000 pages. I don't the story being all that good, or all that bad.

...I recently read Fourth Wing and do not get the hype. It was way too much angst and pining, way too predictable and I did not enjoy it. I will not be continuing the series which I understand will be 5 books. "
Yeah same. I dnf'ed because I got tired of the constant angst and violence. Not an imaginary world I wanted to keep spending time in. I read quite a bit of it, but eventually decided it wasn't worth reading to the end.
I just read Blind Lake by Robert Charles Wilson. A good sci-fi mystery, if the ending was somewhat overly drawn-out. 4 stars. Interesting in the current climate to read an older book about use of technology that the users don't really understand and that is developing by itself.
Next up I'm going to read American Scoundrel: The Life of the Notorious Civil War General Dan Sickles by Thomas Keneally. Just came in at the library :) Should be an interesting read.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
T. Kingfisher (other topics)Robin Hobb (other topics)
Robert Jordan (other topics)
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Martha Wells (other topics)
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