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?

The Light Brigade, by Kam Hurley. I enjoyed (mostly) following the bendy-time travel aspect of the story and Hurley's social..."
Thanks for sharing about the Spotify list, I need to check it out.

Started The Jasmine Throne yesterday and read something like a quarter of it in one day, which is unusual for me lately. Something about the world just really pulled me in.
And I got my copy of Translation State yesterday, but didn't have much time to read by the time I got home. I made some great progress on to today though and I am so excited. Loving being back in the Imperial Radch universe.

The Terraformers by Annalee Newitz. I liked this story quite a bit. It addresses a lot of interesting scientific, social, and technical topics with an interesting mix of human, animal, and bot characters. I was surprised to see the GR average rating was so low, though I do think Newitz is an author that people tend to either like or not like.
High Times in the Low Parliament by Kelly Robson. This was okay - a quick fantasy novella I read while traveling. It has an irreverent protagonist and fairies, and was fun and generally light.
I also listened to the first three books in the series starting with Quarter Share by Nathan Lowell. I liked books 1 and 3 and the first half of book 2 - cozy sci-fi, low stakes, and found family on a trading vessel in space. The main character is a bit too perfect, which gets a little old, but I found the stories enjoyable (and the audiobook narrator is good). I decided to stop at book 3, though - it ends in a way that gives closure and allows me to imagine my own ending for the characters. It looks like book 4 will be much darker and less cozy, without much of what I liked in the first books.

I'm so excited to read this, Jordan! I'm glad to hear that you are loving it so far. The Imperial Radch series is one of my favorites that I have read in the last few years (and probably of all the series I have ever read, really).

I am impatiently waiting for my copy of Translation State to arrive....
Kaia wrote: "I have read a bunch lately - The Terraformers by Annalee Newitz. I liked this story quite a bit. It addresses a lot of interesting scientific, social, and technical topics with an..."
I really enjoyed Terraformers as well. Super imaginative story!

Finally finished my re-read of A Memory Called Empire last night. Just as well I re-read it. I couldn’t remember most of it. That’s a whole 1 book I’ve finished this year. I’ve started about 20. I get halfway through and then put them down and don’t go back to them. It’s not as if I’m not enjoying them. I am. I just don’t get back to them. Hasn’t stopped me buying books though. I have Witch King sitting beside me ready to go and tomorrow I’m heading to Coffs Harbour (a holiday town on the coast about 45 minutes from our beach house) to get The Book that Wouldn’t Burn (QBD has them for $25 or $26 instead of $35) and I’ll look for the Ann Leckie one. I’ve bought more than I’ve started reading that’s for sure this year. It’s not hoarding if it’s books.




I’m in the same boat, Jacqueline. I’m on the hold list at my library, but their copy is still “on order,” so no telling when I will actually be able to read it. I hope you are able to get a copy soon!


Labeled as being a novel in the Laundry Files series -- in fact it is not. We see none of the Laundry Files characters or any of the organizations. This is actually the start of another series featuring, in this case, a modern and magical version of Peter Pan's Lost Boys and the sister of one of them. The plot is so convoluted and layered I can't realistically give a precis. I can say that the book starts out slowly and confusingly but does come together in the second half. Therefore I only really liked half the book and so my rating is 3 stars.


Labeled as being a novel in the Laundry Files series -- in fact it is not. We see none of the Laundry Files characters or..."
It is also the first of a trilogy in that universe that concludes with the just-released Season of Skulls

My review is here ;)

Anyhoo, on to the next book in Mira Grant's zombie series, Blackout.


I just finished it! It lived up to the hype!

Anyhoo, now on to my first Robert Silverberg book, A time of Changes. Also started reading an ebook, The Dark Design by Philip Jose Farmer (I read the first two books, to where your scattered bodies go and fabulous riverboat a year or two ago), which is book 3 of his riverworld universe.




Fun! I just did this last year. Are you reading the short stories in order? I think I had the short story collection on Kindle and tried to read them at the right points between the bigger books.


So cool! glad you enjoyed it. Drive is great as a short story.




If it makes you feel any better, I didn't even notice you said "station" at first, and had to go back and read it after your correction. I am not even familiar with the book, so either I've just seen it mentioned enough times for my brain to auto-correct, or my reading comprehension is not great. :P


Translation State is the newest in Ann Leckie’s Imperial Radch books set in the same universe as Ancillary Justice and its sequels Ancillary Sword and Ancillary Mercy as well as Provenance.

I loved Schoolhouse Rock!!

It genuinely surprised me with the prowess of it's world building, the very individual, vividly human characters, the wonderfully cleaver not-really-magic system with a great backstory.
I would absolutely read this quadrillogy again in the future. I'd recommend it to anyone who's looking for a slightly depressing (but also really intelligent) series, which is not only fun, but philosophical too.
For fans of: not really sure actually, it's not like many other series I've read, ever...
5/5 stars.

My review https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Ann Leckie is up next.


I have read Vicious, the first of the two, and think it is excellent. Schwab does a terrific job with the portrayal of characters who are not likeable at all.

Anyhoo, now on to Naomi Novik's Spinning silver...


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

Lost Places by Sarah Pinsker - this is her most recent book of short stories (most of which have been previously published elsewhere). I love Sarah Pinsker, and I enjoyed this collection. There was only one story that was just meh to me - most of the rest I thought were good to excellent.
I also read The Bone Shard Daughter for the group re-reads and went on to read The Bone Shard Emperor by Andrea Stewart. (I listened to the audiobooks.) I really liked the first one, but I found Bone Shard Emperor to be a little overlong - I'm debating whether or not to read the final book, which is even longer. If anyone has read it and has an opinion, I'd love to hear whether it's worth it to continue.
I'm also almost done with Central Station by Lavie Tidhar, which I'm enjoying, though not as much as Neom.


Supposedly a sci-fi murder mystery--Mallory seems to be a magnet for murders which occur around her, and then she travels to Space Station Eternity, a sentient being inhabited by several alien species. The mystery portion of the book is largely discarded fairly quickly and it was hard for me to take the remainder of the story seriously -- very convoluted and confusing and not in a good way. 2 stars -- just OK.

I'm reading The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood. I'm only 34 pages in and I'm waiting for the story to start! I don't think I can handle much more of an anonymous boyfriend telling a fantasy story to his girlfriend.
Thoughts? Has anyone read it?

I'm reading The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood. I'm only 34 pages in and I'm waiting for the story to start! I don't think I can handle much more of an anonymous boyfriend telling a fanta..."
The "book in a book in a book" element (the whole story about a blind assassin) is only a part of the novel that keeps re-appearing as interludes in the actual story. I would say that the main story is a historical fiction with feminist themes. Every single element of the novel, including the "fantasy" one, comes together towards the end in a way that blew my mind, but generally, the story is rather slow. I have yet to be disappointed by anything written by Margaret Atwood, but it's up to you to decide, if it's up your alley.
My review, if you're interested (with spoiler parts hidden).
Have you maybe read Cat's Eye? It's somewhat similar in a way that both books are bildungsromans with some subtle commentary on how women had to deal with being forced into certain frames in the past.

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Books mentioned in this topic
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The Last Continent (other topics)
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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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Here's a blog about Cosmere reading order, which says Mistborn first. https://thequilltolive.com/2023/04/27...
I happened to have read Mistborn first, and then other Cosmere books randomly and out of order, so I don't know that it REALLY matters all that much.
But Mistborn IS a great one to start with. You get a great story, within a few decently sized books, a feel for Sanderson's style, without a massive commitment to 83 billion pages of Stormlight. (Which are great, sure, I'm assuming since I've only read one of them because each book is 1000+ pages, and that's a LOT.)