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?

That's my problem with Stephen King. He's a genius, possibly even under rated as a writer (ie for sheer talent wattage), but I just don't like horror. There's already enough horror in this world, why make more? For that reason, I loved his Dark Tower fantasy series and think it's the best thing he ever did.

Valley of the Dolls: an interesting peek into (fictionalized) celebrity life in the '60s. Fun to listen to, but I didn't feel a strong connection to the characters, and not just because they're all gorgeous and young. :D (review)
The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches: The House in the Cerulean Sea redux, more or less. If I hadn't read the Klune first, I'd likely have given this another star. (review)
The Land of the Moepek: the first book I read in tandem with the "372 Pages We'll Never Get Back" podcast episodes as they were released. They do a good job choosing books that are entertaining to read, but also not very good, with a heavy dollop of unintentional absurdity. (review)
The Devil is a Part-Timer, Vol. 1: a cute light novel (Japanese YA) about a Devil King who ends up on earth as a fast food worker. Underemployment, silly bickering, and over-the-top battles! This story was adapted into an anime. (review)
Also, 14 manga volumes. Probably another one or two by tomorrow.

What did you think of the Dark Forest? I loved all of the books in the series and am wondering how they will be changed when the come out later in March. I watched a Chinese adaptation of the first book and it was quite good. Am hoping something similar can be accomplished by Netflix.

I've just started The Dark Forest and am waiting impatiently for The Three-Body Problem to come out on Netflix. I probably won't have a chance to finish the rest of the series until next year. I've got some book club reads ahead of it and the Ancillary Justice series.

good article about Stanwick's books:
https://www.tor.com/2023/11/29/a-user...


I am also four chapters in to The Curse of Chalion and..."
Hate that when that happens.

What If? 2: Additional Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions


Loved book #1


good article about Stanwick's books:
https://www.tor..."
Thanks! Still not sure where to start though!
Guess it will just have to be Murderbot for the moment!

so L.E. Modessiti . Jr spellsinger first. great read.
THen enders game and the rest of the series. got sick of that after 2 books
THen Issac Asimov foundation , first sci fi i ever read back then, bit dated now
Have just started Raymond Fiest.
may need to take a break for a while. Someone recommended the Rosie Project

The website is xkcd.com . I go there every morning for his comic. He has a wonderfully absurd take on scientific fact.


Celtic Mythology: Tales From the Celtic Pantheon

And getting back into some Pratchett with...
Men at Arms


Quick question, while I'm looking at a Pratchett title - does Discworld have to be read in order?

No. There are at least a half dozen mini-series within the Discworld series. Go to Pratchett's page and you can find the breakdown. For instance, the one I just mention Men at Arms is part of the "City Watch" mini-series, which make up about 6 Discworld books I believe.

I will have to look for that kids book as well. Thanks. I loved both of the What If? books. They were some of the best fun I have ever had reading a science book.

If you loved book one, you will probably enjoy book two.

The website is xkcd.com . I go there every morning for his comic. He has a wonderfully absurd take on scientif..."
Thanks, I went and started looking at it.

Ahhhh, not the kind of things you would normally think of putting into a fantasy book. Wonder if any cats show up?

Actually, there's a cat hiding in the castle, though we haven't met it yet. I can't wait to see what happens.

On to Penric's Demon.

The Angel of the Crows, I really enjoyed this and recommend if you like Sherlock Holmes fan-fic and urban fantasy set in Victorian London.
A Prayer for the Crown-Shy, I'm loving this world that Becky Chambers has created as well as the Monk and Robot characters.
The Fervor, interesting horror/historical fiction set during World War II in the US, and centered around the Japanese internment camp system.

Actually, there's a cat hiding in the castle, though we haven't met it yet. I can't wait to see what happens."
Me either I am only starting it but I have to say it is great fun.

Grumpy Old Gods: Volume 1


A Question a Day Keeps the Boredom Away


A Man Called Ove

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

Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel which was excellent
working on
Middlegame by Seanan McGuire which I'm really enjoying
and
Breaking Silence by Mercedes Lackey which is way too teenage orientated. Not doing much for me.

Time for a change of pace. Started "No Country for Old Gnomes" by Dawson and Hearne. The puns are so dense that I may not catch them all as bedtime reading.

Love xkcd! My favorite former NASA engineer that I know of!"
thanks will try it


Anyhoo, now moving forward a few decades, on to Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower!

I started on Mammoths at the Gates only to realize that I hadn't read the one before and that the audiobook was due soon anyways. So I've returned it and checked out Into the Riverlands instead.

And Arthur Clarke's "rescue party". "enders game "was another good one.
sometimes the older books are still good

They are, Kareb!

D'Este's bio of Patton was good.
Starting the autobiography of the Red Baron.

D'Este's bio of Patton was good.
Starting the autobiography of the Red Baron."
I found D'Este's Patton was one of the more balanced Bio's on the subject I have read yet. This despite the title.

Instead, this book focuses on a relatively singular aspect of the war, not even going into very great depth on what was going on around it in the same local. In this case, it is the rescue of downed pilots in Yugoslavia. It stays very focused on this only dealing with the issues going on between the two major rebel factions in so much as it is involved with the main story, even though this is mostly on the side of the allies, who are in a bit of disagreement over which side to support and which to ignore. This is due in large part to a large number of Communist agents in the British Special Operations unit based in the area.
The beginning of the book deals with the man who would be in the OSS and was going to school in Belgrade when the Germans invaded and who would in large part be the one behind the rescue. All in all, it adds a depth to the story that would not usually be there. It was a great book and one that should be read, if for no other reason than it shows what a tangled web assisting the partisans could be.
The Forgotten 500: The Untold Story of the Men Who Risked All For the Greatest Rescue Mission of World War II


If they do make it a movie I hope that they put BOC's Godzilla in as a theme song.
The Kaiju Preservation Society

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Books mentioned in this topic
Hogfather (other topics)Night Watch (other topics)
Small Gods (other topics)
Hogfather (other topics)
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)
Lois McMaster Bujold (other topics)
Martha Wells (other topics)
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A favourite of mine.
It seems to me that the role of the main female character in the plot may irritate some readers.
(view spoiler)[
Thinking of her death, mainly.
(hide spoiler)]