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?

https://austin.bibliocommons.com/list...

https://austin.bibliocommons.com/list..."
A more comprehensive guide to both canon and Legends is starwarsreadingorder.com. Wookieepedia would probably also tell you which books are set in which time. Since there is so much Star Wars published, I would suggest people just start with something that looks interesting to them that they can lay their hands on and expand out from there.

Thanks guys! My "add book/author" function was not functioning yesterday.

Oddly, some of the 3 star reviews made me dubious but it came off library hold very quickly so I dove in and it was quite good.
(Yes, I know they get a lot of play here. )


problematic artists are part of the reason I don't read their bios. Now mostly, for me, this applies to music artists, since by and large they tend to be more problematic than writers. Especially since my music tastes tends to be 70s guitar rock. While the 70s (in my less than humble opion) came out with some of the best music ever, it also had bands and companies that didn't have a really good sensor on moral fortitude. I hate giving up things I enjoy because the artist is pond scum

Which was unusual for me because I was a Marion Zimmer Bradley fan. I even published her account of writing the Darkover books in a fanzine I edited. (It has been reprinted elsewhere, sometimes with acknowledgment.)
I now have serious problems with reading her: I can’t avoid what came out about her treatment of her children., in particular.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6...
I’ve been meaning to read something of his forever. I may have read a short story or two listening to SF fiction podcasts, but I don’t remember which ones. At any rate Neom is a wonderful novella set in a far future Earth with robots, space travel and far-flung settlements, Wild AI, uplifted Jackals, miniature black holes used as power and so much more. I’m looking forward to reading Central Station in the same setting.


I've only read one Star Wars book and I could not put it down:





I have that book although I haven't gotten around to it yet. Good news that it's enjoyable!

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

Agreed





I've read it about a month ago. I was very impressed, a great book.


If you are interested in other books by Elizabeth Moon, try


I have that book although I haven't got..."
I really recommend it! Some of the short stories are brilliant and the points of view really add to the lore and the characterisation was good!


I am reading this right now and really enjoying it! It’s my first book by Elizabeth Moon also. Thanks, David and Colin, for the recommendation for other works by her.


Welcome to the club!"
:)


Yeah I really liked that one too.

Anyhoo, now on to Daniel Keyes' Flowers For Algernon!

Probably get back to aquila rift and blake crouch's upgrade.




This sounds really interesting!


the next two are even better! Startide Rising then Uplift War! I haven't read the remaining books in that universe yet. But you are in for a treat reading those two!


It wasn't until years later that I realized it was a Real Thing. (!) Not as a competitive game perhaps, but still, to see the shooters come to life as pixels broke my brain a little. It was like discovering a fantastical creature or bit of magical lore from your childhood actually exists.
Maybe someday I'll get to the Uplift Saga.
@CBRetriever - it seems like some people skip over Sundiver entirely and start off with Startide Rising. Maybe you'd have better luck with that one.

Yes, it has some flaws a lot o debut novels have - like being all over the place and some tech is obsolete even now (it is great how some tech progresses in 40 years!)
CBRetriever wrote: "I seem to remember trying to read Sundiver back when it first came out and couldn't make it through the book"
I also tried it initially a decade or so ago and could move thru the 1st chapter. Now I know that the story really starts up a bit later.
Ryan wrote: "We should really get Brin on our shelf this year..."
I suggest The Postman, it was written a tad later, in 1984 I guess, and got a Hugo nomination

that one I thought was pretty good though the Costner movie made a hash out of it

I'm a big fan of The Postman! It's actually three short stories that were collected together as a novel, which goes someway in explaining why... it is how it is. I'd love to talk about it with the group. . I've tried to get it on the shelf twice and have already laid plans for my third attempt. :)
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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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Also, finished T. Kingfisher's Illuminations and found it much in the same vein as A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking. I find it likely if you're a fan of one, you'll like the other. I personally think I preferred Illuminations, but that could be the recently-finished bias speaking, since I have all the little witticisms fresh in my head, or my love of art and art history edging out my fondness for gingerbread.
Although baking also made its appearance in this one too, come to think of it! Stress-baking, anyone?
She snagged a muffin on the way out though. It tasted of blueberries and anxiety.