SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
What Else Are You Reading?
>
What Else Are You Reading in 2023?
message 301:
by
Mel
(new)
Feb 14, 2023 01:06PM

reply
|
flag


Costner had to be a "hero" - anyway here's Brin's take on the movie:
https://www.davidbrin.com/nonfiction/...
ETA: this might have been a good option for March's 2023 Adapted to Screen SciFi poll

Also just started on the audio version of Across the Green Grass Fields. I fell behind on this series during my pandemic reading slump so I'm trying to catch back up now. I've immensely enjoyed all the others.
I'm also a quarter-ish of the way through The Book That Wouldn’t Burn. It is so so good so far. Almost anything with magical libraries is bound to catch my attention. I've only read his Book of the Ancestor series before, but it's one of my favorites, and this new one is very promising so far.

maybe it came out earlier in the UK?

I’d be pretty excited too Jordan. He’s pretty brilliant. I’m reading The Girl and the Moon at the moment. It’s the last one in The Book of the Ice series.


Now, starting Samuel R Delany's the Einstein Intersection. I seem to be reading the old 'classics'! I do feel the tug of Mira Grant's Deadline starting to call me though! but not yet!


Anyhoo, now off to read Alfred Bester's the Computer Connection!



I've read it a few years back, it had interesting characters and I can see it as a significant breakthrough when it was published, but I cannot say it really 'worked' for me. Also that the end US cultural [cinema] context is important and I lacked it

...and sad that I'm finishing it up"
I can relate! It's one of my favourite sci-fi books ever...

Faith wrote: "My review of Children of Memory by Adrian Tchaikovsky
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
Hi Faith, as your account is set to private those of us who haven't had the privilege of becoming your goodreads friend aren't able to see what you thought of the memorable for all the wrong reasons, Children of Memory. :)
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
Hi Faith, as your account is set to private those of us who haven't had the privilege of becoming your goodreads friend aren't able to see what you thought of the memorable for all the wrong reasons, Children of Memory. :)
Oleksandr wrote: "Marc wrote: "just finished Samuel R Delany's Einstein Intersection. "
I've read it a few years back, it had interesting characters and I can see it as a significant breakthrough when it was publis..."
I was completely baffled on my first listen of Einsteins Intersection but I reread it immediately after and it worked better for me. I put it down to not having to pay attention to everything so my brain could just pick up on the cool stuff.
It's probably my fave Delaney book, but I wouldn't recommend it to anyone other than those who thought Babel 17 was good.
I've read it a few years back, it had interesting characters and I can see it as a significant breakthrough when it was publis..."
I was completely baffled on my first listen of Einsteins Intersection but I reread it immediately after and it worked better for me. I put it down to not having to pay attention to everything so my brain could just pick up on the cool stuff.
It's probably my fave Delaney book, but I wouldn't recommend it to anyone other than those who thought Babel 17 was good.

Starting Leviathan Wakes book 1 of The Expanse series.

And don't forget all of the clothing descriptions! Those provided lots of filler ;)

Maybe the medium is important, I'll try reading it one day, thanks!

Also reading This Time Tomorrow by Emma Straub which I'm enjoying more so far. Time travel is one of my favorite genres & I like that it's set in NYC.
Just now realized both authors are Emmas.
Speaking of which, I have a dil-emma about what to read next -- I have a few competing books in my TBR - the two upcoming group reads Contact & Spear along with God Emperor of Dune, Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, The Mountain in the Sea, When Women Were Dragons, City of Thieves, The Queen of Attolia and The Terraformers.

Neom, by Lavie Tidhar is a far future Israel/Palestine where there are robots smart UXOs, wild AI and rescue shelters for abandoned Pokemon. It was a really interesting book.
The Future Second by Second, by Meridel Newton is a post apocalyptic near-ish future (maybe 70 years?) with an amazing older female protagonist, who is the leader of a kibbutz type settlement in an abandon (Amazon?) warehouse, when trouble arrives. Only the mustache-twirling villain mars just a bit.
Both are highly recommended.


Onto a more serious historical fiction:


The problem for me was that we learn some info in one scene, then read another where it makes it very easy for us to connect things and realize outcomes, but since the scenes don't share characters, the characters blunder on, clueless and it's a little frustrating because it makes them seem dense when it's just a lack of information for them.
Oh, that is a very interesting/frustrating sounding use of that trope, Rick! Thanks for the recon!
I myself have been on a bit of a UF binge. So far no standouts, though in order they'd go Something from the Nightside, Jack of Kinrowan: Jack the Giant-Killer / Drink Down the Moon, Nightfall.
Nightside was typical but amusing. Jack was atypical but not so amusing. Nightfall was typical and not so amusing. I did have a great win in Shadowmarch, which won me over despite heavy prejudice. It's the only one of the four I intend on continuing!
I myself have been on a bit of a UF binge. So far no standouts, though in order they'd go Something from the Nightside, Jack of Kinrowan: Jack the Giant-Killer / Drink Down the Moon, Nightfall.
Nightside was typical but amusing. Jack was atypical but not so amusing. Nightfall was typical and not so amusing. I did have a great win in Shadowmarch, which won me over despite heavy prejudice. It's the only one of the four I intend on continuing!

I quite liked that series as well as Tad Williams Bobby Dollar series (absolutely nothing like Shadowmarch).

..."
I don't want to overstate the issue, either. It's most prominent at one point where we learn something about the background of an presetn time character and then find out that a key historical character has that background - but the two scenes don't share any people, so the connection is never made. It makes perfect sense in-story, but we see both scenes as readers.
In general, all of the twisty bits are handled quite well. There are supposed to be 5 people aboard the ship from the past... and there are, including a couple who match this historical record... but a couple who do not. The "yes, there are 5 but not the right 5" thing is a nice touch, handled well in the book.

I don't particularly like being called names of people that I'm not (like famous chiefs or, just 'chief', my name is Marc, that's all you need to refer to me as!). I have to remember the time the book was written, and glad we moved on from that. Didn't like how he referred to how Cherokee women were expected to behave neither, it's simply not true. Anyhoo, neglecting that, the language was a little weird, N=No so N where is nowhere, U can be Un, so U known = unknown. and I wonder if Highlander (there can be only one) got part of it's inspiration from this book, both had immortals who were born human and mortal till you die, for most of us, we stay dead, for immortals, you awake and are very difficult to be killed again. Not a bad book for it's time, but it's time has past!
Now, on to the near future, reading Mira Grant's next newsflesh book Deadline, then on deck, a little back in time, CJ Cherryh's Heavy Time.

yeah, I bought it, once I started, I had to finish simply because I got a good chunk of the way through the book, may as well finish it! I think a few of the older books would reflect the biases of that time. Heck, even reading the lady astronaut series which is pretty recent and by a female author was originally tough going, being set in those times as when bester was writing!

1. Armor by John Steakley a ground-breaking mil-SF reviewed here
2. River of the Gods: Genius, Courage and Betrayal in the Search for the Source of the Nile by Candice Millard a non-fic, formally about the discovery by Europeans of the source of the Nile, but in reality less about geography and more about explorers reviewed here
3. Бот. Атакамська криза (Ukrainian) by Max Kidruk, a debut novel that is considered the first Ukrainian technothriller, reviewed here
4. Діти Застою (Ukrainian) by Василь Кожелянко, a collection of novellas / fictionalized memoirs set predominantly in a fictitious small town in Western Ukraine, reviewed here


The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey

The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey"
Yes I've read it, great stuff, how he on his force of will moved on when his legs where troubled

Also working on The World We Make. It's developing sort of slowly but has some new elements I'm enjoying.




Erm, the 1920s? I guessed it was a few decades earlier, have to check, read it last year. I liked two earlier novellas set in the same universe more


This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Hogfather (other topics)Night Watch (other topics)
Small Gods (other topics)
Hogfather (other topics)
The Last Continent (other topics)
More...
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)
More...