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What Else Are You Reading? > What Else Are You Reading in 2024?

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message 601: by CBRetriever (last edited Jun 03, 2024 10:37PM) (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments Bobby wrote: "I finally finished Les Miserables. Was a bear to read but interesting to see back story to the musical and his views on helping the poor and improving justice."

There were a lot of digressions off topic in that book and this wikipedia bit is spot on

More than a quarter of the novel—by one count 955 of 2,783 pages—is devoted to essays that argue a moral point or display Hugo's encyclopedic knowledge but do not advance the plot, nor even a subplot, a method Hugo used in such other works as The Hunchback of Notre-Dame and Toilers of the Sea. One biographer noted that "the digressions of genius are easily pardoned". The topics Hugo addresses include cloistered religious orders, the construction of the Paris sewers, argot, and the street urchins of Paris. The one about convents he titles "Parenthesis" to alert the reader to its irrelevance to the story line.

the page counts are all over the place for the Kindle versions so pieces may have been cut out in some. Oddly enough, it doesn't appear the Hugo wrote any short stories.

and as it took him 17 years to write Les Miserables, there may be some hope yet for Martin and Rothfuss to complete their next books...

edit to change yout to yet


message 602: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (michellehartline) | 3168 comments That was my problem with Les Misérables; way too many tangents.


message 603: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Stanford (stephen_k_stanford) | 187 comments And very depressing


message 604: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments CJ wrote: "That might be my favorite of the series. I'm rereading the whole series again (third time) right now ..."

How lovely that you've found comfort in/from Murderbot! ^_^ We have an entire series discussion thread for Murderbot, if you'd like to take a look! :)


message 605: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (michellehartline) | 3168 comments Stephen wrote: "And very depressing"

That, too.


message 606: by Economondos (new)

Economondos | 503 comments Completed Miles in Love, an omnibus of two novels (Komarr and A Civil Campaign) as well as the short story Winterfair Gifts.

Komarr is a mystery, A Civil Campaign is a romantic period piece set in the future, and Winterfair Gifts is a capping short story harking back to the whole book series. My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A Civil Campaign is my favorite Vorkosigan novel. The whole series leads up to this saga of becoming responsible, mature people. Not just Miles, a lot of people leave their young adulthood behind and take on a heavier load. Winterfair Gifts capped it off beautifully, leaving me content.

My review here

Moving on to Diplomatic Immunity.


message 607: by Kim (new)

Kim | 89 comments The books I read and listened to in May:

- Your Shadow Half Remains by Sunny Moraine : An interesting premise though it started to crumble by the end. I wish we got more about the two main characters relationship.

- Murder at Everham Hall by Benedict Brown : A fun enough cozy mystery romp. Not sure if I’ll continue when the next book is out.

- Piglet by Lottie Hazell : I was really excited for this book but it fell flat for me. The descriptions of the food were delectable but I felt too far removed from the main character at times.

- Floating Hotel by Grace Curtis : Another disappointment for me. I was excited for this one. A cozy found family in space? Sign me up. For me, it just didn’t have the sci-fi feel I was looking for and there was so many different points of few I didn’t personally experience a connection between many of them.

- Home Is Where the Bodies Are by Jeneva Rose : First I want to say the audiobook production of this is fantastic. The second thing is that I so wanted to love this book but the mystery never hooked and reeled me in.

- A Magical Girl Retires by Park Seolyeon : This book was so much fun. I love this take on the magical girl trope.

- I Want a Better Catastrophe: Navigating the Climate Crisis with Grief, Hope, and Gallows Humor by Andrew Boyd : This book wasn’t what I was expecting going in and that was my fault.

Top 3 Favorite Comics of the Month:
- A Cat from Our World and the Forgotten Witch Vol. 1 by Hiro Kashiwaba
- Wotakoi: Love is Hard for Otaku, Vol. 1 by Fujita
- Third Shift Society, Vol. One by Meredith Moriarty

Currently reading: The Husbands by Holly Gramazio (Loving this book but taking forever to get through this part because I’m feeling such strong second hand embarrassment.) & Someone You Can Build a Nest In by John Wiswell
Currently listening: I'm Afraid You've Got Dragons by Peter S. Beagle
Current Comic: By The Horns, Vol. 1: The Wind Rises by Markisan Naso


message 608: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Stanford (stephen_k_stanford) | 187 comments I'm currently working my way through the Hugo Awards short fiction reading list (am going to WorldCon in Glasgow).
So far the best thing I've read is Ivy, Angelica, Bay by C.L. Polk, a riveting urban fantasy.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...


message 609: by Kaia (new)

Kaia | 660 comments I've now finished Mirror Dance and Memory by Lois McMaster Bujold in my Vorkosigan Saga reading adventure, and they were both excellent and very different from each other. I also discovered an old blog from Jo Walton on tor.com from when she re-read the series back in 2009. It's been fun to read her takes on each of the books I've read so far, and I wonder if Memory had any influence on her book My Real Children, which I read earlier this year.

I'm also just about to finish Her Smoke Rose Up Forever, a collection of short stories and novellas by James Tiptree, Jr, mostly from the 1970s. It's taken me a long time to read because I can usually only manage one story per day, if that. Most of the stories are well told and insightful but also tend toward the grim side. In doing some research on the author, I was amazed to discover that she didn't start writing / publishing stories until her 50s, and she was of my grandmother's generation. I would never have guessed that from the stories themselves, which is kind of delightful.


message 611: by Marc (new)

Marc Towersap (marct22) | 340 comments just finished P Djeli Clark's A Master of Djinn, a great story! Set in Egypt about 200 years ago, fantasy, human kind re-discovering magical beings, such as.... djinn! aka genie's. yeah, I know most of us including me instantly thought of rubbing bottles and getting three wishes, but it's not quite that easy. And it's more than that! He is a great writer, looking forward to more work from him!

Anyhoo, now on to Joe Haldeman's Camouflage...


message 612: by Cynda (new)

Cynda | 184 comments Enjoying reading Backteria: & Other Improbable Tales by Richard Matheson. I thought-knew I would enjoy this collection after reading I Am Legend a couple of years ago.


message 613: by Charlton (new)

Charlton (cw-z) | 778 comments Just finished The Dark Throne byJocelyn A. Fox.
I liked the book, I like how Jocelyn Fox writes, her characters are really fleshed out. The fae world that she has created is amazing and fun to read about.

Just started reading The Chronicle of Heloise & Grimple by Sean Gibson.


message 614: by Leonie (new)

Leonie (leonierogers) | 1221 comments Currently reading Witch King by Martha Wells, which is slowly sucking me in.


message 615: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Connell (sarahconnell) | 315 comments I’m waiting for the witch king paperback to come out - tried borrowing it 3x from the library and I’m too slow reading it to finish in time before it needs to be returned. It’s a lot of great world building.


message 616: by Leonie (new)

Leonie (leonierogers) | 1221 comments Sarah wrote: "I’m waiting for the witch king paperback to come out - tried borrowing it 3x from the library and I’m too slow reading it to finish in time before it needs to be returned. It’s a lot of great world..."

Yes, I was fortunate enough to get it via the Hugo Packet.


message 617: by Bobby (new)

Bobby Durrett | 233 comments CBRetriever wrote: "Bobby wrote: "I finally finished Les Miserables. Was a bear to read but interesting to see back story to the musical and his views on helping the poor and improving justice."

There were a lot of d..."


My edition (Signet Paperback) was 1460 pages. Supposedly complete and unabridged. I hope there is not another 1300 pages out there!

The whole side story about the sewer system was a little much. But even the parts that were part of the plot were tedious. He just loves France and Paris. Lots of names and lists. There were long songs in French translated in footnotes. Quite self indulgent and not in a lot of ways very well written. And yet the message is quite poignant similar to the musical. Jean Valjean is quite the pilgrim and humble saint. Cried my eyes out at the end but it wasn't depressing. It was noble and uplifting and a call to action to help the poor and to seek a more just nation.


message 618: by Economondos (new)

Economondos | 503 comments Finished up Diplomatic Immunity by Lois McMaster Bujold this morning. My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Very good plot and the medical parts remind me of James White's Sector General series.

My review here

Continuing the series with Captain Vorpatril's Alliance. Although Alice Bell's Grave Expectations just arrived and I have been wanting to read that for a while.


message 619: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments Bobby wrote: "My edition (Signet Paperback) was 1460 pages. Supposedly complete and unabridged. I hope there is not another 1300 pages out there!"

It quite often takes more words to say something in French than in English. Lists, for example almost always have the correct French version of the in front of each noun. The translation may have left out a lot too


message 620: by Brett (new)

Brett Bosley | 329 comments Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas was definitely different. 1880s Brazilian prose feels highly accessible, you would be forgiven if you thought it was a new release.

I'm starting on Taylor Brown's, Rednecks, historical fiction based around the Battle of Blair Mountain, in early 1920s West Virginia. That's "rednecks" in the political, union strong sense, before it became a smear.


message 621: by TheBookLounge (new)

TheBookLounge | 36 comments For anyone who is currently reading the Joe Ledger novels and are not yet on Rage, when you get to this book, you will have rage at the end of it. Joe Ledger gets put to the test in this one. Not just with the current situation, but with his own personal issues. RTI, also known as DMS in previous books have no idea what they just got themselves into.

The writing per the norm had me hooked but I will admit, somewhere around 70-75% it was kind of hard to get through some chapters. Found myself going back to figure out what was going on. Could've been I was tired when I was reading at the time or it really was confusing. Either way I made it past that and it went 100 mph from then on. I was bummed out that Ghost (Joe's dog) was not in it that much. All of the other books, his dog has been right by his side. I feel like we got to know Mr. Church a lot more in this one. Mr. Church is in charge of Joe's team and a lot of other things, lol.

Overall I'm giving this a 4.5 out of 5. Action just like the rest of the books. Joe and his team putting their lives at risk and 100% should have died ten times already, lol. People....get on this series. You wont regret it. (less)


message 622: by CJ (new)

CJ | 531 comments After Goodreads' algorithm recommending it to me about 50 times. I checked out the audiobook of Bookshops & Bonedust by Travis Baldree from my local library. I didn't have high expectations, many of these recent, super popular fantasy books aren't for me, so I was pleasantly surprised that I enjoyed it enough to not return the digital loan after the 4th chapter. Baldree's narration really carries the audiobook. It was a nice fun read for a Sunday.


message 623: by Kirsten (new)

Kirsten  (kmcripn) I just started Throne of Glass (Throne of Glass, #1) by Sarah J. Maas Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas.


message 624: by CJ (last edited Jun 10, 2024 08:20AM) (new)

CJ | 531 comments I started reading A Memory Called Empire this morning and well...I already have opinions. Right now that's mostly about how this novel seems to be trying to do an awful lot of things right out of the box.


message 625: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Stanford (stephen_k_stanford) | 187 comments CJ wrote: "I started reading A Memory Called Empire this morning and well...I already have opinions. Right now that's mostly about how this novel seems to be trying to do an awful lot of things right out of t..."

I really struggled with this book!


message 627: by Jan (new)

Jan (jan130) | 413 comments CJ wrote: "I started reading A Memory Called Empire this morning and well...I already have opinions. Right now that's mostly about how this novel seems to be trying to do an awful lot of things right out of t..."

I read and really enjoyed A Memory Called Empire back in 2021. I remember it started slowly, and I took a little while to get drawn into it. But then I was fully in. By the time I finished, I was thinking, yeah, I can see why it won the Hugo and other awards. Well-deserved IMO.

I guess it's about time for me to try the sequel LOL.


message 628: by Kirsten (new)

Kirsten  (kmcripn) I finished reading A Merry Little Meet Cute by Julie Murphy A Merry Little Meet Cute by Julie Murphy


message 630: by CJ (new)

CJ | 531 comments Stephen wrote: "I really struggled with this book!"

Yeah, I'm finding A Memory Called Empire a bit of a chore myself. I will wait until I'm finished before airing my opinions/grievances.

I grabbed Witch King by Martha Wells last night (the Kindle version is on sale right now for $2) and immediately got into it. It's funny because 1) I was fully prepared to be disappointed by Witch King because I knew it would not be Murderbot, and 2) I'm usually exceedingly patient with science fiction--I have read a lot of not great SF--and exceedingly fussy with fantasy. And here I am reading a SF book that I'm fussing over and a fantasy book I just dove into.


message 631: by Freya Berry (new)

Freya Berry | 1 comments The Duke and I (Bridgertons, #1)
by Julia Quinn


message 632: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments CJ wrote: "I was fully prepared to be disappointed by Witch King because I knew it would not be Murderbot"

This is why I haven't tried it! :D


message 633: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Stanford (stephen_k_stanford) | 187 comments I've got the witch King on Kindle as part of my Hugo package. Let me know what you think?
In general, I prefer SF, so a Fantasy has to be a real good'n before I commit!


message 634: by Leonie (new)

Leonie (leonierogers) | 1221 comments I've just finished Witch King (Hugo Packet 😊), and really enjoyed it. I love both fantasy and SF, and I love Murderbot. I mostly enjoyed Martha Wells other fantasy, but this one was definitely better, and occasionally I felt Murderbot vibes on the way through.

Murderbot wasn't there, but there were a few turns of phrase that were very reminiscent.


message 635: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Stanford (stephen_k_stanford) | 187 comments Good to hear. I will definitely read. I think Translation State is going to get my Hugo vote - really loved it!


message 636: by Jacci (new)

Jacci Ferrantino | 12 comments Kristen...I started throne of glass and ended up reading all 6 books in like 2 weeks...they are so addictive.


message 637: by Jacci (new)

Jacci Ferrantino | 12 comments I'm just starting a memory called empire good to know it takes a bit to get into it...I was about to put it down


message 638: by CJ (last edited Jun 12, 2024 06:49PM) (new)

CJ | 531 comments Leonie wrote: "I've just finished Witch King (Hugo Packet 😊), and really enjoyed it. I love both fantasy and SF, and I love Murderbot. I mostly enjoyed Martha Wells other fantasy, but this one was definitely bett..."

I am really enjoying it myself, and like with the Murderbot Diaries, I'm finding myself going back and reading chapters or passages over again, not because I didn't get them the first time but because I am so fascinated by Wells' skill as a storyteller. I will write more about this possibly in the discussions threads after I'm done.


message 639: by HeyT (new)

HeyT | 504 comments I'm in kind of a weird reading mood so I'm trying to get back in the habit by catching up on The Chronicles of St. Mary's. It's very OTT and nonsensical which apparently I need right now.


message 640: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Stanford (stephen_k_stanford) | 187 comments Jan wrote: "Jacci wrote: "I'm just starting a memory called empire good to know it takes a bit to get into it...I was about to put it down"

I encourage you to hang in there, Jacci."


I finished it, but mainly because I was afraid of the DNF police. I was never able to get into it!


message 641: by Kristen (new)

Kristen Lorenzano | 4 comments I am currently reading "I Will Find You" by Joe Kenda...I loved his show on ID so I thought I would give his.book a try...I am loving it..I really enjoy it when the author reads their books sometimes...


message 642: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (michellehartline) | 3168 comments Kristen wrote: "I am currently reading "I Will Find You" by Joe Kenda...I loved his show on ID so I thought I would give his.book a try...I am loving it..I really enjoy it when the author reads their books sometim..."

I had assumed that was romance or something from the title until I looked it up! Nope, not romance 😂 I guess my assumption was due to Daniel Day Lewis saying that in The Last of the Mohicans.


message 643: by Jacci (new)

Jacci Ferrantino | 12 comments I started reading murderbot thanks to this thread and it's fing awesome....sorry A Memory called empire but you're going to the dnf pile ....I'm now obsessed with MURDER BOT


message 644: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments I'm still struggling on with Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee and I think my strategy of one chapter a day will lead me to the end. Far too much death and gore and math and tactics.

I'm interspersing it with

Swords of Haven by Simon R. Green which is a fantasy mixed in with a policier with the first book in the bundle. Nice and fast paced and interesting

The Blackwing War by K.B. Spangler which is very interesting and I'm liking it

The Song of Homanaby Jennifer Roberson = a comfort read. I'm reading this for the first time in Kindle format (two prior reads in paperback). I'll be doing the whole series

Cyador's Heirs by L.E. Modesitt Jr. which is book 17 in the series (23 total). I'm hoping to finish the series late 2024/early 2025

The Killing Mood by T.F. Muir which is a nice break from Ninefox Gambit as it's a mystery


message 645: by Economondos (new)

Economondos | 503 comments Took some time this morning to enjoy the end of Captain Vorpatril's Alliance by Lois McMaster Bujold. The last 80 pages of this book are enthralling and hard to set down.

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is the side-character book that other authors should envy. My To Reread Shelf may collapse under the weight of Bujold books, but I will just have to reinforce it.

My review here

Going to start CryoBurn tonight.


message 646: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Stanford (stephen_k_stanford) | 187 comments Jacci wrote: "I started reading murderbot thanks to this thread and it's fing awesome....sorry A Memory called empire but you're going to the dnf pile ....I'm now obsessed with MURDER BOT"

Murderbot is the best thing to happen in SciFi for decades in my opinion. And I found A Memory Called Empire almost impossible to read as well!


message 647: by CJ (last edited Jun 14, 2024 04:47PM) (new)

CJ | 531 comments Jacci wrote: "I started reading murderbot thanks to this thread and it's fing awesome....sorry A Memory called empire but you're going to the dnf pile ....I'm now obsessed with MURDER BOT"

Ha! Welcome to the club. I'm battling cancer right now, and was looking for something to just lose myself in. Tried Pratchett--not really for me. Read the first 6 Legend of Drizzt novels and then re-read All Systems Red and was like "This is exactly what I need right now," I've been just re-reading the whole series in a loop in between all my other reads.

I'm currently re-reading the full length Murderbot novel, Network Effect, which is a RIDE. Was reading it through my infusion treatment this morning. I suspect you'll love it.


message 648: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (michellehartline) | 3168 comments I'm sending well-wishes your way, CJ!


message 649: by CJ (new)

CJ | 531 comments Thank you!


message 650: by Charlton (new)

Charlton (cw-z) | 778 comments Sending you good thoughts CJ!


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