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 2024?
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Melanie, the neutral party
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Aug 18, 2024 04:02AM

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My review is here ;)
I am also done with [book..."
I just got back from Glasgow and was at the Hugo awards. This book got a massive cheer and was clearly the fan favourite. Puzzling to me because I absolutely HATED it!
Just goes to show

"
I try to be indifferent; I don't necessarily succeed at it! Like Stephen says, there's apparently a big fan base for Some Desperate Glory, so it appeals to someone.
I haven't read Translation State yet, but I've enjoyed everything I've read by Leckie so far and several people with tastes similar to mine has praised it, so I look forward to reading it.
And I'm just not a Scalzi fan so I'll be passing on his book. He's another author with enthusiastic fans, but fans whose taste just don't often mesh with mine. But it's nice there's a variety of stuff out there in SFF for different readers.
I just started Blindsight by Peter Watts and Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel. The first isn't winning me over so far, but the second is intriguing and I like the writing much more.

Not really. This author also wrote a book about a war between elves and trolls, and how the children of a merman and a human woman tried to adapt to life among humans.

Witch King really deserves an award. Horror and fantasy books usually describe how priests and wizards try to exorcise evil demons that try to take up residence in people's bodies. But in this case, humans and demons are cooperating, and on top of that, this book has a demon's POV!
I've never read anything like it before!


Martha Wells' recent-ish book, Witch King, which had some award nominations this year.



I just gave that one a try and was also underwhelmed.


now, on to a different classic book, Julian May's The Many-Colored Land. So far, so good!


On the one hand, it is set in Renaissance Italy. The book does an even better job than real historical novels of describing that period, when Italy was divided into many warring city-states, mercenary leaders often seized power, and child marriages, poisoning and torture were common.
On the other hand, the city-state of Montefoglia, where the main protagonist, Fiametta, lives, is entirely fictional. Ghosts and kobolds also exist in this world, and alchemy and magic really do work.
All in all, this is a well-written and very interesting book.

On the one hand, it is set in Renaissance Italy. The book does an even better ..."
Bujold is always good ;)
And I just finished her Penric and the Bandit, book 13 in the Penric & Desdemona series. It was wonderful, of course!
My review is here ;)


On the one hand, it is set in Renaissance Italy. The book do..."
So many people praise this series of books. I will probably read it one day. And your review is a great incentive for me to do so.

So many people praise this series of books. I will probably read it one day. And your review is a great incentive for me to do so."
I hope you will like it! :)

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This one took a long time to finish. Not that it was a difficult read, quite the opposite. The writing is very approachable, almost simplistic. It is just a reeeaaallly long book.
My review here
I started The Game of Fox and Lion by Robert Chase. This is a reread, and definitely a comfort read. Also continuing Fellowship of the Ring on audio.

I liked both of those by Andy Weir. Not perfect but pretty cool space related fiction.


Yeah, it'll do that.

My rating: 4 of 5 stars. Good, solid sci-fi.
My review here
This one was on my TBR Cleanup Challenge, as is the next: Birth of Fire by Jerry Pournelle.

Reading Vampires of El Norte by Isabel Cañas. I am torn on this one. I wasn't terribly impressed with her other novel, and this one is a notch over it, if only for its creative and interesting take on vampires. But her writing style, how the novel is structured, the overwrought romantic subplot and romanticizing of the cultural and gender norms of the time period of the story is set are tiring for me.
Also reading In Ascension by Martin MacInnes. I tried to read this months back but couldn't get into it. This time around, I'm liking it, although there is a lot of dry science-y exposition and very slow paced. I'm OK with that, personally. I like how MacInnes writes his characters and how he weaves the very ordinary aspects of the MC's life with her scientific ambitions. I relate a lot to her conflicts in that regard.

My rating: 4 of 5 stars. Good, solid sci-fi.
My review here
..."
Happy Birthday!!!

The second book is just as good as the first! She is a great writer!

Good for you!"
you're catching up to me - I'm 63 in a few days!


Wow! I wish my loved ones could live to be that old! Your children and grandchildren must be very happy for you.

That's one way to look at things, Brett :)



Pocket Apocalypse by Seanan McGuire: #4 in her InCryptid UF series. Somewhat of a dud. I thought that McGuire could have done more with Australia and its cryptids rather than make this "yet another werewolf story," and the newly-introduced characters were tiresome. (review)
Mickey7 by Edward Ashton (audio): I read this one mainly so I could participate in SFFBC's Virtual Book Club about it. Fun, light SF that spurred more discussion than I'd expected. (short review)
Addendum: I tend to overlook short fiction in these roundups, and I finished three this month. So maybe this hasn't been as pathetic a reading month as I thought.
The Forensic Certified Public Accountant and the Cremated 64-Squares Financial Statements by Dwight David Thrash: a selection of the "372 Pages We'll Never Get Back" bad-book podcast, it well justified its inclusion. It would be pretty awful even without the egregious, and obvious, copy-and-pasting. (review)
The Executor by Margaret Oliphant: this is a short story that is part of her "Carlingford" stories, inspired by (and in my experience thus far, nowhere as good as) Anthony Trollope's Barsetshire series. (review)
Of Sorrow and Such by Angela Slatter: a small-town witch heals a shapeshifter woman, leading to a series of awful revelations and a startlingly high body count. Bleak. (review)

My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is pretty standard Pournelle-graphy. Good adventure story set in a gritty future.
My review here
While DIYing, but on the headphones and listened to the last chapter of The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Something in this story just begs to be told, not read. I listened while gardening and woodworking, but somehow I was mentally sitting at a fireside while an older relative read this story to a younger me. It just took me right back to childhood.
This time I noticed the excellence of the last sentence or two of every chapter. Somehow Tolkien came up with an excellent summarizing or linking sentence for every one.
My review here
Working on the TBR Cleanup Challenge with my Aries entry, Podkayne of Mars by Heinlein.

which version? I loved the Rob Inglis versions

which version? I loved the Rob Inglis versions"
This one has the 1990 copyright. I didn't know there was more than one. It is only the second audiobook I have listened to.
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