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?





I read Jim Hines' Goblin Hero to my wife years ago. She still reminds me of it from time to time. The rise of audiobooks has brought that to a lot of people, and the more I think about it the happier it makes me.


I've read the A Song of Ice and Fire series or what's available right now. I liked it as a whole but some books were better than others.
But I'd like to recommend Raymond E. Feist or David Eddings both what I consider really good High Fantasy authors.

Thanks!"
Second these two authors. Very good world-building.

also just read Becky chambers Long Way to a Small Angry Planet. a mostly fun romp around the galaxy on a smaller ship that creates 'highways' via tunneling through spacetime. a story about the captain and crew mostly told through the eyes of a new crewmate. it's book one, I'm gonna get the other books, I am enjoying the series!!
now I'm reading Patricia McKillips riddle-master series, starting with the riddle-master of Hed.

any other suggestions
i have all of these books, but haven't looked at them in years

any other suggestions
i have all of thes..."
Robert Silverberg, Glen Cook and Gene Wolfe?

I'd forgotten Keith Laumer! I used to read his books decades ago.


Ah, I love Becky Chambers' books so much! I am glad you enjoyed.
The Riddle-Master series is magical. I read it last summer :) Looking forward to your thoughts!


got all of those books, wow i spent the afternoon going through my book shelves of old authors. i figure i have a few hundred , looks like my reading is organised for a few months

Becky Chambers and especially Patricia McKillip's books are really great.
Unfortunately I haven't read Julian May's Many Coloured Land yet. But the time when 'the dinosaurs were extinct but humans were still smallish monkeys' has always seemed very interesting to me. And there are aliens too! I'll probably start reading that book soon.
I hope it's written in good language, and the descriptions of the Eocene (because I know it's the Eocene) landscapes are quite vivid. For some reason, writers don't love this period as much as the age of the dinosaurs. And yet it is very interesting!
Thank you for mentioning this book!

Oooo, I have the 1st of this series on my TBR, and hope to get to soon.
Since I completed the GR yearly reading challenge, I started this group's Zodiac challenge this past weekend and picked out books for every year. So far for that challenge I've finished Ancillary Mercy by Ann Leckie, In Ascension by Martin MacInnes, The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula K. Le Guin and Authority by Jeff VanderMeer.
All were solid 4 star reads for me except Authority which was such a disappointment and I only finished it, thanks to a fit of insomnia, for the Zodiac challenge after looking around at other books published those years. My review is here.
Today I'm starting these from my TBR list (which really needs to be whittled down a bit):
Riot Baby by Tochi Onyebuchi, The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell and To the Warm Horizon by Jin-Young Choi.

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This 1995 Baen edition is better than the original! It includes both endings as well as the 25 winning essays in the contest to pick between the ending 'as originally published' and 'as Heinlein originally wrote it.' In addition there is some commentary from Heinlein's letters and notes from Jim Baen.
My review here
Working through my TBR challenge list, started Feet of Clay by Terry Pratchett.

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This 1995 Baen edition is better than the original! It includes both endings as well as the 25 ..."
that sounds interesting

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This 1995 Baen edition is better than the original! It includes both endings as well as the 25 ..."
I have a 1993 Baen printing that includes both endings but not the essays. The cover announces it as the first publication with Heinlein's original ending. It has a page at the end announcing a vote to "pick the ending" and also one for the essay contest. To me, the original ending is better, way more powerful, and sad. I can guess why a publisher in the 1950's did not want it and you have made me curious how the vote in 1994 (30 years ago) turned out.

Apparently it was 2 to 1 in favor of Heinlein's original ending. Still, that is a fair amount of support for the ending as published.

Apparently it was 2 to 1 in favor of Heinlein's original ending. Still, that is a fair amount of support ..."
I wonder what would happen if there was a vote today. Although, it might come out the same way. (view spoiler)






Don't go by the name. The book is balanced by a lot of whimsy and humour


Also, there are other great Vonnegut books you could read if you found this too intense. He was a genius, a humanist and a deeply gentle person. His writing is profoundly anti-war and anti-violence, but this work was personal, drawing on his experiences in WW2.


Yes! Yes! Yes! My dad loved them and so do I. My favorite is The Kraken Wakes

Just finished Patricia McKillips' the riddle-master of Hed. took me a while to like the protagonist, Morgon, I kept thinking, come on! Stop trying to go home and quit, it's not going to work out, bad things will keep happening.
I did think the book was too short, only 190 pages, and ended kinda like Star Wars Empire Strikes Back, cliffhanger (carbonite, well, if you haven't seen ESB, I won't spoil, but if you did watch it, you know what I mean).
Anyhoo, on to book 2, Heir of Sea and Fire.

Report from half way - absolutely loving it. In my view the best think he's written (or is it spoken?)


Ooh! I do love a good anthology of horror!


Just finished Patricia McKillips' the riddle-master of Hed. took me a while to like the protagonist, Morgon, I kept thinkin..."
You may also like her books The Changeling Sea, Winter Rose, Ombria in the Shadow, Alphabet of Thorn and In the Forests of Serre.
The Changeling Sea is a very sad yet poetic book. It's the story of two brothers who are like yin and yang. One of them, though raised in a royal palace, truly belongs to the sea, to darkness and night. The other brother, who is bewitched and lives in the depths of the sea, is drawn to the sun, light and day because he belongs to them. At the same time, these different brothers are similar because they are the sons of the same father and love the same girl.
As for Alphabet of Thorn and Ombria in Shadow, these books have very interesting and bizarre plots. Winter Rose and In the Forests of Serre are just poetry written in prose, like the other Patricia McKillip books.

Sounds very interesting!
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Yep. 19 + 16+ 18 = 53 hours. Good thing I have a lot of DIY to work on in the shop this summer and fall.