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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Colin
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Oct 13, 2024 05:03PM


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I've been meaning to get to that series. Please let us know how it goes!

My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is one of the few times I can say that the movie was better than the book. Maybe I just need more Ru..."
I agree, the movie was a masterpiece but the book it was based on, only so so. This is very rare! Usually they buy a 'property', change it completely and make it much worse - i Robot springs to mind. If you're going to make a crappy movie, may as well live or die by the IP that you paid good money for!

But before I can do that, I have to read Fonda Lee's Jade City for a scifi/fantasy hike that is going on this Sunday. I gotta hurry through a 500 page book!


That series gives me the giggles!

That series gives me the giggles!"
especially Loiosh

That series gives me the giggles!"
especially Loiosh"
For me it's the scenes with Vlad & Kragar!






I'm finishing up Planet of the Apes by Peter Boulle. The original movies were a huge influence on my love of SF and were among my favorite movies as a kid, but never read the novel before. So far it's a mix a top-notch 60s SF/spec fic and laugh-out-loud dated writing, especially regarding the female character Nova.
Also started Pushing Ice by Alastair Reynolds. I had to stop and look up whether Reynolds counts PKD as an influence (he does) because there's something about the premise and some of characters that strike me as PKD-esque, like PKD had some leftover novel ideas and chararcter sketches and gave them to an astrophysicist. I never read Reynolds before and was just in the mood for something Expanse-like but not by the Expanse writers (I've given those guys enough of my time and money for now). Enjoying it so far.

I'm finishing up [book:Planet of the Ape..."
you'll still enjoy them as an adult

I don't doubt that, they seem to be something that would appeal to me and I'm in a big nostalgic mood right now, with wanting to read/reread all the old SFF stuff. I'll add the to my "shopping" list so I don't forget about them when I have money to spend of books.


The author himself was in the middle of a divorce when he wrote that one. It shows, doesn't it?

Short novels/novellas I hope to finish this weekend:
The Scarlet Plague, an early post-apocalyptic novel by the master fiction author Jack London, one of his few works I have never read before
Even the Worm Will Turn and Song of the Tyrant Worm by Hailey Piper, queer Lovecraftian horror! I loved the 1st novella of this series.
A Short Stay in Hell by Steven L. Peck, I potentially could have a very violent reaction to this, being an ex-phil/theo academic. We will see.
The Butcher of the Forest by Premee Mohamed and Linghun by Ai Jiang, a couple of horror/horror-adjacent fantasy novellas I've been itching to read
Horrorstor by Grady Hendrix, wasn't planning on reading this this weekend but my library hold on it came in, so read it now or get back in queue (I started at 5)

Michelle wrote: "Mai wrote: "Teckla. This 3rd book in the Jhereg series shines less brightly than #s 1 and 2. The hero and his wife split ways and Steven Brust captures perfectly the horrendous feelin..."
Aha!


gotta pick up the other 2 books in this series!
anyhoo, turning back to my October horror, now reading Stephen Graham Jones don't fear the reaper. not sure if the title is inspired by the Blue oyster cult song or not...


Regulators reminded me a lot of Twilight Zone.

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

I adore this book. The brothers were going through an issue that is revealed much later on in the story. Pumpkin, OMG, LOL. So much love, I had to save this quote:
She’s still silently mumbling when a rocket darts off the railing. Only, it’s not a rocket. It’s Pumpkin. He fires true and lands with his back feet on the woman’s collar, then bats her helmet with his front ones, his suited tummy right in her face. Just: bat bat bat bat bat, like a pro boxer’s flurry of hooks. Unfortunately, he’s wearing booties, so aside from the pleasing dull smack every time he lands a blow, it doesn’t do much. She does scream, though.
In a quick, graceful motion that betrays her mercenary training, she puts the pistol to her belt and scoops Pumpkin up by his armpits, hoisting him away. “Is this a fucking cat?” “Um,” Kieran says. Pumpkin’s still swiping. “Who the fuck brings a cat to space? I thought it was a dog!”


Tonight I'm looking to finish Memory of Water by Emmi Itäranta. It's a stark post-climate apocalypse story with some lovely prose. More impressive is Itäranta is Finnish and wrote this both in English and Finnish, so this isn't an translation I'm reading.
My library digital hold for The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie came in and if this wasn't a buddy read I might just return it, lol. I don't know what I was thinking when I agreed to this buddy read. I'm not a grimdark kind of person. But maybe I'll like it. Maybe. Or maybe not.

This and the rest of the series (and its sequel series) are all good. Just don't read his YA, stick to the First Law world. His POV characters are great and memorable.

Now starting Shards of Earth. Hoping this is a good space opera.

I finished Shards of Earth over the weekend, Silvana, and I really enjoyed it. I was sucked in right away. Lots of interesting alien characters, too.
I was simultaneously reading / listening to the audiobook of Hyperion by Dan Simmons, which I finished yesterday and also really liked. Incredible world and character building. It was kind of a funny pairing, though, because both books had a Hegemony, though the stories themselves were very different.

CJ just a note that your post links to a different Memory of Water
ETA Thanks for reminding me I wanted it. It is discounted on Kindle so now I have it.


I recently watched Julius Caesar: Making of a Dictator on PBS which had Tom Holland in it. I learned so much I never knew. I really wonder if we would care as much about Ancient Rome if Shakespeare hadn't drawn our attention to it.

I finished Shards of Earth over the weekend, Silvana, and I really enjoyed it. I was sucked in ri..."
If you like this author, you might want to try his latest, Service Model. I thought it was brilliant!

"Stephen wrote: If you like this author, you might want to try his latest, Service Model. I thought it was brilliant!"
Thanks for the recommendation, Stephen! Shards of Earth was only my second book by Adrian Tchaikovsky, but so far I've liked 2 for 2.


I finished Pushing Ice this morning (thank you, insomnia), and liked it quite a lot, even though some of the interpersonal conflict and community politics was a little drawn out at times. If there are any big Reynolds fans here, feel free to recommend what I should read next by him.
I started the 3rd book of Lee's Machineries of Empire, Revenant Gun and for the last week of my spooky season reading, I'm reading Horrorstör by Grady Hendrix, A Lonely Broadcast by Kel Byron and Crypt of the Moon Spider by Nathan Ballingrud. I still have about 10 titles on my spooky season TBR that I want to get to eventually but overall I am pretty chuffed with myself with how many horror books I've read over the past 2 months. I could potentially have a proper book conversation with horror fans now.

Station Eleven is wonderful! I read it together with my book club after I first joined. I have such good memories of that discussion.
If you like Reynolds, I would recommend reading House of Suns next. I really liked it! You could also try Blue Remembered Earth, the first book in Poseidon's Children series.
Machineries of Empire is excellent! I've reread the first two books the summer before last, but managed to let other books get in the way of my reread of the third ;)

I agree with your comments about Pushing Ice. I felt similarly. Glad you enjoyed it overall. Other Reynolds I have enjoyed include Aurora Rising (Previously published as The Prefect.) I also enjoyed his earlier Revelation Space series. The writing is a little dense at times, but I loved the worlds he created, and the characters. I did enjoy Alexandra's recs too, House of Suns and Blue Remembered Earth. Plenty to choose from :)

Jan wrote: "Other Reynolds I have enjoyed include Aurora Rising (Previously published as The Prefect.) I also enjoyed his earlier Revelation Space series. ."
Thank you! I'll definitely look into those.


I admire your patience.

If I left grad school with any enduring skills, it's the ability to be a patient reader, lol
Mai wrote: "Firebreak. Action Junkie Alert! Video Gamer Alert! Our heroine, with a supporting cast of characters, fights corruption and oppression for a better world. A world without war and th..."
Ah, thank you, adding this to my cyberpunk/biopunk TBR list.
For dovetailing from my Sept-Oct horror fest into my Nov-Jan cyberpunk/biopunk project, I started The Jinn-Bot of Shantiport by Samit Basu and will try to do a quick reread of Do Androids Dream of Sheep? to refresh my memory of it, as the last time I read it was 2005 or so, judging by the Barnes & Noble receipt in my print copy.

Station Eleven is wond..."
I loved Blue Remembered Earth. A pageturner!

Good to hear. My local library isn't good about SF in general, better with fantasy and horror, but their SF acquisitions are very wanting (they only have 3 titles by Reynolds and none that people have rec'd to me so far). So I will have to look at what the used bookstores here might have the next time I go. SF just isn't popular where I live so I might have to wait for a deal on Amazon or Audible for some of these Reynolds books. Not that my TBR is running low or anything, lol.
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