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 2024?

Also was thrilled to find the Houston Public Library has the now-unavailable ebook of Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott that I wanted for my cyberpunk/biopunk reading project and have started that. So far it's great.


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Last chance to vote for our December 2024 books!
Polls close at midnight on the 15th, Goodreads time (PST/PDT). Remember that you can also change your vote by selecting "change your vote" in the bottom left corner of the poll.
January 2025 Mod Madness 2025 has started!
Polls close at midnight on the 15th, Goodreads time (PST/PDT). Remember that you can also change your vote by selecting "change your vote" in the bottom left corner of the poll.
January 2025 Mod Madness 2025 has started!


amusingly my 30 year old grandson tried to explain that maybe i should try reading Dune instead of what i read now. I explained that i read Dune when it first came out and twice since then
he has just discovered sci fi and fantasy!!!!!
gave me a good laugh


Also reading Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott and...why is this book never mentioned as one of the Wachowskis' sources for The Matrix??? Because I'm pretty sure it was. I already bought a used copy of another of Scott's books from this time period, because I'm mad I haven't read her stuff before now.
And started this morning: Prophet Song by Paul Lynch, who seems to not believe in paragraphs? But actually so far it's pretty cool.


This is a great book. Have you read Empire of the Summer Moon by S.C. Gwynne? It's a biography of Chieftain Quanah Parker.

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Collected short works from 5 decades of Pratchett's career. Definitely a read for the Pratchett completionist.
My review here
Tonight I will start a similar work, A Stroke of the Pen: The Lost Stories. These are more collected works published posthumously.

I saw "Blue Oyster Cult" in your comment and got excited thinking it WAS one of their songs that is ab..."
I should go back and revisit the Elric books from Moorcock, it's been decades!
And yeah, Simon Jimenez's book Spear Cuts through Water, I had issues with. Parts I liked, but it's like, you died and now you're back alive? and what happened?? And it's not explained... He does write well, but needs to work on the getting the stories to flow and when to stop (there was some stuff at the end that was added but did it need to be added?).
Anyhoo, I did finish it, then went immediately to finish Stephen Graham Jones' trilogy the Angel of Indian Lake. It too is set in the same town as the other 2 books in his trilogy, same protagonist too. It was great up towards the ending. I admit I found the bear scene a little over the top and could have been left off.
And also read Never Whistle at Night, a Native American collection of short horror stories. It was great, a mix of good and great stories!
And looking at my read list, realized I also read Alex Van Halen's Brothers. That was a good book as well. I kinda always thought Alex as a jerk before the book. Why didn't he play some Van Halen songs after his brother Eddie passed away? It was a rather short book, it stopped after David Lee Roth left Van Halen the first time. He did mention Sammy Hagar a couple of times, but that was it, leaped from when David left the first time straight to Eddie's passing. Totally skipped over Van Hagar, Gary Cherone, and the reunion tours. He really didn't slag on anyone, praising David and obviously his brother. He did like Michael Anthony's singing, saying he was a nice guy, but that kinda was it.
Also just finished NK Jemison's World We Make. I really liked it!! but do NOT read unless you read the predecessor, the City We Became. It truly is a sequel to that book. She's an amazing writer! loved her broken earth series! I will need to pick up her other book as well
And now, just starting Vonda McIntyre's Moon and the Sun. saw it was also a movie. not sure I've seen it, but I'll go look for it after I read the book!

Good to hear that! I'm still waiting on my library hold of this that I placed last month, lol.
Marc wrote: "I should go back and revisit the Elric books from Moorcock, it's been decades!"
I'm planning on a reread/read of the series for early next year. I'm a bit worried what I will think of them now, if they will hold up, lol. I never read them all and I don't even know what happened to my copies. I had the classic Ace mass market paperbacks from the 1980s with the cool covers, a whole set I bought at a used bookstore in Houston. No idea where they are now. I've noticed some recent interest in Moorcock percolating up in fantasy Booktube circles and such, not sure what started that.

Good to know, thanks!



Alex always seemed relatively quiet. I wonder why he left out such a significant swath of the band's history. The Hagar and Cheronne periods would have been interesting reading! I read Phil Collins' memoir within the last year or two: Not Dead Yet: The Memoir. He had to understandably keep things minimal because of the sheer number of decades involved going back to Peter Gabriel at the helm. But Genesis was around a lot longer than Van Halen. Maybe Alex will write another with more detail.
Along these musical lines, I've been considering Metallica Unbound but haven't picked it up yet. I started listening to Metallica before they were allowed to be played on the radio. It's hard to imagine now that they were once considered too harsh for the airwaves.
Anyway, right now I'm in the middle of The Shattered Realm of Ardor Benn and it's just as good as book one.

@ Stephen
The VBC [https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...] is planning a meeting to talk about that series near the end of the month.
The VBC [https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...] is planning a meeting to talk about that series near the end of the month.


Night Angel Nemesis = 838 pages
Jade Legacy = 713 pages
Heritage of Cyador = 528 pages
plus
a re-read of The Dragonbone Chair = 672 pages for a Buddy Read on another forum.
it's going to be a while before I finish a book. I loved the first Night Angel Trilogy, disliked the Black Pyramid series and the latest Night Angel book is reading like it's part of the Black Prism series with the main character acting like a teenager with their hormones in overdrive. The other three books are good though

Night Angel Nemesis = 838 pages
Jade Legacy = 713 pages
Heritage of Cyador = 528 pages
plus
a re-read o..."
Ahhh The Prism series.. I really struggled there.. :)


I shouldn't have waited so long; these are great.
My Review - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Read Trouble and Her Friends years ago and thought it was superb. The computer tech would probably feel dated on a re-read today, but the story is still great. I have read a couple of other books by Melissa Scott that I think are terrific and would highly recommend: Shadow Man and The Jazz.

Yes, I bought a used copy of Shadow Man and hope to read others by Scott. I will have to get a copy of this as well--I have been threatening to start a new blog for my thoughts and ideas that I can't cram into other social media posts and this might be to thing that pushes me to finally do it. I've followed Scott on Bluesky and just might go on a reading frenzy of her works next year, as my budget allows.
In other reads, I was hoping to finish Prophet Song by Paul Lynch today but I'll be starting it from the beginning because I bought the audiobook after reading reviews of it--while reading the ebook I've had to hear the text spoken in an Irish accent (basically Colm Meaney doing his Miles O'Brien accent) in my head to get into the flow of Lynch's prose, but now I can let Gerry O'Brien do that work for me!
Also hope to finish Our Hideous Progeny by C.E. McGill and be done with it--I'm not having a good time with this one. There are things in it that as very good, but there are other things that hurt the cohesion and pacing of the narrative that I feel a tough editor could have addressed.
Also will be starting There, There by Tommy Orange as part of my ongoing Indigenous Writers project and will be getting back to The Will of the Many by James Islington for this group's BotM, which so far is better than I expected (I tend to be disappointed by many big popular fantasy books like this so my expectations were low).
Edit: Forgot to mention--I'm reading Two Truths and a Lie by Sarah Pinsker, which is a novella/novelette available to read here https://reactormag.com/two-truths-and... as it was recently announced that Paramount is developing an adaptation of it.


CJ, I thought There There was an amazing book (though not an easy read from an emotional standpoint), and the audio version is quite good.

Night Angel Nemesis = 838 pages
Jade Legacy = 713 pages
Heritage of Cyador = 528 pages
plus
a re-read o..."
Are you also a Ted Williams fan? Have you read the other Osten Ard books?
I'm going to start The Navigator Children very soon.


yes, I am and I have thiese in my TBR list
Empire of Grass (The Last King of Osten Ard, #2)
Into the Narrowdark (Last King of Osten Ard #3)
The Witchwood Crown (The Last King of Osten Ard, #1)
I'm waiting for the The Navigator Children to come down in price before I purchase it and start the series.




yes, I am and I have thiese in my TBR list
Empire of Grass (The Last King of Osten Ard, #2)
Into the..."
I don't have your patience, so I've already read all the books except The Navigator Children. By the way, there are two more relatively new Osten Ard books, The Heart of What Was Lost and Brothers of the Wind. I think they have already come down in price, so you can buy them.
Udayan wrote: "The Last King of Osten Ard series is even better than Memory, Sorrow and Thorn, IMHO. Tad Williams is becoming better and better, if that's possible."
I totally agree! I read his Memory, Sorrow and Thorn books when I was in my early teens, just because my dad had those old paper books around the house. Then I grew up and Ted Williams started a new Osten Ard series. I don't know how to explain it, but I feel like his fictional world grew up with me. It's become much more complex and a bit darker, but I still really like it.
I'm also very happy that the new series has so many Sithi and Norn episodes. When I read the first series, I was very interested in their culture and history. In my opinion, Ted Williams is only writer who has really managed to create elf-like beings that actually seem strange and alien, not just good-looking humans with pointy ears.
So my dreams (I even tried to write Osten Ard fanfics when I was just a silly schoolgirl) finally came true. Among the main characters in The Last King of Osten Ard are Nezeru, a girl who is half human and half norn, and her norn father Viyeki. But I should probably shut up now, or I'll tell the whole story here and spoil it for other readers.
Anyway, I'm very, very happy.


This was my second 20+ hour audiobook in a row, though - is there an equivalent word to doorstopper for long audiobooks? While both of the long books I read have sequels that I am interested in, I need a shorter book break, so I'm going to read the relatively brief 6+ hour Moon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig Rice next.
I'm also close to finishing Jhereg by Steven Brust. It took me a little bit to get into the story, but I am enjoying it now - it's much lighter than the other things I've been reading lately, which is nice.



Nice to hear! I really like T. Kingfisher's books and this one is on my radar :)


I need to read the sequel. Unfortunately I cannot access it through my libraries on Libby or Boundless so I will have to wait until I can get it another way. I listened to the audiobook of Crusted Snow so I hope to get the audiobook for the sequel too.

I am listening to it - I really like it so far (about an hour in at this point). :-)

The other is a prequel that tells the story of how Hakatri and Ineluki went to slay a dragon, and how Hakatri began to suffer from his severe wounds, and Ineluki began to suffer from his severe humanophobia.
It's a good book, but I liked The Heart of What Was Lost better. My favourite character was General Suno'ku. It's such a shame that she died!


My rating: 4 of 5 stars
These are the stories Pratchett wrote under the pen name Patrick Kearns. A strong recommend.
My review here
Went to a book I somehow missed by another favorite author, Governor by David Weber.

Starting Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse.

I did enjoy the book, still haven't seen the movie...
Anyhoo, now starting Adrian Tchaikovsky's Children of Time


This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
I’d Rather Have a Cat than a Harem! Reincarnated into the World of an Otome Game as a Cat-loving Villainess Volume 1 (other topics)Odin's Child (other topics)
Bee Sting Cake (other topics)
Neuromancer (other topics)
Gardens of the Moon (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Andrea Stewart (other topics)Brian McClellan (other topics)
Robin Hobb (other topics)
Charlie Jane Anders (other topics)
Robert Jordan (other topics)
More...
And I just bought Ancillary Justice, which I've been meaning to read for a few years now.