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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Neil
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Apr 07, 2024 09:05PM

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Perhaps another Mary Shelley novel. She also wrote The Last Man which is an apocalyptic fantasy.


The Second Sect

Read Herodotus's the Histories, Peter Green's Alexander of Macedon, and Arrian's 'the landmark Arrian: the campaigns of alexander, edited by James Romm.
All great books!! really loved the Arrian one coupled with Peter Green's book. they differed some even in describing battles like Granicus, the first large battle between Alexander and Darius III (not the more famous Darius who lost at Marathon), did they fight across the Granicus river, or did Alexander cross first then fought? It's all interpretations and which conflicting story you think is correct!
Anyhoo, I saw two other Landmark type books in my local Barnes & Noble, so gonna go buy those two.
But I'm slowly getting back to scifi, reading RF Kuang's Babel, while also finishing my final book on that Persian (aka Achaemenid empire), namely finishing off Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones' Persians: The Age of Great Kings. Past Cyrus and his son Cambyses, now on Darius I aka Darius the Great. that book is a bit more readable, almost like a tv series. A great cap to that time period.



I'm waiting for the price to go down a bit

I'm waiting for the price to go down a bit"
It is high, I agree! I canceled my preorder of the hardcover and bought the kindle version at $14.99.

Wicked Problems (#2 in the Craft Wars series) by Max Gladstone and Lyorn, #17(!!) in Steven Brust's Vlad Taltos series.

Wicked Problems (#2 in the Craft Wars series) by Max Gladstone and Lyo..."</i>
Lol, Rick! I'm reading [book:Lyorn right now. I dropped the anthology I was reading like a hot potato to start it.

:(


I gave up on The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie.
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Thank you everyone who recommended this book. You all have more patience and a higher capacity for tedium than I. Gave this book 350 pages to capture my attention. It never did.
In my review I give much more detail for those interested in deciding whether or not to give this one a try. The short version is that in about the same number of pages as The Hobbit, Joe Abercrombie doesn't even get his characters to meet each other. In addition, no one seems to have any reason to gather in the capital and do something. The only person with a clear motivation is the villain, he wants to conquer more land.
My review here
Looked over my To Read list and picked The Colour of Magic. Maybe a good reread will clear my head.


Then I jumped into Dragons of Deceit, but I find it hard to keep reading. I hoped I would like it, having never read any Dragonlance before, but so far I just find it a bit bland.
So I closed it and opened The Sunlit Man, which reminded me why I liked Brandon Sanderson's books in the first place; fast paced, solid world building, great magic system and fun characters. Also love all the little (and big!) nods to the greater Cosmere universe.
And now I find myself in the snow capped lands of The Shadow of the Gods. Bloody great so far!
@Michael- You should read DragonLance Chronicles, four-volume set: Dragons of Autumn Twilight + Dragons of Winter Night + Dragons of Spring Dawning + Dragons of Summer Flame and DRAGONLANCE LEGENDS -- 3-book set by Weis and Hickman -- TIME OF THE TWINS / WAR OF THE TWINS / TEST OF THE TWINS before the Dragons of Deceit series.

I’m also about halfway through The Saint of Bright Doors by Vajra Chandrasekera. I wasn’t sure about it at first, but now I am fully invested. It’s a bit slow to read for me because there is a lot of narration, and the story takes its time. The world is complex with a lot of undefined pieces at first.

Anyhoo, now my attention is 100% on finishing RF Kuang's Babel. not even 10% done though, got a ways to go!

My review of book two Red Side Story
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

2011 for current last book in series -> whenever for Patrick Rothfuss' and George R.R. Martin's next book in the series
John Updike followed up his paranormal novel The Witches of Eastwick, published in 1984, 24 years later with The Widows of Eastwick (2008).



Heh. I rated Lyorn 4.5 rounded up, too!

*Klemperer's diaries are fascinating in and of themselves, as through a legal loophole he survived all 12 years of the Reich despite being a German Jew (as well as the Dresden firestorm).

Anyhoo, now on to Evan Winter's Rage Of Dragons, reading for a hiking bookclub I recently learned about and joined!

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
The first Discworld book. Read it and see why Pratchett was one of the best and is beloved by his fans to this day.
Besides, he teaches us so many ways not to say eight. Oops, now I've done it. Oh, no. Well, it was nice to meet you all . . .
My review here
Guards! Guards! is also on my reread list, so started that right after.
On an unrelated note, Watched the original Gone in 60 Seconds last night for our 37th anniversary.


My rating: 5 of 5 stars
A reread of another favorite. If the top point of a series is really wide across many books is it a top plateau? Anyway, this is an excellent book in an excellent series. Also the one I tend to tell new readers to begin with.
My review here
Moving on to Mort to complete the Discworld books on my 2024 Read All The Books 11: Prime Reading Time challenge.




I've also been reading Brimstone Angels on my phone (Kindle) when I'm not at home. It's a great fantasy read so far. And I really like the twin sister dynamic between Farideh and Havilar.
And on the audiobook front, it's In the Shadow of Lightning. Baby Montego is my new favorite character, and the narrator adds so much to him (and the others).

I've also been reading Brimstone Angels on my phone (..."
Tim Hardie's Hall of Bones might be to your liking, then!

Non SFF am almost finished with Brideshead Revisited and The Echo of Old Books which is my ebook / phone read
Also listening to Night Watch and Witchmark as well as Light of the Jedi with my son on the way to and from school

Hey, thanks for the rec!"
You're welcome! If you go for historical fiction, Bernard Cornwell's The Saxon Tales series might be up your alley, too. It's excellent! The first book is The Last Kingdom.

Lots of great fight scenes! Don't want to say too much more though, or else I start spoiling.
There is a sequel, but I don't have it.
So, I'm now reading Sarah Pinsker's A Song For A New Day. Won a Nebula. title is definitely intriguing. I just read the back cover, concerts, viruses, doordash (well a fictional doordash). Now I am intrigued!!

I thought A Song for a New Day was terrific and I hope you enjoy it. If you like rock bands and rock concerts, it will be even better. It's worth bearing in mind as you read about the pandemic in the story and how people responded to it that this book came out in September 2019, right before COVID hit.




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