The Sword and Laser discussion
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What Else Are You Reading?
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What else are you reading - June 2024
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Rob, Roberator
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Jun 01, 2024 07:11AM

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On the one hand it was a nice quick fantasy adventure set in an alternate early 1900's London with a really interesting magic system. On the other hand, if you took out all the teen angst and face flushing and heart pounding every time the main character thinks about her handsome mentor you'd probably be left with less than 100 pages. Oh well, I'll get around to reading the third book a couple more years.
Next is Strength of Stones by Greg Bear.

While I'm waiting for the third in the series to come in, I've decided to listen to Emily Wilde’s Map of the Otherlands.
I enjoyed Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries enough to give the sequel a go.

Then, got thinking about how it's sort of the same setting as All the Birds in the Sky, which I picked up an reread - on audio this time around. I somehow remember almost all of the first 25% of that book, and almost nothing of the latter 75%. Still felt like it was good, but most enjoyable in the first quarter where they're surviving childhood and discovering their powers.
Now I need to read a few books that won't trigger any more climate anxiety.

I don’t need books for that. Today in Nashua, New Hampshire:


Finished the nonfiction audiobook The Six: The Untold Story of America's First Women Astronauts. 5 stars,

I donno, The Deluge might be good, like the beginning of The Stand. It's a doorstopper though.
Dedication: "For my mom. All this began when I was a child and you sat me on your lap in front of an MS-DOS computer and asked me what story I wanted to tell."


Beric the Briton: A Story of the Roman Invasion
Native American Wisdom
I am working on:
Ranger Up!: True Stories of National Park Service Protection Rangers
The Spartans: The World of the Warrior-Heroes of Ancient Greece
Yep, these are the types of books I think are fun. I might try to get through a couple more this month. I am thinking about:
Shutter Island
Jaws
So You Want To Be A Hotshot?: How One Hotshot's Escape Into America's Burning Wildlands Will Ignite Transformation In Your Life
The Smoke Dragon
Picked up Chlorine by Jade Song from the library so I'm reading that and What Feasts at Night by T. Kingfisher which I got as a gift and couldn't wait to get into. Enjoying both so far at about 20% in.

DURING THE TWELFTH CENTURY CRUSADES A DEADLY JOURNEY MUST BE MADE FOR SALVATION TO HAPPEN...
When the king of Jerusalem is diagnosed with life-threatening leprosy, his physician and two apprentices - Ippolito and Ruth - will travel to India in search of a cure that has only ever been rumoured to exist.
They face many trials and tribulations along their journey to India and each will be more traumatic and devastating than the last. Against all odds they must continue as they hold the legacy of humanity in their hands alone.
With daring adventures having deadly consequences at each junction of the quest, it is their love and fortitude that drive them forward with nothing but a hope in their hearts of succeeding. To lose would be too devastating to contemplate.


Rag and Bone by James R. Benn (ebook)
The Wright Brothers by David McCullough (hardback)
System Collapse by Martha Wells (audio)



Chlorine is crazy and I loved it. One of my faves this year.

I started 30% of the cli-fi doorstop The Deluge. Parts of it are like a science textbook, like The Swarm I hear. One pov has these boxed sidebars. I hope the earth starts to fall apart soon. What kind of a masochist is Matthew for getting with Kate? I've only see two people on booktube talk about it.

Might I suggest:
https://youtu.be/MZpOd2pHiI0?si=r-n2a...
Also, if you haven't, go to the children's nonfiction section at the library and snag a copy of Cathedral: A Caldecott Honor Award Winner, the David Macaulay book that the PBS special was adapted from.

Started Trading in Danger (audio version).

Hoopla is great for those who can use it. Unfortunately, I live in Japan and the Yokohama City Library isn't a participant. 🙁

Hoopla is great for those who can use it. Unfortunately, I live in Japan and the Yokohama City Library isn't ..."
On the plus side you get to live in Japan.

I haven’t been this angry at an author in a very long while.

Yup. That is one big plus. ➕😊



I read that earlier this year and liked it.

Yup. That is one big plus. ➕😊"
The YouTube algorithm sent me down the “living in Japan” rabbit hole a couple weeks ago and I was quite impressed with how quiet, clean and safe it was. Quite a bit of racism, apparently, but that’s kind of a human problem, not specific to any particular country.

DU..."
Hello Benji,
That sounds like an amazing book. I am fond of historical fictions. I might check it out. Thanks for sharing.

I distinctly recall Narnia showing the idea of eating talking animals as a horrific thing only an unredeemable villain would do.
If we are to go with the half-dark-humor that many zombie stories do, the obvious role for dogs wouldn't be as food. It would be as hunters...hunting other humans. Perhaps for food. Long pig for dinner!


Intriguing! And a spectacular cover, too.
Apparently it will be published late August in the States.

Now I’m reading Survival of the Fritters. It’s…fine. I wanted a palette cleanser before I jump into The Way of Kings Prime. And whatever books I bring to the beach next week…


"We arrived at last at a fairly prepossessing gate..."
This term is used overwhelming in the negative (unprepossessing) so it was a bit of witty wordplay that I enjoyed.
"Rail-of-consciousness chatter."
They live on a gas giant and travel of any distance is by rail. So of course they wouldn't have streams. Any discussion of flow would default to the rails. Nice bit of worldbuilding.
Anyway, that's at the 45% mark. It's a good enough, not great, book so far. But the wordplay is fun.



Started Marque and Reprisal by Elizabeth Moon. (Audio)


There's some really great stuff about distributed consciousness and AI vs human modes of thought. A fairly big galactic civilization is implied. I was at a raving five stars for most of the book. Lack of a satisfying ending took it down a smidge, but not too far.
Then the followups. They each continue on the same theme. Both were solid books but not as inspired as the original. The scale shrinks from galactic to a single station and mostly stays there. There's a decent enough finale in the third book but it feels quickly tacked on after Leckie had made all her points. Anyway. Definitely far better than I had thought it would be. I just feel like Leckie could do even more. We need someone to rival Heinlein's skill in the current market and she's close.


There's another book in the series, Provenance, although it's really not connected to the Ancillary books at all except through the setting and a few off-handed references to major events happening elsewhere. I've enjoyed all of them -- I get more than a whiff of C.J. Cherryh from Leckie.

Thanks for reminding me. I have intended for a while to start that trilogy, and digging into my ebook library, I find that I already bought the first book (Ship of Magic)! Bout time to getroundtoit I reckon.

Started The Game of Kings by Dorothy Dunnett.

God-Does-Battle was settled, about 1200 years previous to the start of the story, by a coalition of Jews, Christians and Moslems who tried to live together in peace in cities run by AI. After a couple hundred years the AI decided that all humans were sinful by their own criteria and kicked all the people out into the wilderness to fend for themselves. By the start of the story the cities have all decayed and most are "dead". The book involves the exploration and reclamation of some of the cities and the return of the original "builder".
It's an interesting premise and setting but I'm afraid I didn't find the writing all that compelling. It was kind of the same way I felt when I read Bear's most famous book, Blood Music, a few years ago. It was fine but nothing to get excited about. I got a couple more of his on my shelves that I'll get to some day.
Next is Mythos: The Greek Myths Retold by Stephen Fry.
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