The Sword and Laser discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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What else are you reading - 2024



As a storyteller Les Johnson makes a good scientist. I'm vaguely aware he's a NASA staffer of some high level. The book contained large amounts of tell-not-show done with bland, trope-filled characters. There are stereotyped plot points so obvious I just skimmed dozens of pages. And as for saving Proxima, they take 80% of the book getting there. It's chock full of instruction manual SF and while I do like hard SF, this one skips the story part. I despair of finding anyone with the breadth of Niven these days, capable of delivering both science and character. Alastair Reynolds comes closest but his works are filled with grotesque violence and shoehorning in continuity from his earliest short stories.
I may buy the sequel when it comes out in November, just to get the end of the story. Or I may still be peeved and not want to pay the $10 for it.






This is one perennially on my TBR. I hope one day our kind overlords maybe pick it. 🙃


I also just finished it. However, I don't find it as depressing. (view spoiler)
Some might find a recent interview with Daniel Abraham & Ty Franck (AKA James S.A. Corey) interesting. Among other things they give some insight into the seed ideas from which this new series sprouts.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQsE_...


Absolutely agree! Loved this book.

I am really enjoying Lois McMaster Bujold's Penric and Desdemona series. I highly recommend the audio versions. Grover Gardner brings the series alive.


I also listened to Ben Aaronovitch's latest, The Masquerades of Spring. I loved it. 5 stars.
I've started to listen to Equal Rites. Great so far.
I'm reading Long Live Evil. Sigh. I'm so torn. There are times when I'm reading it and I lose track of time I'm so lost in the story and then there are times when I can't seem to read a page without being frustrated. I can't figure out why.
I loved her In Other Lands and was greatly looking forward to Long Live Evil so I'm a bit bummed. I'll finish Long Live and hope the ending is great but since it's the first in a series, I'm expecting a cliffhanger.



The Penric and Desdemona series is quite wonderful. I highly recommend the audio versions. Grover Gardner brings the series alive.

(Sigh … so many books, so little time.)

The Penric and Desdemona series is quite wonderful. I highly recommend the audio versions. Grover Gardner brings the series alive."
I've been reading (like holding a paper book kind of reading) them and really like them too. The last two in the series seem to be audio-only, however, which bums me out. I don't really want to get 2 months of Audible to grab novellas and they're available on OverDrive but would cost the library $45 each to buy which seems like too much. I guess I'll just suck it up and pay Bezos.

Audible had a deal last month that was 99 cents per month for 3 months, so I took it. I’ve seen that deal before, so it will likely come around again. Add a note to your calendar to look for it around Black Friday.


Both seem very promising.

I also finished Equal Rites. Four stars. Really liked it.
Now I'm reading A Brightness Long Ago. It's one of only a few Guy Gavriel Kay books I haven't read. I was inspired to catch up by the announcement of a new book coming in May, Written in the Dark.


Oh my. You are so fast! 😊
I will never catch up with you. But, Desolation Island is in fact the next up reread for me.

Now on to Mal Goes to War, not because it seems to have similar themes, but just because it's due next at the library.
Also, listening to The Goblin Emperor for about the fifth time because it's nice and I don't have anything else in audio I'm compelled to read.

Sabriel / Lirael / Abhorsen

Oh my. You a..."
Don’t worry, I’ll probably take a break from Captain Aubrey’s adventures after this, so you’ll have a chance to catch up.


It concerns Alec (sometimes Alex), an ultra-rightwing conservative minister from an ultra-rightwing conservative version of Earth. In the first chapter he starts uncontrollably multiverse hopping while on vacation. He meets and fall in love with a woman in the first "hop" and together they try to make their way to his home in Kansas. Every time things start to look up they hop again and lose everything they're not wearing. As they go he's also trying to save her soul by converting her to his version of Christianity from her Norse god worship.
(view spoiler)
This is my favorite of his last half dozen books and his only "fantasy" novel. There's lots of bashing of conservative Christians which I enjoyed (no offence meant to my fellow readers) but it did drag a bit in the middle.






I really liked the series. There are some differences in the book and even though I know the ending, I still have difficulty putting the book down. XD

Set on an alternate Earth in 1926 where Huygens, in the 1600's, invented an alchemical process to make "clakkers", essentially robots controlled by magic. The Netherlands have used the secret of their manufacture to dominate the rest of the world and have been in an ongoing war with France and Catholics, who have fled to "Marseille-in-the-West", Quebec.
The story is told through 3 characters' POV; Jax the Clakker, Berenice the French spymaster, and Visser the Protestant priest who is secretly Catholic and spies for the French.
This is book one of a trilogy and doesn't really stand alone.
There is some substantial body-horror which may be a trigger for some.
Overall I thought it was worth 4 stars.
Next for me is The Rose Rent by Ellis Peters.

For Halloween season I'm going to read some Edgar Allan Poe short stories. I haven't really read a lot of Poe. Also I'm going to read The Picture of Dorian Gray.

Her Majesty's Bucketeers. A truly weird tale of an alt-London. Features tripartite (three way partition) crab creatures with three stalks that break into three arms and those into fingers/paws. The MC is an ersatz Watson to the Holmes character. There's three sexes also, and the "Watson" is a surmale. Which kinda fits Watson well.
There's a murder of the Darwin stand-in which the "Holmes" investigates. He is also pioneering the detective principles that Holmes was known for. Along the way is a cornucopia of budding science done by all levels of society, but mostly the upper class as they have the money.
The "Bucketeers" bring buckets of sand to put out fires. This species loathes water and absorbs what little it needs from the air.
Plenty of social commentary along the way. The characters are so human in feeling that you get jolted back to their differences as Smith refers to their actions, as for instance, "handcuffing" all nine hands above the carapace.
Loads of great Libertarian stuff too. Three fave quotes.
"To us, liberty is the central issue, and, although we tend to see the Lower House (their parliament-JT) as useful obtaining that end, we place little faith in any political process and more upon the people whom we know and trade with, love and live with."
"In the end, only we can win peace and freedom for ourselves."
"Lamviin (their race-JT) are a thinking race, and we should be guided by our thoughts, and by our thoughts about our feelings."
Along the way Smith pursued a Libertarian philosophy throughout the book. Some came off better than others. There is a Madam character who runs what has to be the cleanest brothel in the history of the World's Oldest Profession, likely a model for Spider Robinson's "Callahan's Lady" brothel books. Really not the topic I'd go for but hey, entertaining book anyway. Smith also has the Madam as a recovering street urchin who earned her way to respectability while her fellow urchin, given the "same" opportunities, went bad. Except this reads more like a description of how the physically attractive have an easier time in life and more options at every stage. TBH the "villain" involved seemed to me to be justifiably pissed off at inequal treatment and correct in his motivations if not his actions.
The book had a strange effect on my subconscious. One night I dreamt of the characters being trapped in the London Fire, no matter how much my almost-waking mind insisted that was 200 years too early. (I may have been subconciously incorporating an animal fight in the back yard.) Another night, as I fell asleep from my insomnia read at exactly the 50% mark, my dreaming brain insisted that the tie-in to the rest of the Probability Broach came just pages later (and that I had read them.) Actually, there is only a small tie-in, and at the 98% mark.
Weird throughout, obviously effective, well crafted if strange to read. I liked it but not as much as...

MC is Edwin "Win" Bear, a refugee from our Earth (or close to it) choked by bureaucracy and overbearing government. (Perhaps Smith was just a few decades early.) Win was a police detective and is still a detective, just for hire now. Until his cross-universal twin gets kidnapped and off he goes to the rescue. With, in tow, an uplifted Great Ape, the niece of the current President of the Confederacy, representing what little government the NAC has.
It's chock full of Libertarian philosophy, and nary a plot point happens than Smith is off and running with the implications. In fact I was enjoying the romp so much I was a good 3/4 of the way through the book before I realized that very little had actually happened. And what little had gone on plot wise had not been affected by the MC or the side characters. They were more passengers in the train of events.
That continued on with a Bond-style supervillain all the way down to the description of the villain's plan. A major plot point gets resolved by all of the characters having secreted on themselves significant weaponry.
As for the Venus belt itself, that is introduced as an after thought in the last few pages. Smith opines that as thinking species the sapient animals of Earth (including apes and dolphins) will leave their imprint on the Universe, and that to leave it alone would be a disservice to their sapience. Well. That's a point anyway. Not sure I agree but I am fine with Smith making the argument. Who knows, maybe I'll be convinced.
My recollection is that it is downhill from here, though I would swear that the onboard AI that is in love with its pilot in The Nagasaki Vector was the inspiration for Beta Ray Bill's companion in the Surtur Saga in Thor. I'd ask Walt Simonson, but I did ask him about something he had actually described for the opening pages with Surtur, and he responded that it had been a long time and he didn't recall. I'll have to go with my own interpretation then as it works for me.

I wasn't afraid to delete it 😉
You double posted on your post in the book announcement thread as well. I fixed that as well.
You double posted on your post in the book announcement thread as well. I fixed that as well.

Books mentioned in this topic
Too Like the Lightning (other topics)Heavenly Tyrant (other topics)
Wind and Truth (other topics)
Time of the Cat (other topics)
Midshipman's Hope (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Brandon Sanderson (other topics)Marko Kloos (other topics)
Andrea Stewart (other topics)
Neal Stephenson (other topics)
Patrick O'Brian (other topics)
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So with 4 months remaining in 2024, what are you reading?