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What Else Are You Reading? > What Else Are You Reading in 2025?

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message 701: by Mai (last edited Sep 25, 2025 07:45PM) (new)

Mai Britt | 66 comments I'm on the second Emily Wilde book. She is such a prickly pear.Emily Wilde’s Map of the Otherlands


message 702: by Economondos (last edited Sep 26, 2025 10:22AM) (new)

Economondos | 528 comments Just finished Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman.

My Rating 3.75 out of 5.

I like the characters and the monster names. Fast-paced story but started getting repetitive by the end of the book. Might read the second one some time in the future.

My review here

Having enjoyed the Tsurani sub-series so much, I am going to binge Raymond E. Feist's Midkemia books for a while. I haven't reread Silverthorn in quite a while, so it's up first.


message 703: by Kaia (new)

Kaia | 687 comments I am currently re-reading Becky Chambers’ Wayfarers series, and I am enjoying the books just as much as the first time. I have finished The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet and A Closed and Common Orbit, and I am currently about half way through Record of a Spaceborn Few. So many great characters and found families with enough action and adventure to keep the stories moving.


message 704: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan | 23 comments I have been re-reading the Revelation Space series by Alistair Reynolds. Really love these books.


message 705: by Jan (new)

Jan (jan130) | 414 comments Jonathan wrote: "I have been re-reading the Revelation Space series by Alistair Reynolds. Really love these books."

It's a great series. Enjoy your reread, Jonathan.


message 706: by Beth (last edited Sep 29, 2025 07:53PM) (new)

Beth (rosewoodpip) | 2007 comments Finished one whole book in September! 🥳 although it amounts to about the same number of pages "completed" in August at 150 or so. I made some progress on a much longer book or two, which I hope to be able to review in October. "Better than nothing," again...

Central Station by Lavie Tidhar: an evocative mosaic novel featuring a number of characters who live near Central Station--now a space station--sitting on the former Israel/Palestine border. (brief review written during a vacation)


message 707: by Mai (new)

Mai Britt | 66 comments The Enchanted Greenhouse. The main character, Terlu, was turned into a statue as punishment for practicing magic without a license. She comes unstatufied near an enchanted greenhouse. I wasn't a real fan of Sarah Beth Durst's The Spellshop and this one appears to be similar. But so far, it's a quick, easy, and fairly interesting read.


message 708: by Peony (new)

Peony | 32 comments Continuing The Broken Earth series, so I edited my review of The Fifth Season;

A well-written book with poor pacing. It’s not that I wasn’t enthralled—it had tension and (I thought) direction— but its plot twists unravel its expected progressions into stillness; the book goes near-nowhere.

I like this book enough. I’d give it 3.5 stars in ‘liked,’ but its writing itself is usually a 5. The plot drags it down.

Also, I’m not one for horrific, on-screen cruelty. There’s two scenes, around the 20% mark, that really got to me, and not in the good way. It toes the line of sensationalism, and it’s disproportionately against children, all of it abusive, cruel, and systematic, written to shock. Some of it is injustice against magic users in general, and the pain of parents, but not most.

Paradoxically, much of its tone reminded me of The Wheel of Time’s world. I think it’s the magic system and its mysterious organization with factions.


message 709: by Jabotikaba (last edited Oct 01, 2025 11:35AM) (new)

Jabotikaba | 117 comments Mai wrote: "The Enchanted Greenhouse. The main character, Terlu, was turned into a statue as punishment for practicing magic without a license. She comes unstatufied near an enchanted greenhou..."

So, someone turned the poor lady into a statue in this book? That sounds very interesting!


message 710: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Lacoste | 29 comments Sheska wrote: "I started Kindred by Octavia E. Butler. I'm continuing my reading challenge from 2024 and this one meets the time travel criteria. So far, I'm loving the story.

Also started the Night Watch by Te..."


Really loved Night Watch, I never quite got anything similar to Terry Pratchett's writing to be honest...


message 711: by Leonie (last edited Oct 05, 2025 09:21PM) (new)

Leonie (leonierogers) | 1224 comments I'm trying my first Charles Stross story: The Atrocity Archives. Started slow, but it's ramped up now.


message 712: by Jabotikaba (new)

Jabotikaba | 117 comments I just finished reading Europe by Craig Beck. It's a well-written book, but unfortunately, all the plot twists were too predictable.


message 713: by Colin (new)

Colin (colinalexander) | 374 comments Read Days of Shattered Faith by Adrian Tchaikovsky, a fantasy and the third book set in the world of the Palleseen Sway. Excellent book! The prose is engaging and pulls the reader along quickly. The world-building is richly detailed. Numerous characters are developed in depth with the good (a few), the bad (many), and the ugly (plenty of those). The primary characters are new, but a number of characters from the first two books have meaningful roles in this new setting. The story has combat (from individual to army level), mystery, political intrigue, and backstabbing (figurative and literal). Note that the carnage among key characters is significant. No plot armor in this story! (It does have an echo of the historical British consolidation of rule in India, and the author does mention Dalrymple's "The Anarchy" in his endnote.) One quibble I had was that some character decisions and maneuvers near the end seemed designed to move the plot to a place it was not going to go, but that did not spoil the fun. Overall, a strong recommendation for fantasy readers who are not looking for romantasy. I would say three cheers for this book! (Unless . . . ahem . . . you have a frog in your throat. And now I better duck quick . . .)
Days of Shattered Faith (The Tyrant Philosophers, #3) by Adrian Tchaikovsky


message 714: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus (expendablemudge) | 39 comments Colin wrote: "(Unless . . . ahem . . . you have a frog in your throat. And now I better duck quick . . .)"

Your dad-joke game is world-class!


message 715: by Economondos (last edited Oct 12, 2025 10:18AM) (new)

Economondos | 528 comments Been deep in DIY projects trying to beat the fall rains, so haven't posted much. Recently finished two in Feist's Riftwar series:
Silverthorn and
A Darkness at Sethanon
in the evenings,

While working got to listen to some more Penric audiobooks,
The Assassins of Thasalon and
Knot of Shadows

reviews are in the usual place, but are a little more rushed than I like. Now off for some long-neglected housecleaning. Tomorrow back to fixing grout and polishing tile so that everything can be resealed.


message 716: by Bobby (new)

Bobby Durrett | 235 comments Started "The Gods Themselves" but I'm a little bogged down in it. I'm in a little bit of a reading slump. Partly I'm just busy with other things. I started one of the Ursula K Le Guin short stories in my Library of America collection and I didn't get off the first page. I've liked so many of her stories I think I'm just a little distracted.


message 717: by Cynda (new)

Cynda | 190 comments I recently finished The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende. The description of some of the types of magica and mystery of the Hispanic New World adds an element of ethnicity.

This completes my reading of the involuntary trilogy. Now there seems to be a fourth book in the de Valle saga: My Name Is Emilia del Valle which I hope to read next year.


message 718: by HeyT (new)

HeyT | 507 comments I recently finished the Tide Child Trilogy by RJ Barker and I wouldn't say no to more stories in that world.


message 719: by Randy (new)

Randy Money | 109 comments Bobby wrote: "Started "The Gods Themselves" but I'm a little bogged down in it. I'm in a little bit of a reading slump. Partly I'm just busy with other things. I started one of the Ursula K Le Guin short stories..."

For what it's worth, this is the second October in a row where the world outside of reading has weighed heavily enough that I glanced off a book that should be right in my wheelhouse. It happens. Like you, I've found some short stories to read, though not very challenging stories, and used them to just keep moving through.


message 720: by Economondos (new)

Economondos | 528 comments Now reading Prince of the Blood and listening to Demon Daughter.

My wife just found the Witchfinder graphic novels (Hellboy universe) and Black Company series (including Port of Shadows) on computer as Humble Bundles. Not sure when I would have time to read these, but I can find room for some electrons until then.


message 721: by Stewart (new)

Stewart Ireland | 22 comments Bobby wrote: "Started "The Gods Themselves" but I'm a little bogged down in it."
Keep going until you reach the second part of the book, where things are told from the aliens (Gods) perspective. It's so good!


message 722: by Economondos (new)

Economondos | 528 comments Rather than sleep, read Prince of the Blood by Raymond E. Feist this morning.

My rating: 4.5 of 5 stars

Feist gives us returning characters and a mix of new ones (including the protagonist twins) who are all people I want to see in fantasy novels.

My review here

My wife started reading about the Murderbot Diaries and wants to discuss what she found. So a quick diversion to read All Systems Red. While fixing the shower tiles I will continue listening to Demon Daughter (Penric and Desdemona).


message 723: by CJ (last edited Oct 14, 2025 06:53PM) (new)

CJ | 555 comments All Systems Red is one of those books for me that every time I reread (and I've reread it a lot at this point), my opinion of it grows. I read it first back not long after it was published, and I remember 1) not thinking it lived up to the hype and 2) thinking Wells was a new-ish millennial author! Boy, I was very mistaken on both points.

I'm swamped with reading right now and am very slowly getting through a stack of new reads:

Esperance - I'm quite enjoying this one. I like its blend of crime mystery and SF
Days of Shattered Faith - I love Tchaikovsky but I am finding it hard to get into this one. The previous 2 novels in this series were easier for me.
The Cold House - so far, it's really good, so good I keep putting off finishing it because I want not rush my way through the rest
The Witch of Willow Sound - not at all what I expected, a bit more YA than I wanted, not terrible, I hope to finish it


message 724: by Randy (new)

Randy Money | 109 comments CJ wrote: "All Systems Red is one of those books for me that every time I reread (and I've reread it a lot at this point), my opinion of it grows. I read it first back not long after it was published, and I r..."

I'm reading The Cold House, too, and wish I had more than a few minutes at a time to dig into it. If I had, I'd have finished it already. I really like Slatter's writing.


message 725: by Jabotikaba (new)

Jabotikaba | 117 comments Colin wrote: "Read Days of Shattered Faith by Adrian Tchaikovsky, a fantasy and the third book set in the world of the Palleseen Sway. Excellent book! The prose is engaging and pulls the reader ..."

Sounds very interesting!


message 726: by Dean (new)

Dean Landers | 8 comments Waiting on Zelazny's A Night in the Lonesome October from the library. I have been on the wait list for more than a minute so it is going to be a squeeze to read it before Halloween!

In non-SFF, I just finished Rubicon. Holy Roman Emperor, Batman... that book is essential reading.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

And for pure candy, I just demolished The Collapsing Empire by John Scalzi. Fan-freaking-tastic.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 727: by Mai (last edited Oct 18, 2025 05:12PM) (new)

Mai Britt | 66 comments Just started Hemlock & Silver by T. Kingfisher. It reminds me of Ariana Franklin's Mistress of the Art of Death series. Both main characters are women of science, commanded to work for their king, set in medieval times. So far it's a sweet little read.


message 728: by Colin (new)

Colin (colinalexander) | 374 comments Mai wrote: "Just started Hemlock & Silver by T. Kingfisher. It reminds me of Ariana Franklin's Mistress of the Art of Death series. Both main characters are women of science, ..."

Started this one as well. About halfway in now and enjoying it. So far, a fairly cozy mystery vibe. Sadly, I will have to put it down for about two weeks because there is too much to do and not enough time to do it. Hope you enjoy the rest of the book.


message 729: by AML (new)

AML | 10 comments Dean wrote: "And for pure candy, I just demolished The Collapsing Empire by John Scalzi. Fan-freaking-tastic.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."


My library hold still has me waiting a few weeks! Glad to hear it doesn't disappoint.


message 730: by Brett (new)

Brett Bosley | 330 comments Blacks In Appalachia, William H. Turner and Edward J. Cabbell (Eds.) Collection of essays. *Fascinating*.


message 731: by Economondos (last edited Oct 19, 2025 09:39AM) (new)

Economondos | 528 comments Finished up All Systems Red a couple days ago. And the audiobook of Demon Daughter ran out while I was applying tile sealant in the shower yesterday.

Back to my Midkemia reread with Jimmy the Hand and Discworld listen with Pyramids.

I will write the reviews, but just can't right now. Too many projects and not enough sleep.


message 732: by Mai (new)

Mai Britt | 66 comments Colin wrote: "Mai wrote: "Just started Hemlock & Silver by T. Kingfisher. It reminds me of Ariana Franklin's Mistress of the Art of Death series. Both main characters are women ..."

I enjoyed it despite some confusion about the mechanical details of how the mirror world worked. The humor, the talking cat, and the heroine's social blunders worked for me.

This season cuts into my reading time as well. What you gonna do...shrug.


message 733: by Mai (new)

Mai Britt | 66 comments Just finished chapter 4 of Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. Our hero wakes up with amnesia on a spaceship sent to stop space algae from consuming enough energy from the sun to cause extinction of life on earth. The author gives us a ton of flashbacks as the amnesia subsides. I really like the pace, the plot, and our hero so far. Looks like the Goodreads Choice Award in 2021 was well deserved.


message 734: by Colin (new)

Colin (colinalexander) | 374 comments Mai wrote: "Just finished chapter 4 of Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. Our hero wakes up with amnesia on a spaceship sent to stop space algae from consuming enough energy from ..."

Hope you enjoy the rest of it. For me, this is one of the best hard science fiction novels I have ever read.


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