SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
>
What Else Are You Reading in 2025?
message 351:
by
Gary
(new)
Apr 29, 2025 12:55PM

reply
|
flag

[book:The Courtiers: Splendor and Intrigue..."
Beth, I read the same Lucy Worsley book in April too. I liked it. I agree it was an accessible read for this kind of historical tome. 4 stars. I had a hard copy from the library, and was able to enjoy the colour plates too. One day I might actually get to Kensington Palace and see that famous mural on the staircase :)


Also listening to The Burning Bridge, book 2 of Ranger's Apprentice, which is one of my favorite series, though this is my first time listening instead of reading.


A Civil Campaign may be my most reread book. Keep an eye out for the 'abject' part.

Yes, might be worth doing. The colour plates definitely added to the enjoyment of the read. There were several of the mural, a photo of the Wild Boy's collar (eeek!) and more.


Other library loans I plan to start this weekend: The Terraformers by Annalee Newitz and City of Last Chances by Adrian Tchaikovsky. The latter is a series nom'd for a Hugo and it's really the only Hugo nom for longer works that I haven't read yet that I'm interested in getting to right now.
And I plan to read a couple of short stories this weekend for another group, A Lost Opportunity by Tolstoy and The Machine Stops by EM Forester.

Have you read The Faded Sun Trilogy? It's my favorite Cherryh series.

I will second The Faded Sun trilogy! And add the Morgaine quartet to that. All excellent storytelling!

I just finished ワンパンマン 26 未知 One Punch Man 26: Michi and it is still very fun. It's been a long arc but there have been lots of changes and turns to keep it interesting.
Currently reading Tales from Earthsea.

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Good story with a satisfying ending.
My review here
Started Pandora's Star and continuing Wizard's First Rule. But I am up to the torture section of the latter and may go DNF. Just not sure yet.


Have you read Percival Everett's James? It might be interesting, to read it after you finish Huck Finn, whilst the story is still alive in your mind. I wasn't sold on its hype but James is an interesting take on Twain's story.

I'm also reading The Light Pirate by Lily Brooks-Dalton. This is my second book by her, and while I liked the other (Good Morning, Midnight) better so far, The Light Pirate is getting better the farther I read. I found the beginning very stressful.

Well, I've had a great day and a half of reading recently.
Then I read Saturation Point by Adrian Tchaikovsky in one sitting yesterday. I love how it really wears its inspirations on its sleeve, with even the MC referencing the other SF authors Tchaikovsky drew from, but is still its own story about humanity facing our current climate crisis. It also makes me feel really bad about not yet having read Roadside Picnic even though I basically know what it's about from all the other works it's influenced and inspired.
Then this morning I reread Negative Scholarship on the Fifth State of Being by A.W. Prihandita and read The Brotherhood of Montague St. Video by Thomas Ha, both are Nebula-nominated novelettes publish by Clarksworld and both are available online to read. Both are excellent but Ha's novelette in particular blew me away, with how elegantly written it is, exploring thoughtfully our relationship with technology that can record--and manipulate--our memory and experience (and there's a vaguely menacing villain named Caliper John, omg I love it so much). Highly recommended.

You weren't kidding. I read Ha's story immediately after seeing your post and it is terrific. Something tells me that it will linger with me the way that The Winter Hills had stayed with the narrator. The personal resonance was simply overwhelming. Oddly, Salt's novel reminded me of my experience with Edward Abbey's The Brave Cowboy although the endings do differ. It too made me think of the impermanence of things.

Well, I've had a great day and a half of reading recently.
I started [book..."
CJ, I also really enjoyed "The Brotherhood of Montague St. Video" by Thomas Ha. Your post also reminded me that I recently finished [book:A Drop of Corruption|213618143], too, which I found I liked as much as the first book. I hope Robert Jackson Bennett continues the series - it is really good (especially if you like both mystery and fantasy).

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...



Thanks for the unexpected chuckle :)




When I saw the words 'South Seas headhunters', I didn't immediately realise that they were headhunters in the literal sense, and that they certainly weren't recruiting staff for companies operating in the South Seas.


Kaia, you're inspiring me to continue the Murderbot Diaries saga with Rogue Protocol :)

The 'Six of Crows' production has multiple narrators, one for the perspective of each section, but I wish, if they were going to have different narrators for the characters, they would just do a proper Graphic Audio. It's weird listening to, for instance, Inej's narrator do a voice for Kaz, followed by a different reader for Kaz's section which makes him sound different, obviously, from Inej's actor's voice.

Last night I got back to Count Zero by William Gibson, which I started last month. It's good, but sometimes it feels like it's so well planned out compared to Neuromancer that it feels a little dull.
Going to the library today to pick up my hold on a physical copy of City of Last Chances by Adrian Tchaikovsky because I first started the audiobook but then realized quickly it's one of those books that is hard to follow with just the audiobook on the first read because of the dense worldbuilding and multiple characters to keep track of. I'm enjoying it a lot, but it's not a fast read.


Next immediate, Regenesis:

After that the rest of my library books are non fiction (i'll have to finish those first, but for my copies:



These I'll read after I finish the other stuff since they don't have a due date. One of my unspoken resolutions this year was to use my library more and try to buy less. *lol* Sort of working.



How fun! I should have done this last year. I just ripped through the Murderbot books recently. Hard for me to read them slowly. Enjoy!


-Seven Surrenders by Ada Palmer (I might hold off on this one until next month because I think it will fit a June challenge prompt about manipulative characters)
-Eyes of the Void by Adrian Tchaikovsky (this one has to be returned first, but it is also the longest one)
-Sheepfarmer's Daughter by Elizabeth Moon
-Downbelow Station by CJ Cherryh



Also reading The Annual Migration of Clouds by Premee Mohamed and Wheel of the Infinite by Martha Wells, as well as trying to finish up other books I've let fallen to the side.

I would second that! A great read...and stranger than fiction...

Not yet, but I originally started with the Company Wars, so I was doing a re-read. If I did it in order I probably should have started with the Hinder Stars books. *lol* The Faded Sun trilogy is on my list and I will eventually get to it. I'm not sure my Library has the actual books but I have it in my kindle so no rush for me. :)

Ooh! That's going on my list. It sounds really interesting.

Thanks for the heads up, CBRetriever! I decided to start with Eyes of the Void (it is also on my TBR challenge, so if I can't use it for the June prompts, that's okay). I'll probably read Downbelow Station next. I hope you are enjoying it.

I am enjoying Downbelow Station - I like Cherryh's SciFi series a lot
Books mentioned in this topic
The Scrivener's Apprentice (other topics)Uhura's Song (other topics)
The Waking of Angantyr (other topics)
A Planet for Rent (other topics)
Red Dust (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Yoss (other topics)Yoss (other topics)
Paul Bradley Carr (other topics)
Lubov Leonova (other topics)
Ray Bradbury (other topics)
More...