Beyond Reality discussion
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What else are you reading in April 2010?
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At the time, I had the sense, though, that I was reading SF/Fantasy answer to Eco's The Name of the Rose."
"
I liked the New Sun series. But then, I liked "The Name of the Rose" also. (Though I think BR's recent BOTM "Eiffelheim" is much more comparable to Eco.)



"Orson Scott Card is one of the ones I look at really carefully before deciding."
Why, exactly?

because I think he is very uneven as a writer and sometimes offensively sexist. Not anywhere on the scale of Ringo. But he wrote Speaker for the Dead so he earned some tolerance from me.
Marty




On another note, it could be just the book that she read that comes off as misogynistic, after all that particular book was about a guy in a nasty profession.
Of course, there are book I positively hate and no way a few voices on an internet site will make me try again...well maybe...but if its against a fundamental moral code I have, it ain't getting read.
With that said, I am going to dig out the Wolfe books in question and read them.
Well, those Wolfe books rank among my favorite SF ever... and I really doubt that the gender of the readers would have any impact on whether they'd like those books. Personal preference, sure. Gender, no. Anyway, I always recommend checking out his short stories, to see if his style matches your preference. There's an excellent "best of" collection of his short works out now from Tor, which is, for my money, maybe the best collection of short SF ever.
I would say, however, that Book of the New Sun had a much stronger impact when it first came out (almost 30 years ago now!) than now. Its grittiness, and its level of complexity, are now more common than they were back then, I think.
As for my own reading, I'm still knee-deep in Malazan books. I finished my re-read of Deadhouse Gates last night and just started on Memories of Ice today. The start of our tor.com re-read is getting pushed back a bit, which is perfect because it gives me some time to go through the books again to prepare. Such complexity in this series - I've never encountered anything like it.
I would say, however, that Book of the New Sun had a much stronger impact when it first came out (almost 30 years ago now!) than now. Its grittiness, and its level of complexity, are now more common than they were back then, I think.
As for my own reading, I'm still knee-deep in Malazan books. I finished my re-read of Deadhouse Gates last night and just started on Memories of Ice today. The start of our tor.com re-read is getting pushed back a bit, which is perfect because it gives me some time to go through the books again to prepare. Such complexity in this series - I've never encountered anything like it.

most of the Posleen series was ok although some of it was borderline in my view but the Ghost stuff is over the line in my opinion.
I dunno about Monty Python Ken, I'm female and I *love* Monty Python, and I know lots more female fans too!
Just to mention it, I really hated the New Sun series, and don't really appreciate the Three Stooges (though I did like the robot Three Stooges in the movie Short circuit). But I loved Monty Python, it was a mainstay of my young adulthood. And yes, I am a woman. And my grandfather, husband and brother all liked the Stooges.
Count me as another woman who doesn't find the 3 Stooges funny, but I enjoy Monty Python for the most part.

I agree about the Wolfe. His novella, The Fifth Head of Cerberus: Three Novellas, (the titular novella from that collection), held a great impact on me as a teen and I picked up the New Sun series based on that. I first read "Fifth Head..." at about the same time as Houston, Houston, Do You Read? by James Tiptree Jr. and both works, sorta flip sides of the same gender issues, instilled in me an interest in feminism and gender issues in sci fi that has continued to this day. ...which is why I am excited that The Knife of Never Letting Go, a recent Tiptree award winner, is our current BOTM.
Now I'm going to put down the Tim Powers book I've been trying to get into and go back to reread "Fifth Head...."

I put away the Elric book, after 2 weeks I was only 150 pages or so in, could not get into it. The stories were ok but guess my mind was not into it

"And Oliver has run himself over! What a great twit!"
"There's Nigel, he's shot Simon by mistake."
hehehehehehe
I also have to admit to liking The Three Stooges, though Monty Python is by far better.
I haven't read any of the mentioned authors, so I can't comment there.

I'm also currently reading Gardens of the Moon but its taking a really long time. The story hasn't hooked me enough to make me eager to pick the book up again after putting it down. I don't think I've ever put so much effort into reading a book before (this is my third time trying to read it)

http://web.mac.com/paddybon/Site/a_tr...
("If Ever a Wiz There Was")

http://web.mac.com/paddybon/Site/a_tr...
("If Ev..."
Sorry, hit 'Post' before I meant to. Here is also a quotation snipped from Wikipedia by Thomas Disch, again admittedly a man but not one bound by hetero-masculine stereotype: "When asked the "Most overrated" and "Most underrated" authors, Thomas Disch identified Isaac Asimov and Gene Wolfe, respectively, writing: "...all too many have already gone into a decline after carrying home some trophies. The one exception is Gene Wolfe...Between 1980 and 1982 he published The Book of the New Sun, a tetralogy of couth, intelligence, and suavity that is also written in VistaVision with Dolby Sound. Imagine a Star Wars-style space opera penned by G. K. Chesterton in the throes of a religious conversion. Wolfe has continued in full diapason ever since, and a crossover success is long overdue."
I would suggest starting somewhere else than the Book of the New Sun, maybe Soldier of the Mist or Wizard/Knight.

Simcha wrote: "I'm also currently reading Gardens of the Moon but its taking a really long time. The story hasn't hooked me enough to make me eager to pick the book up again after putting it down. I don't think I've ever put so much effort into reading a book before (this is my third time trying to read it) "
Simcha, if I can make one recommendation: go with the flow, don't worry too much about trying to understand everything, and make sure you get to book 2 in the series, Deadhouse Gates, which is much, much better. Gardens of the Moon is impossible to understand completely until you get more familiar with the Malazan universe. Once you've read more of the series, it's a good book to go back to and re-read. Trust me, the series gets a lot better.
Simcha, if I can make one recommendation: go with the flow, don't worry too much about trying to understand everything, and make sure you get to book 2 in the series, Deadhouse Gates, which is much, much better. Gardens of the Moon is impossible to understand completely until you get more familiar with the Malazan universe. Once you've read more of the series, it's a good book to go back to and re-read. Trust me, the series gets a lot better.

But I've tried both Gene Wolfe and the Malazan series and Wolfe was almost impenetrable from the get go and after the first book, the Malazan series settled into fairly conventional quest and battle fantasy.
Give me Connie Willis or Joe Abercrombie or Guy Gavriel Kay or Lois McMaster Bujold or GRR Martin, to name just a few authors I think far surpass these other two.

I heartily agree! I have troubled to google The Book of the New Sun and have read some reviews. One particularly good one asks if the elaborate premise of the work is worth caring about and I think for me the answer is a hearty no. I do not disparage Wolfe's writing style or his brilliance, but don't find the story, the main character, or the world interesting enough to work that hard to explore.

Sandra: I would suggest it's a little unfair to start any trilogy in the middle and expect to make much sense of it. The Wolfe series is in essence one long book in four volumes; he doesn't give you a lot of convenient recaps, no appearances by Basil Exposition to keep us on track. As for hearing as opposed to reading, I don't know, I'm sure everyone is different in how they process material. I know that if I'm reading poetry I pretty much have to do both, see it on the page and read it aloud, to really get anywhere with it. And finally, whether it's worth it or not is a matter of taste of course; if Wolfe isn't your cup of tea don't torture yourself. I happen to like "involuted literary shenanigans", as your reviewer puts it. I like them more than I like the same old thing warmed over once again, only this time with pixies instead of elves or wormholes instead of warpdrive.
And to Reginac1, absolutely, you can have my share of Connie Willis and George Martin. I've given Willis a more than fair try and to me her books are like food without salt, food that's never heard of salt even. All the ingredients are there but, to quote Snoopy, "Bleah." Not a fair criticism, I know, just how I feel. And Martin, never mind time between books, it just seems to me he's doing what ER Eddison did better lo, these many years ago. Again, maybe I haven't given it a fair try, but after twelve hundred pages I'm out.

I just finished my reread of Memories of Ice by Steven Erikson, and upped it from 4 stars to 5. Wow. Still recovering from the emotional rollercoaster of the last few hundred pages.
Next up: a reread of the next book in the series, House of Chains.
Next up: a reread of the next book in the series, House of Chains.




Here's what I've read in April:
Mornings in Jenin - heartbreaking but a necessary read.
Sabriel - listened on audio, very enjoyable.
A Hunger Like No Other - badly written, lots of hot sex if you go in for that kind of thing
The Forgotten Garden - with the Book Addicts. I was outraged at the ending and found it shallow, unbelievable, rambling, and in the end awful. Gave it one star.
Too Much Happiness: Stories - by the awesome Alice Munro.
Grimspace, Wanderlust, and Doubleblind by Ann Aguirre - a very entertaining and imaginative sort of UF/space opera.
Scream For Me for a change of pace
Deeper than the Dead - meh.
The Claw of the Conciliator - abandoned halfway through. First Gene Wolfe and didn't care for the subject matter enough to appreciate his fine writing.
Miles, Mutants and Microbes -- am loving the Vorkosigan Saga
And all three of the Tamir Triad by Lynn Flewelling.
Am currently working on Someone to Run With: A Novel

I'm having a bit of a hard time getting into it, but I was warned that it starts off slow so I'll try to be patient.
Jon wrote: "I finally finished (after twenty days) Gardens of the Moon (my review) and am happily looking forward to reading Breath and Bone today.
I also just finished Gardens of the Moon and I'm feeling quite exhausted. I've rarely put so much effort into reading a book before and I'm not even sure that I understood everything. Though I am glad that I finally did read it.


Some great stories here.
Safe Passage by Ramona Ausubel, about passing into death?
Uncle Chaim, Aunt Rifke and the Angel by Peter S. Beagle, an artist an Angel and a young boy learn about life.
The Torturer's Wife by Thomas Glave, a descent into madness?
Serials by Katie Williams, a funny and scary story about serial killers and teenage girls.
A non horror Stephen King story, The New York Times at Special Bargain Rates.
Overall, a very good book.





I'm going to be flying to/from Salt Lake City this weekend and so I'm packing a couple books for the airport layovers and flights: Calculating God by Robert J. Sawyer and The Grail of Hearts by Susan Shwartz.
I just got around to reading two of Neil Gaiman's Sandman graphic novel spinoffs: Death: the High Cost of Living and Death: The Time of Your Life. They were both lovely meditations on how death makes us value life. Plus, Death was always my favorite Sandman character. So now it's made me want to re-read the Sandman books so I'm about to go pick up Preludes and Nocturnes and dive in.


But I'm very excited I've discovered all these fine fine writers that I can read who've written lots of books - Dunnett, Hobb, Berg... We'll see how I like Cherryh, Friedman, and Moon.
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Books mentioned in this topic
The Deed of Paksenarrion (other topics)A Clash of Kings (other topics)
The Game of Kings (other topics)
The Girl With Glass Feet (other topics)
The Sandman, Vol. 1: Preludes & Nocturnes (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
C.S. Friedman (other topics)C.J. Cherryh (other topics)
Susan Shwartz (other topics)
Robert J. Sawyer (other topics)
Julian May (other topics)
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Next up is Blindsight, which I'm quite looking forward to. One of these days maybe I'll manage to read a book at the same time that the group is discussing it, but in the meantime I'll definitely go back to the group discussion threads once I get started and throw in my two cents!
I haven't read anything of Gene Wolfe's, so can't really contribute to that discussion!