The Sword and Laser discussion
Introduction and welcome thread!


I'm a long time fantasy/science fiction reader and first started reading these genre's back in the 70's with Tolkien and then discovered Heinlein and Asimov and been hooked ever since. Favorite authors include David Brin, Ray Feist, David Eddings, Ursula Leguin, Anne McCaffrey, Jack Chalker and many others... glad to be here.

Laser wise I'm a big fan of Robert A Heinlein, Larry Niven and of course Isaac Asimov, as well as many others.
My sword side really loves Brandon Sanderson, Patrick Rothfuss, George R.R. Martin, Robert Jordan, and once again, many others.
I am seriously the only person I know that can spend a whole day reading about reading.

> purchase handbags based on whether or not it will fit [my kindle]
Ok, that actually made my day, knowing access to literature trumps design! I'm running a scenario in my head: Salesperson: "Is this purchase for yourself, or a gift?" You: "Gift!" Salesperson: "What's the name of the luck person?" You:"Kindle! (holding it up) Now, do you have something that complements both white on black, and black on white text or do I need 2 separate handbags?"

My name is Lucas Bale. I've been a science-fiction and fantasy fan for a very long time, and I was role-playing geek in my younger days. These days I tend towards science-fiction rather than fantasy.
Favourite authors can vary, but to give a flavour of my reading, right now I'm reading Iain M. Banks, John Scalzi, Joe Haldeman, Dan Simmons, Alistair Reynolds, Ann Leckie and Hugh Howey (to name a few). There's more, of course, but that's a good cross-section of it. Like Julie, I take my iPad Mini Kindle App everywhere, but I tend not to choose my handbags based on it. It does, however, fit into every coat I own!
I'm looking forward to making my way through the podcasts and contributing to some discussions.
Thanks.


> purchase handbags based on whether or not it will fit [my kindle]
Ok, that actually made my day, knowing access to literature trumps design! I'm running a scenario in my head: Salesperso..."
That's a fairly accurate description of a typical handbag shopping excursion for me. I have been known to turn down free purses (nice ones!) from friends and family simply because my Kindle won't fit. To paraphrase Johnny Cochran, "If it won't fit, it's not legit!"

Don't you love when you purchase a new coat and it has surprise pockets inside, often that fit your favored reading device?!



Thought I'd say hi.

I'm Paul - I'm a Brit currently living in Brooklyn, NY.
I came to Sword & Laser throuh Geek & Sundry/Vaginal Fantasy. The read list looks superb.
My top reads for this year are:
Ancillary Sword
The Girl in the Road
The Mirror Empire
Annihilation

That's what I do! Only I'm a little more militant about it.
I can rarely watch Sword unless it is super high production value stuff. Except for Willow. George Lucas had me at plowing with a team of pigs.
But I can only read Laser if it is amazingly well written. Otherwise I nit-pick the suspension of disbelief right out of it.
So favorite Sword authors (in order of perceived ability): Tolkien, Martin, Williams, Le Guinn, Rothfuss, Feist, Jordan, Brooks, Eddings...
Favorite Laser authors (also in order of ability): Le Guinn, Atwood, Lem, and Clarke.
S. K. wrote: "J. wrote: "Ok. Sword-reader...Laser-watcher here..."
So favorite Sword authors (in order of perceived ability): Tolkien, Martin, Williams...."
Would that be Tad, Charles or another Williams?
So favorite Sword authors (in order of perceived ability): Tolkien, Martin, Williams...."
Would that be Tad, Charles or another Williams?


Some of my favorite authors:
Isaac Asimov, Neil Gaiman, Brandon Sanderson, Shannon Hale, JK Rowling, JRR Tolkien.
Some recent reads: The Fault in Our Stars, Steelheart, Hard Magic, currently working on The Night Circus.
I'm excited to get to know the group!

This one has a podcast, sometimes a video show, it's also published it's own anthology. And of course there is Lem the dragon.

I am Alek - I like to read interesting books. In particular near future speculative fiction. I liked Vernor Vinge, Neal Stephenson and Daniel Suarez - looking for new faces ...
Listened and watched podcast / videos or long time and this year decided to "de-lurk".
Hoping for good discussions in years to come.


Hello! I'm David Monster. I just published a Sexy SciFi/Fantasy novel: PARALLEL LINES. It's NOT 50 Shades of Grey, with a SciFi twist. Thank you, David Monster. http://amzn.to/1D13cg

I am Alek - I like to read interesting books. In particular near future speculative fiction. I liked Vernor Vinge, Neal Stephenson and Daniel Suarez - looking for new faces ...
Listened and w..."
Alek, you should check out TC McCarthy https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1... It's some very well-written & dark near-future sci-fi. Actually, everyone should check it out


If your husband is new to fantasy, Rothfuss is a great place to start (although he's new to the scene). Another place to start might be Scott Lynch's "The Lies of Locke Lemora."
You want classics? "The Last Unicorn" is spectacular. So is "Stardust" by Neil Gaiman.
Where are you guys located?

Maybe try the Expanse series starting with Leviathan Wakes, or some John Scalzi like Fuzzy Nation, Lock In or Old Man's War
Those are all lighter Sci-Fi books with decent humor, especially the Scalzi books.
Those are all lighter Sci-Fi books with decent humor, especially the Scalzi books.
Well Fuzzy Nation is probably my favorite of his.
Old Man's War is maybe his most popular, and Lock In is his most recent. I enjoyed all 3.
Redshirts is the one he won a Hugo for last year (almost 2 years ago now that it's practically 2015). I enjoyed that too, though not as much as the other 3.
The other nice thing about Fuzzy Nation is it's stand alone. But so is Lock In.
All of them are great in audio too. Wil Wheaton narrates all but Old Man's War, though Lock In actually has 2 versions. The second is narrated by Amber Benson.
Old Man's War is maybe his most popular, and Lock In is his most recent. I enjoyed all 3.
Redshirts is the one he won a Hugo for last year (almost 2 years ago now that it's practically 2015). I enjoyed that too, though not as much as the other 3.
The other nice thing about Fuzzy Nation is it's stand alone. But so is Lock In.
All of them are great in audio too. Wil Wheaton narrates all but Old Man's War, though Lock In actually has 2 versions. The second is narrated by Amber Benson.


Wil Wheaton's narration of "Lock In" was fantastic. Get both of those.

My name is Drew and I am kind of a returning sword and laser follower. I listened when the podcast for started way back, last episodes I listened to was the first dragon con interview with Timothy Zahn, but I had 3 young kids and crazy busy at work and found I never had time to keep up with the reads so kind of dropped off.
As a big fan of Tom and Veronica though I recently started listening to the show again the past couple of months (and became a patreon) and wanted to join the good reads and try to keep up again.
I've been reading fantasy and sci fi for like 30 years and my favorite is game of thrones. I recently started reading dreamsongs the compilation of George RR Martins early work(is there any discussions on those stories anywhere as I would love to hear people's thoughts on some of these endings!) but would love some good recommendations on other stories from everyone.
Also curious if anyone finished the wheel of time series and what they thought? I gave up after book 9 some years back and I recently started again but found it dragging a bit for me again by the end of book 5 and was curious if anyone has read them all and what they thought.
I also read historical books and non fiction hockey books (big hockey fan) so I try to balance out my readings a bit. Also been on a mission to catch up on all of the walking dead comics.
I must admit I do half my reading audio style on my drive in to work, do we still call that reading?
A pleasure to meet you all and look forward to talking with you.
Drew
I finished WoT last year when A Memory of Light came out. I found 9 and especially 10 pretty tough going, but 11-14 were great I thought. If you've made it that far, I'd maybe read some book summaries on 1-10 and give 11 a try.
I'm a big hockey fan too, though my team is the Sabres so it's been tough the last few years.
And I call audio books reading, or at least I count them the same as books I read in text. People can argue semantics about it "counting" or not, but it really only matters what you think about it.
I'm a big hockey fan too, though my team is the Sabres so it's been tough the last few years.
And I call audio books reading, or at least I count them the same as books I read in text. People can argue semantics about it "counting" or not, but it really only matters what you think about it.

I'm a Devils fan so I can relate this year. Although I think the Sabres are at least building for the future while the Devils are clinging to the past a bit.
Sometimes I get so much more out of the audio than reading it. I listened to all the song of ice and fire books as well as read them multiple times but for some reason the hints about Jon's parents (and other hidden stories) jumped out at me way more in audio than when I read it.
At least you have a past worth clinging to. We had a few close calls, but have never managed to win the cup, and haven't seriously contended since 2008. The team was badly miss managed for the last 10 years or so and we got a bit lucky to be as good as we were after the 2005 lockout.
I do a TON of audio (52+/year more than doubling my output). I think they are great, but it varies about how much I get out of them compared to reading. I'm a lot more likely to go back and reread a page/chapter than I am to relisten to one.
I also tend to go for books that don't need as much focus, and do a few rereads each year since I don't have to pay as much attention to those generally to follow what's going on.
I do a TON of audio (52+/year more than doubling my output). I think they are great, but it varies about how much I get out of them compared to reading. I'm a lot more likely to go back and reread a page/chapter than I am to relisten to one.
I also tend to go for books that don't need as much focus, and do a few rereads each year since I don't have to pay as much attention to those generally to follow what's going on.

What do you recommend on the audio side? so far in audio i've only done George RR Martin and Robert Jordan books.
Drewr15 wrote: "I still think if the Sabres blue line wasn't so injured during the conference finals they would have beat the Canes. When Drury and Briere left it put the Sabres in such a hole much as Parise and K..."
Not only would we have beat the Canes, I think we would have won the cup. That year kind of bothers me more than the "No Goal" year against the Stars.
As to recommendations, I have a few favorite narrators, so it really depends what type of book your in the mood for. I rate and review pretty extensively and comment on the quality of the reader for each book I've listened to in the last 2.5+ years.
I have a goodreads shelf dedicated to audio books you can browse that may be a good starting place. There are 150 books on it, most of which should have reviews.
Not only would we have beat the Canes, I think we would have won the cup. That year kind of bothers me more than the "No Goal" year against the Stars.
As to recommendations, I have a few favorite narrators, so it really depends what type of book your in the mood for. I rate and review pretty extensively and comment on the quality of the reader for each book I've listened to in the last 2.5+ years.
I have a goodreads shelf dedicated to audio books you can browse that may be a good starting place. There are 150 books on it, most of which should have reviews.

She is a geek, coffee addicted and mother of Albus Dumbledore, the dog.
He is also a geek, Heavy Metal addicted, History enthusiast and Liverpool FC's supporter.
Follow our work (in portuguese) on: www.intocados.com.br


My name is Derek and I'm a huge dork. I also write dorky things for other dorks. Really enjoying the forums and the podcast -- passively like a barnacle. Now I won't feel weird if I want to post somewhere else.



I've been huge fans of Tom and Veronica from back in the CNET days so I started listening to the podcast as soon as heard about, but didn't really have time to much reading while I was still in school, so I just listened to the conversations. Once I graduated college I decided to start reading the group reads, starting with Ancillary Justice. Since then I've been lurking around the site reading the conversations. The new year seemed like a good time to come out of the shadows and introduce myself.
My favorite book that we've read here is Promise of Blood and my least favorite is The Einstein Intersection. But ultimately I'm very grateful for this group because it has reignited my love of reading that I had lost over the years. See you around!

Have you made any headway in this month's book, "The Sparrow"?

I liked the ideas just didn't think the story itself was anything special.


If the Kings weren't beating my Devils in 2012 I would have been rooting for them all the way. Obviously last year I was.
Did you enjoy the Jordan series in the end?

I'm a long time reader, but I've been reading a lot of urban fantasy lately and want to start adding more variety to my reading list. I started listening to Sword and Laser to this end, so joining the Good Reads group was an obvious next step.

Sorry I don't talk here often,I'm not familiar with interacting with groups,but most of my friends are here so I decide to give it a try :)
I'm currently finishing The Martian,I plan on going to some Dark Fantasy after that. I also bought Under The Dome by Stephen King and it's been sitting around for some time.
Books mentioned in this topic
Ghosts of the Scattered Kingdoms (other topics)The Sword of Shannara (other topics)
Shadow & Claw (other topics)
A Canticle for Leibowitz (other topics)
A Canticle for Leibowitz (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Wade Garret (other topics)Gene Wolfe (other topics)
John Scalzi (other topics)
Richelle Mead (other topics)
Brandon Sanderson (other topics)
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I'm Amy, a well rounded nerd. I tend to prefer classic sci fi and modern fantasy. My Kindle, a blanket, and a cup of coffee are my constant companions for the cold New England winters. So bring it on.