SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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What are you reading in January 2011?
Nikki wrote: "Now I'm reading The Explosionist as my diversionary book. "
Part me of thinks, "hey, this book sounds interesting". Another part of me is saying, "dude...really?".
Part me of thinks, "hey, this book sounds interesting". Another part of me is saying, "dude...really?".

I know what you mean. I heard about it from a YA author's blog, and it has a higher quotient of girliness than I would normally go for ... but we'll see.
I'll wait until you're finished before I entertain thoughts of adding it to my TBR shelf.

If I am confusing it with another forum, I am sorry :) My memory fails me nowdays :D
I finished The Subtle Knife yesterday.
I actually liked it a lot. A big improvement over the Northern Lights
On to the last book in His Dark Material,




Nikki wrote: "Ala - my thought on The Explosionist is that for an adult reader it's really not worth cracking open. I mean, unless you somehow need to do so to kill time or something. It's not a..."
Ah well. No loss, I suppose. Though that is a great line :P
Tonyanc, I read Side Jobs. Good stuffs, just makes me want the next Dresden more...ugh
Ah well. No loss, I suppose. Though that is a great line :P
Tonyanc, I read Side Jobs. Good stuffs, just makes me want the next Dresden more...ugh


I would be interested to see your overview of the Dark Materials Trilogy

It was me that had the problem. The problem was that most people thought that I was demanding and did not give my reasons for hating the book.

Sometimes it is very difficult to pinpoint the exact reason why you don't like a book.

Stuart wrote: "I would be interested to see your overview of the Dark Materials Trilogy..."
Will do. Honest! :)
Although, I am a slow reader so it will take probably 2 weeks to finish.

I want to read a few well reviewed graphic novels - [bookcover:American Vampire Vol. 1|7..."
Good luck on Little, Big, you're going to needed it.





Now on to Doctor Who and an Unearthly Child - Terrance Dicks
Let me know if that doctor who book is any good. I just want to find one that is actually doctory.

Now: Las hijas de Tara
And if I finally get the courage (one of those nemesis books: for years on the shelf and being unable to pick it up to read it): The Gunslinger

I have a boxload of the old Who novels, collected those over many years of loving The Doctor.
Aleix: The Gunslinger may take a bit to get into. Thankfully it's short. The Drawing of the Three is where the series really picks up.
stormhawk: are the "New Adventures" books the only ones of the New Doctors? Have you come across any since the restart that are worthwhile?
stormhawk: are the "New Adventures" books the only ones of the New Doctors? Have you come across any since the restart that are worthwhile?

Now: Las hijas de Tara
And if I finally get the courage (one of those nemesis b..."
Give Gunslinger a try, it will open a side of Stephen King that you have never seen. The other book in the Dark Tower Series is not as bad, as said in the original dust jacket, this a book that is unlike anything that King has ever written. After all these years that is still true.


Now: Las hijas de Tara
And if I finally get the courage (one of those nemesis b..."
What did you think of Mote...I read the "The Gripping Hand" recently and it started slow and took along time to resemble Mote. My overall feeling is it didn't stand up to the first one but it's hard to stay away from a sequel if the first one is as good as Mote. May be worth the time if you were intrigued by the alien stuff.

The aliens are superb, but the rhythm of the book can be painfully slow sometimes. Also, some of the decisions taken by the characters on the book seemed completely impossible to believe but then again everything can be forgiven when the aliens are so interesting. :-)

I started Inside the Outbreaks: The Elite Medical Detectives of the Epidemic Intelligence Service as a diversionary book while I was ploughing through The Jewel House. Sadly, it didn't really live up to the awesomeness of the cover. It was a series of epidemiological vignettes that didn't really go into much depth.
I also read Eyes Like Stars. If you were ever a theatre geek and you like fantasy without being opposed to reading YA stuff, you should give this a shot. But get it from the library, if you can, rather than buying it right off.

I was going to read Doctor Who: Coming of the Terraphiles but I didn't want to spend $25 for it. I was going to get the Kindle edition for $10 until I read the reviews. There were only a few reviews, but they were so polarized. Those that were Moorcock fans and Doctor Who fans loved it. Those that were just Doctor Who fans hated it. So I did not get it. I haven't read any Moorcock. I have the first three Elric books, but never made it through the first one.
I like the other New Who books that I have read. Of course some are better than others. I particularly liked Doctor Who: The Deviant Strain which is 9/Rose/Jack. Doctor Who: The Stone Rose and Doctor Who: The Art Of Destruction which are 10/Rose. Doctor Who: The Last Dodo and Doctor Who: The Pirate Loop were good too, they're 10/Martha. I haven't read any of the 10/Donna books, 10 solo books, or the 11/Amy books yet. I read Doctor Who books when I want to pad up my count a bit since I can read them so quickly. (I'm in the 50 books a year club also).
I think I'll dig back into Dickson's Childe Cycle now. Years and years ago I read Young Bleys and Other and absolutly loved them, but I didn't realize that they were part of a larger series. I have them all now, and in 2009 I read the first 5 or 6. I'm up to The Final Encyclopedia now, and that's a really long one, so it will probably take me at least the rest of January to read it.

Yay! Dickson was one of my early favorite authors, and I absolutely love some of the books in the Childe Cycle. (My absolute fave is Soldier, Ask Not, but you probably have to read a couple others before it works really well for you.) You should also check out Time Storm, which is a standalone by him. :D

I really enjoyed his standalone book Wolf And Iron - which is a post-apocalyptic tale.


You and me both!!! :D

Well that is just my point of view. Not much of a Robin Hobb fan, she is good, not great.

Kevin, you just put a new target on your back. :)

I have an omnibus with Necromancer, Tactics of Mistake and Dorsai!. I think I read it in like 2 days, I was just sucked right in. Then I read Soldier, Ask Not and loved it just as much. I'm hoping I'll love The Final Encyclopedia just as much

Kevin, you just put a new target on your back. :)"
Wow, what you mean by that? The fact is I had to a 20 page paper on Assassin's Apprentice for a class over the summer. After that you would find the book a little boring. Plus more there are less fan of the book than The Name of the Wind.

I read Assassin's Apprentice last year, and I was not blown away either. I may try it again late this year, but I..."
I am glad that you feel the same way, I guess even if you don't feel the same way you want not want to shoot me like Lara Amber.
I just...
There. Are. No. Words.
There. Are. No. Words.

I never said I wanted to shoot you. "Target on your back" is a rather innocuous phrase. First people were getting aggravated about In the Name of the Wind, then you decided to rain on the people who are excited about Robin Hobb's forthcoming book.
I didn't realize a smiley face was now threatening.

I always feel like perhaps I'm missing something. People tend to really enjoy certain books that I found to be only mildly entertaining, if that.
For instance, I didn't really get into Shadow & Claw or Strange & Norrell, yet most folks I come across who've read them seem to love them.
It's gotten to the point where I'm seriously considering rereads of both, just to see if maybe I just wasn't in the right headspace during my first reading(which is very possible).
For instance, I didn't really get into Shadow & Claw or Strange & Norrell, yet most folks I come across who've read them seem to love them.
It's gotten to the point where I'm seriously considering rereads of both, just to see if maybe I just wasn't in the right headspace during my first reading(which is very possible).

In reference to the Robin Hobb discussion, my opinion, for what it's worth, is that the Ship trilogy are far better than the Assassin books or Fool books. I loved the Ship trilogy, but the Assassin books were mostly very painful to read. I read the first two Fool books but have put off for years reading the last one because the series did not seem to be going anywhere I wanted to go. Pretty bad when you don't want to read the last of a nine-book sequence!
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Now I'm reading The Explosionist as my diversionary book.