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What are you reading in May 2011?
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Kevin
(last edited Apr 30, 2011 01:49PM)
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Apr 30, 2011 09:46AM

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So what i'm reading instead... Just about to start the first of Malcolm Pryce's Aberystwyth books, Aberystwyth Mon Amour, and I have The Mall of Cthulhu and Flash for Freedom borrowed from people which need returning. Other than that I'm kind of in the mood for some violent SF, so perhaps grab a Dan Abnett or Richard Morgan and something highbrow, which could either be Paul Auster or perhaps Tom Holland's history of Rome, Rubicon. This is, of course, all subject to my whim as per usual :D





Meat: A Benign Extravagance, by Simon Fairlie, which is fascinating but too dense to read for very long;
Passion Play, by Sean Stewart, which is wonderfully written but somehow not grabbing me;
World-Building, by Stephen L. Gillett, which I've almost finished but which has stopped being useful so I haven't felt like pushing through the last 20 pages;
and
Quatrain, by Sharon Shinn, which I wanted to be light and fun (I've been a fan of Shinn since Archangel) but which is kind of crappy so far.
I have the following two volumes waiting to be read so I can review them:
Embassytown, by China Miéville
and
Cut Through the Bone, by Ethel Rohan
I've promised my dad I'm going to read Until I Find You, by John Irving.
And various book groups I'm in have several titles that I want to read planned for discussion in May.
But in my current mood I'm probably going to pick up some more Georgette Heyer. She's shot all my reading challenges to hell this year, but I just can't hold it against her. (Mostly because her novels are delightful, but also because she's dead so I don't think she'd care.)

Starting Peril's Gateon my flight from New Orleans to Detroit (to Green Bay). After that, don't know...

The rest of my May reading, in no particular order:






I finished my Black Sun Rising: The Coldfire Trilogy #1 re-read and am trying to decide what I have the brainpower to tackle next. Reading time/energy is pretty limited these days...

Started up a Dresden Files book
Grave Peril
I just reread that Vorkosigan book, Ken. I agree, starts off slow but turns really great towards the end.


I'm gonna try to read the final book of Gene Wolfe's "Book of the New Sun" series, "The Citadel of the Autarch", it's a busy month for me and I've found that I cannot zip through these books. Just too dense and poetic. So, I'm gonna try to do a chapter or two a day. After that I'm gonna re-start Poul and Karen Anderson's "King of Ys" series. I read the first book, "Roma Mater" some years ago and enjoyed it, but got sidetracked before I got to the second book. Gonna start over. It's a curse to be an avid but slow reader.


Jhegaala

Jhegaala"
I guess you are unlike me and most of of the people who have read Dresden, who have started the first book then want ,and many do read the rest of the series.


I also picked up each short stories Sharon Lee& Steve Millerhave been adding to the Kindle store these past weeks. A treat!

I read Carol Berg's The Spirit Lens and am hoping I'll like it better when I read #2, The Soul Mirror. Also read Wizard of the Pigeons by Megan Lindholm. Wrongly billed as fantasy, IMO. Very poignant story about a Viet Nam vet with PTSD. Am currently reading Bangkok 8 (Sonchai Jitpleecheep, #1), a mystery taking place in Bangkok. It's very witty and the wholly different culture almost makes it qualify as fantasy. I'm listening to Dragonfly in Amber, an interminable experience. Pleasant enough, but plot is almost non existent... I'm almost finished, thank God.
The Dresden Files have been on my radar screen for a while, but I haven't gotten around to giving them a try yet. I don't have super-high expectations but think they might be mildly entertaining - we'll see!
I think I'm going to take a break from the baby books and pick up Connie Willis's Bellwether - I've really enjoyed the other books of hers I've read and it looks like a fairly quick read.
I think I'm going to take a break from the baby books and pick up Connie Willis's Bellwether - I've really enjoyed the other books of hers I've read and it looks like a fairly quick read.

I enjoyed the previous 2 books, just not in the mood for book like this right now. I was looking for an actual fantasy novel, nothing heavy. Taltos was right up my alley.

Bellwether is probably my favorite of Willis' novels. The SF elements are virtually nil, but I giggle the entire time every time I pick it up. Hope you enjoy!



CJ Cherryh did say on her blog recently that she might do a followup to Regenesis as one of the next three books she writes for DAW.
Clark wrote: "After that I'm gonna re-start Poul and Karen Anderson's "King of Ys" series. I read the first book, "Roma Mater" some years ago and enjoyed it, but got sidetracked before I got to the second book. Gonna start over."
I read The King of Ys several years ago, all in one volume. I though it was excellent but not a quick read.
I read The King of Ys several years ago, all in one volume. I though it was excellent but not a quick read.

The first Dresden books didn't wow me when I originally read them. It took some coming back to the series for later books to really make me a fan. Now, I'm hooked and waiting for the latest. They're not all brilliant, but they're fun and a little relief from all the kick-butt heroine urban fantasy series out there.
Love Bellwetherit's goofy and light fun, but that's just it, it is fun to read. And a nice break when I need it. Even my mother enjoyed that one.
Currently reading Highbornwhich is going better than expected. Also trying to get through Soul Hunt and The Grimm Legacy.
Tried to crack open and read Touched by an Alienand just couldn't get into it. May go back to it later, but it's not thrilling me by any stretch.

I feel the same way, find things on the Union side a lot more tense and exciting, though I enjoy the Alliance books too. Have you read Forty Thousand in Gehenna? I thought that was an amazing book. Shared your opinion on Regenesis. Devoured it, because I was so interested to see what happened with the characters, but it felt like a dinner-length appetizer.

Planning to read either The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest or The Hunger Games next.
Also on my list, re-reading The Name of the Wind so I could finally start The Wise Man's Fear.
I finished Bellwether and found it good fun! Lots of humor/social satire, but hidden in there are some interesting musings on the nature of scientific discoveries.

Sandra, absolutely right about Cherryh; I read "Downbelow" in my impressionable years and now think the whole Union/Alliance group is ripe for a revisit. Loved the first "Foreigner" novel but got bogged down in the second; I thought at the time that the ambassador wanna-be was a weak nuisance of a character. Should have trusted Cherryh more, probably. I would like to see a follow-up to "Regenesis": I think introducing a major player in the last forty pages is a bit suspect, but otherwise the thing might never have ended.
As for favourites, I confess to a strong weakness for the "Pride of Chanur" novels.

Sandra, absolutely right ab..."
Well Bren does dither a bit in the first two novels, but weak? Not. The series is a masterful bit of political suspense with the invention of a truly fascinating race of people.


Just finished The Solar Queen by Andre Norton. A review of sorts here.
I need to read more Cherryh - I read Cuckoo's Egg, which I really enjoyed, the Chanur books, which I loved, and the Morgaine Saga, which I didn't like as much. I have The Faded Sun Trilogy on my shelf but haven't read it yet, and would like to read the Foreigner books one of these days (candidate for our next series read, maybe?).
Right now I'm re-reading the first four of Patricia Briggs' Mercy Thompson books in anticipation of receiving book 5 in the mail in a few days.
Right now I'm re-reading the first four of Patricia Briggs' Mercy Thompson books in anticipation of receiving book 5 in the mail in a few days.

That's a great idea, shel - Foreigner for the next series. I haven't read any of her fantasies, but I do love her scifi.

Started on another overdue Eighth Doctor Who novel
Coldheart

This is my favorite by far of the Cherryh I've read. It's some of her early work, and so the pacing is kind of rough, but the central metaphor is absolutely brilliant and really packs an emotional punch (for me at least).
Plus my mom, who never remembers anything about anything she reads (often times not even whether or not she's read it!), has on multiple occasions said it's the best thing she's read in the past. . . well, now it'd be 15 years.
:D

I'm also just beginning Daughter of the Forest (with the hope that Juliet Marillier will be kinder to the characters I like than George R.R. Martin is to the characters I like in his series).
I started reading When Gravity Fails when it first came out in the 1980s and wound up tossing it after a chapter or two. I don't care for stories about thugs in the underworld and their shady dealings, and I vaguely remember that being the point of When Gravity Fails.
Instead, I'm planning to read Snow Crash, mainly because I have a copy that I bought when it first came out in 1992 that I haven't read yet, plus a couple of blogs I've read recently have mentioned it, so it's up on my list. I also have Tanith Lee's novel The Silver Metal Lover near at hand .... gotta love the cover:


The magic system was extremely original, the three main characters were very well rounded, and it had one of the more meatier antagonists (leaning to anti-hero) I've encountered in a while.

Also caught up on two nonfiction titles for my local book club.
Debating which of two temptations to start now:
The Soul Mirror or Seer of Sevenwaters.

Snow Crash is pretty good. I read it many years ago. Everything from Stephenson is pretty amazing, well except his Trilogy
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