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What are you reading in May 2011?
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whimsicalmeerkat
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May 17, 2011 08:11PM

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I haven't read them all, but my favorite of Stephenson's is Zodiac.
Finished re-reading the first four and I'm about to start the fifth Mercy Thompson book, Silver Borne. Looking forward to it.
Finished re-reading the first four and I'm about to start the fifth Mercy Thompson book, Silver Borne. Looking forward to it.

My fav Stephenson is Anathem. Cryptomicon used to be number one



I'm on a Cherryh kick. FinishedCyteen and started Forty Thousand in Gehenna. Am scrounging around trying to find all the Alliance/Union books I can. Just ordered Regenesis, got Rimrunners and Merchanter's Luck. Also the whole Chanur series. Have The Faded Sun in my wish list. Love, love, love them!
Cyteen was absolutely AWESOME!

Always glad to find that someone else loved Cyteen. :)

Might even listen to it before.
Books in regular text mode ...
Mornings in Jenin
I Saw Ramallah
Those are on at the North African/Middle East book discussion group here at Goodreads.
Both are books themed on the Palestinians plight in the middle east conflict.

Might even listen to it befo..."
I loved Mornings in Jenin.

I keep hearing good things about Cryptonomicon, but it's not on Kindle yet (at least in the UK). Hopefully soon... :)

My fav Stephenson is Anathem. Cryptomicon used to be number one"
I'll have to check that one out at some point.


I have several Cherryh books on my shelf, but the only ones I've read are her Russian fantasy fables (Rusalka, Chernevog, and Yvgenie), which I didn't really like, and 2 or 3 of her Fortress fantasy series, which I loved. I have some of her other books but have been hesitating to dive into another series. I try to only read one series at a time (WoLaS right now), interspersed with stand-alones.

I haven't read any of her fantasy yet, but I LOVE her scifi.

Might even liste..."
If you aren't following this discussion yet, here's the link to the Goodreads group who are doing it ...
http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/4...
There's a lively discussion going on with it right now.

Fortress is not fantasy, but science fiction.

Both Goodreads and B&N call it fantasy and it was nominated for the British fantasy award. I haven't read it yet, but it's on my list.

The Fortress series is fantasy, it has no aspects of science fiction whatsoever. It's set in a historical fantasy world, approximately comparable to Earth early European renaissance.
I have all of Cherryh's book, and though I read the Russian fantasy and liked them well enough, they were not among my favorite, and I've not reread them. The Fortress series is my favorite and I've reread it over half a dozen times.
The Foreigner Universe is sci-fi & fantasy mix as it has tones of both, depending on where on their earth or in the space the characters were. The Morgaine Cycle also is that special mix of known & alien, scifi & fantasy that Cherryh does so very well.
I am currently rereading

I finished Silver Borne, and it was just as much fun as the rest of the Mercy Thompson books :) Now I'm on to Shades of Grey by Jasper Fforde. So far it's just as funny as the Thursday Next books but much darker.

Just found that one, and it looks really interesting! I'll have to check back with you and see how it goes. =)
I'm finishing up The Wise Man's Fear and then... I'm not sure. I've got a couple hanging right now (Night's Master & A Darkness at Sethanon), but I may need some motivation to finish them. lol
Red wrote: "The Morgaine Cycle also is that special mix of known & alien, scifi & fantasy that Cherryh does so very well."
I also have those books on my shelf to read... good to know I have lots of good things ahead of me!
I also have those books on my shelf to read... good to know I have lots of good things ahead of me!

I have a number of series needing attention. Terry Brooks, Feist, Robin Hobb and Tad Williams are shouting the loudest. Do I go for a new set or a set that will mean reading the previous set first...

Since Helen was asking about finishing series or starting new ones....I vote finsihing old.
So I will put the money where my fingers are and I am
starting on Kushiel's Mercy

So I will put the money where my fingers are and I am
starting on Kushiel's Mercy."
That one marks a pretty significant shift for Carey's world. . . will be interested in hearing what you think!
(I was seriously underwhelmed the first time I read it, then really came to like it on a reread.)

The Shaman trilogy is unrelated to the others, so if you wanted to get a Hobb fix without needing to refresh your memory by re-reading it would be a good choice :)

A lot of Hobb fans says Shaman Trilogy is trash, but I think only the third book was trash, the first two was amazing in my view. The first one was done to earth, second was a whole funny joke. Then the third has all the magic, where the first two had almost none.

Helen wrote: "Should I be embarassed that I have never read Cherryh?"
No... you've been reading lots of other great stuff by other authors. That's always my excuse when someone says, "You've never read ?"
No... you've been reading lots of other great stuff by other authors. That's always my excuse when someone says, "You've never read ?"
Definitely no reason to be embarrassed - more a reason to be really excited about how many excellent books you have to look forward to! Cherryh is one of my favorite authors and possibly the single author I've read the most books by. I've got a shelf full of her books, and actually need to expand to a second shelf because they're getting double-stacked. :)
(Come to think of it, I've probably read more books by Terry Pratchett, just because his Discworld series is so ginormous.)
(Come to think of it, I've probably read more books by Terry Pratchett, just because his Discworld series is so ginormous.)


I finished Peril's Gate last night and hope to start In the Garden of Iden this weekend. I didn't read it when this group (back at Yahoo groups) read it, and I've never read any of the Company books, although I've managed to acquire them. Can anyone tell me how closely they follow in sequence? Like a series, or more like separate adventures that should be read in order but don't continue one story throughout?
I finished Shades of Grey by Jasper Fforde last night. It's a really interesting book! Fforde's voice is very distinctive and although it's a very different book from the Thursday Next series (much darker) it is still definitely a Fforde book. I look forward to the sequel, which I think comes out soon.
Kathi wrote: "Can anyone tell me how closely they follow in sequence? Like a series, or more like separate adventures that should be read in order but don't continue one story throughout?"
Kathi, initially the series seems like they're all separate stories, but it gradually will become clear that there's a large story arc across the entire series. Re-reading them later is interesting because it's impossible to get everything that's happening the first time around. I recommend reading them in order of publication if possible.
Kathi, initially the series seems like they're all separate stories, but it gradually will become clear that there's a large story arc across the entire series. Re-reading them later is interesting because it's impossible to get everything that's happening the first time around. I recommend reading them in order of publication if possible.

Good to know. It looked interesting, and it also won for July's group read... so I'm definitely looking forward to it. =)

I'm reading his The Big Over Easy for another book club, I've just started but it seems fun so far.
Kara wrote: "Good to know. It looked interesting, and it also won for July's group read... so I'm definitely looking forward to it. =)."
This was one of the books I just acquired in my shopping spree on Friday. I didn't realize it was an upcoming BOTM, so thanks for the heads up, Kara. I will save it for our July discussion.
I have read 2 or 3 of Fforde's Thursday Next books and loved them. I have most of his other books on my shelf, waiting to be read.
Stefan wrote: "Kathi, initially the series seems like they're all separate stories, but it gradually will become clear that there's a large story arc across the entire series. Re-reading them later is interesting because it's impossible to get everything that's happening the first time around. I recommend reading them in order of publication if possible. "
Good to know. I just don't really want to start a multi-book series while I still reading Wars of Light and Shadow. I knew In the Garden of Iden was the first of Baker's Company series, but I'm planning to hold off on reading the others until sometime in the future, but I didn't want to be left hanging.
This was one of the books I just acquired in my shopping spree on Friday. I didn't realize it was an upcoming BOTM, so thanks for the heads up, Kara. I will save it for our July discussion.
I have read 2 or 3 of Fforde's Thursday Next books and loved them. I have most of his other books on my shelf, waiting to be read.
Stefan wrote: "Kathi, initially the series seems like they're all separate stories, but it gradually will become clear that there's a large story arc across the entire series. Re-reading them later is interesting because it's impossible to get everything that's happening the first time around. I recommend reading them in order of publication if possible. "
Good to know. I just don't really want to start a multi-book series while I still reading Wars of Light and Shadow. I knew In the Garden of Iden was the first of Baker's Company series, but I'm planning to hold off on reading the others until sometime in the future, but I didn't want to be left hanging.

What's that one about, Kevin?"
It set right at the end of the Company Wars, where The Neiharts family, especially 17 year old Jeremy Neiharts goes to Pell Station to retrieve a long lost cousin named Fletcher.

What's that one about, Kevin?"
It set right at the end of the Company Wars, where The Neiharts family, especiall..."
Thanks. I'm still catching up on the Company Wars.

What's that one about, Kevin?"
It set right at the end of the Company Wars, where The Neiharts fam..."
I have not read any of the Company Wars, expect Downbelow Stations.

In the Garden of Iden stands alone really well, as does book #2, Sky Coyote. After that they have to be read in order and probably close together, but I think you shouldn't have trouble reading just #1 and taking a break.
There's a several-hundred year gap, for one thing. . . ;)

You are welcome. I was quite happy

=)
I needed a break from epic fantasy, so...
I finished up Part II of

I've been pouring through

And I just started listening to

Then I hope to return to

Phew, I don't usually have so many books going at once.

Next up: Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town by Cory Doctorow.
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