Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What are you Reading this February?

Started on the group read The Dying Earth by Jack Vance...in fact I have the omnibus of the four books, so technically I'm reading the Compleat Dying Earth.

- The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2015 Edition edited by Rich Horton (should finish this month)
- Lock In by John Scalzi (should finish this month)
- The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood (might finish this month)
- The Circle by Dave Eggers (might finish this month)
- A Dance with Dragons by George R.R. Martin (will not finish this month - many trees died to bring us this book)
And I'm reading other non-SFF books too:
- The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins (might finish this month)
- The Long Home by William Gay
- Go Girl!: Raising Healthy, Confident and Successful Girls Through Sports by Hannah Storm and Mark Jenkins
This month would probably be a slower reading month but I'm flying to Columbus OH over President's Day weekend with my daughter for a basketball tournament so I'll probably finish some books on the plane flight and in the hotel...unless there are other things to do in Columbus in February?



Krysta wrote: "Norse mythology by Neil Gaiman!"
Neil Gaiman is hit-and-miss for me atm. I loved Neverwhere and Stardust (the movie anyways), but absolutely hated American Gods. But colour me intrigued for Norse Mythology!

Currently reading The Fever Code. I really enjoyed the Maze Runner trilogy and this book is a prequel that's answering some questions I had.

His words are what I can't get enough of. He could write a story about a stick and I would want to read every word he had to say about it. Ha ha, he is like an artist. You should give Good Omens a chance of you haven't already.

I think I'm going to start reading Rama II around the end of the month. How did you like it and the two that followed?

Going to finish The Winter's Tale, hopefully this weekend.
This month will also include Alice in Wonderland and The Maltese Falcon, and hopefully His Majesty's Dragon.

I liked that one but lost interest in the second book. May need to revisit.

I went with Piers Anthony because it is a book in the series of Incarnations of Immortality that I am not familiar with and I love that series of books.


Deaths End
Dark Matter (whenever can get from library)
The paper menagerie
The first dark tower book
Continuing to backfill from 2016.....

Deaths End
Dark Matter (whenever can get from library)
The paper menagerie
The first dark tower book
Continuing to backfill from 2016....."
Lol...our lists are similar. I liked Dark Matter, but not enough to purchase it. Its a good title to get from your library. I'm currently in the middle of the Dark Tower series. The first book is a bit dry...Stephen King wouldn't even argue with that assessment. But stick with it because I just finished the fourth book and all I can say is OMG. The emotional roller coaster is worth it. Started Death's End today and its not what I expected. Its better and I don't know how that's possible!

I think I'm going to start reading Rama II a..."
It was the most amazing thing ive read this year so far. Im still sad from the last book

& starting on Binti:Home

Really? Wow! Glad to hear that. A lot of people were down on the Rama sequel trilogy. I've put off reading them because of that. I'm glad to hear a different opinion.

Worth reading 2312 and even the Mars trilogy first though as they're some references but it is not necessary.
Today just started on The Simulacra by PKD.
Also got Shaman (KSR again), The Martian, The Handmaid's Tale and House of Leaves lined-up for this month.


Really? Wow! Glad to hear that. A lot of people were down on the Rama sequel trilogy. I'v..."
I saw that and it made me wary of it but obviously those people have no idea what they were talking about

Okorafor's sequel to Binti has the title character taking a leave of absence from her studies at Intergalactic University to return home to Earth and her parents and friends. She doesn't get quite the reception she expects. This novella is in much the same style as its predecessor, with the exception that it's not self-contained, but rather ends on a clear "to be continued..."
Wow!
A Closed and Common Orbit by Becky Chambers
Chambers' previous novel, The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet, was a story of a contract construction spaceship and its quirky crew of various personalities (and species) making their way across space to a job. (Some compared it to Firefly in that regard — except for the whole alien thing.) For this follow-on, she's ditched the ship and its crew and started anew on a planet, featuring a couple of minor characters introduced late in the predecessor. The reinitialized ship AI, now inhabiting a humanoid body ("kit"), is having many unexpected difficulties fitting in.
Pepper, who you may recall as one of Jenks' hacker contacts from the first book, takes Sidra under her wing for reasons that become clear an impressive back story told through interleaved flashbacks. The two stories work perfectly together, and the result is really enjoyable & engrossing. (I tore thru it in under 24 hours.)

Chambers' previous novel, The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet, was a story of a contract construction spaceship and its quirky crew of various personalities (and species) making their way across space to a job. (Some compared it to Firefly in that regard — except for the whole alien thing.) For this follow-on, she's ditched the ship and its crew and started anew on a planet, featuring a couple of minor characters introduced late in the predecessor. The reinitialized ship AI, now inhabiting a humanoid body ("kit"), is having many unexpected difficulties fitting in.
Pepper, who you may recall as one of Jenks' hacker contacts from the first book, takes Sidra under her wing for reasons that become clear an impressive back story told through interleaved flashbacks. The two stories work perfectly together, and the result is really enjoyable & engrossing. (I tore thru it in under 24 hours.)



Enjoyed Binti:Home, though I found my interest fluctuating at points (liked the glimpse of Oomza Uni; then felt there was a bit too much retread of the first novella, though I enjoyed seeing Third Fish again; definitely was drawn in to the end of the book, with the encounter with the Desert People). I was a bit annoyed at the cliffhanger ending, but I know Tor has already bought the next installation -- just saw that this will be Binti: The Night Masquerade. I don't know much about African masquerade (it was interesting how the appearance of this figure interacted with the Himba gender expectations); the masquerade figure made me think of the carnival figures in Hopkinson's Midnight Robber.



Much as I enjoyed the slower start to PSS, where we spend quite a bit of time in the first half of the book exploring the streets of New Crobuzon, and getting to know its inhabitants, it's nice to get into the story a bit quicker in The Scar.
I'm liking the city of Armada so far.

Still trying to get through all the orbital mechanics in Neal Stephenson's Seveneves. Almost 50%.





Probably something from my Sci-Fi list. I like switching back and forth.

Oh man, I used to love the Redwall books as a kid. I never finished the series but at least more than half of it anyway and still have the books. I should try rereading them as an adult, could be fun to revisit.

I cannot wait for the remaining novels in the series to be republished.

Side note - how do you link books from the GR app???
Rachel wrote: "Just finished Dark Matter which seemed like a thriller trying on mommy's sci-fi clothes. ..."
That was my take on Dark Matter, too. :)
That was my take on Dark Matter, too. :)
Rachel wrote: "Side note - how do you link books from the GR app???.."
I don't think you can.
I don't think you can.

I added my thoughts to the group discussion of the book located here: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Oh man, I used to love the Redwall books as a kid. I never finished the series but at least more than half of it anyway and st..."
I never read any of the Redwall books as a kid. I guess I'm making up for some of that now.
Another obsession I have is board games. There's a game called Mice and Mystics that is heavily influenced by Redwall and Mouse Guard: Fall 1152 which is why I decided to go back and read some Redwall.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Twelve (other topics)Demon Lord of Karanda (other topics)
The Autumn Republic (other topics)
The Lions of Al-Rassan (other topics)
Seveneves (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Terry Pratchett (other topics)Alastair Reynolds (other topics)
Stephen Baxter (other topics)
Karen Lord (other topics)
Kim Stanley Robinson (other topics)
More...
It's a short month, so I'm sticking to short stories. :)