Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What are you reading this March, 2018?







This month I hope to finish:







And I'm also picking away at (but probably won't finish this month):






Currently reading Jagannath, a short story collection, while i wait for The Strange Bird: A Borne Story to be delivered.

Starting on the massive The Found and the Lost: The Collected Novellas of Ursula K. Le Guin, glad to see Brendan describe them as mostly good, sometimes anthologies can be iffy.

The one story i didn't like was a real-world multigenerational one, which for a novella i thought was a bit too long. Many of the novellas are interlinked as well, so you almost get novel-like narrative arcs and recurring characters.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



Once I'm done with one of the two, I'm going to read



Children of Time (Really impressive - must read)
Binti:3: The Night Masquerade - solid conclusion
Golden Age and other Stories: if you enjoyed the characters from the Temeraire series this is a nice little trip back - two fun shorts and many 'microfiction' all to fan art
Null States - Following up on the ideas of Infomacracy - could have been a bit shorter but I like her character-building

Children of Time (Really impressive - must read)
Binti:3: The Night Masquerade - solid conclusion
Golden Age and other Stories: if you enjoyed the characters from the Te..."
Nice! Some books there that are coming up on my own TBR. I keep wanting to read Null States because I liked Infomocracy so much, but I can't seem to find it in paperback in stores over here yet. The same problem I'm having with The Girl in the Tower :( Not sure why it's taking so long. Will soon be reading The Night Masquerade, though and looking forward to that. Really liked the first two books of the trilogy. Also just had Children of Time recommended to me by a friend and now noticing people talk about it everywhere. May have to push that one up my list!

It was especially interesting to read "The Treasure of Lynortis", the first Kane story KEW wrote back when he was 16 & never published. He later rewrote it extensively into "Lynortis Reprise". A truly wonderful comparison.
The entire collection was fantastic with excellent illustrations, too. I gave it a 5 star review here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/edit...
Rachel wrote: "Children of Time (Really impressive - must read)..."
i enjoyed Children of Time as well. Sadly The Night Masquerade & Null States are still on my to-read list.
i enjoyed Children of Time as well. Sadly The Night Masquerade & Null States are still on my to-read list.

And on the side, the first new Black Panther graphic novel. Excellent artwork.

I cant decide between The First Law trilogy, The Traitor Son Cycle, the Riyria Revelations or going with one of Neil Gaimans standalones.

Also read An Unkindness of Ghosts for a group read. I liked it, despite the bad YA-sounding title and an ending that wouldn't have been the direction I went in. I'd compare it to other SF titles that tackle slavery seriously, like Parable of the Talents and The Underground Railroad. ★★★★☆.
For a real change of pace, currently reading Swords Against Death, hopefully it's better than the Fritz Leiber sci fi we read.

I cant decide between The First Law trilogy, The Traitor Son Cycle, the Riyria Revelations or going with one of Neil Gaimans standalones."
IMO, if you want dark, then go First Law. Great battles and characters--The Traitor Son Cycle.


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Now starting on All Our Wrong Todays by Elan Mastai. He mentions Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle early and I can see the Vonnegut influence in his style, which should make for an entertaining read.

I'm currently reading On Stranger Tides for the group read which I'm enjoying so far.
Planned next is: The Buried Giant (because it's due back at the library soon and I've already had to extend it once, oops). Then I think I'm going to continue with my WoT re-read with A Crown of Swords.

I had picked up the first three books from the library, and since I'm going back this weekend to return some other books, I'll finish off How to Speak Dragonese quickly so I can bring it back too.


Don't think you can ever be too late to comment on discussion, the Earthsea one recently revived after the last post on it in 2015, and the thread itself was started in 2011

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Jim wrote: "Martians Abroad by Carrie Vaughn was a fun YA romp that reminded me very much of one of the Heinlein juveniles...."
I was thinking of Podkayne of Mars; would have liked Martians Abroad a lot more if the ending/resolution wasn't so stupid.
I was thinking of Podkayne of Mars; would have liked Martians Abroad a lot more if the ending/resolution wasn't so stupid.
I read three Marko Kloos stories earlier this month. His latest Frontlines novel (Points of Impact, one of his novella side-stories Measures of Absolution, and a graphic novel side-story Frontlines: Requiem. The graphic novel was a horrid (though technically Kloos didn't write it.) Also, it's hard to shift to an artists visions of what I'd read about. Kloos writes detailed combat scenes, and plot exists mostly to set up the next battle he wants to describe, so it's a popcorn read. (But, got two Bingo squares from the three. :)
Finished JY Yang's The Black Tides of Heaven. Sort-of silkpunk (how much fantasy can you add to Eastern culture before it's so different it ceases to be "silk"? :) Interesting novella, pair of twins, about to start companion novella, The Red Threads of Fortune, following the other twin.
Finished JY Yang's The Black Tides of Heaven. Sort-of silkpunk (how much fantasy can you add to Eastern culture before it's so different it ceases to be "silk"? :) Interesting novella, pair of twins, about to start companion novella, The Red Threads of Fortune, following the other twin.

Rachel wrote: "I also just finished Black Tides of Heaven! Interesting take on gender- but can’t figure out how to get a bingo square out if it"
While technically I've read JY Yang previously as short stories in various magazines (I was fond of Secondhand Bodies last year), this is my first Yang "book", so I'm making them "New (to me) Author" :)
While technically I've read JY Yang previously as short stories in various magazines (I was fond of Secondhand Bodies last year), this is my first Yang "book", so I'm making them "New (to me) Author" :)

Yeah, she jumped the shark there, but I was able to just roll with it. I almost dropped a star for it. I would have liked it better if (view spoiler) Still, it was a good romp up to that point, a type of book I don't read much any more.

Silkpunk...hadn't heard that one before.
Andrea wrote: "Silkpunk...hadn't heard that one before. ..."
First I'd heard it was when Ken Liu published The Grace of Kings, so pretty new. Not sure why the "punk" part; with cyberpunk it originated in stories featuring outside-the-law hackers, then it became steampunk (for retro setting with odd technology, which could just as easily have been called Verne-fiction.) Then biopunk for radical genetic engineering or cybernetics,.... we seem to add "punk" to sub-genres these days much like we tack "-gate" onto a political scandal. (Except climate change fiction, because clifi rhyme was irresistible :)
First I'd heard it was when Ken Liu published The Grace of Kings, so pretty new. Not sure why the "punk" part; with cyberpunk it originated in stories featuring outside-the-law hackers, then it became steampunk (for retro setting with odd technology, which could just as easily have been called Verne-fiction.) Then biopunk for radical genetic engineering or cybernetics,.... we seem to add "punk" to sub-genres these days much like we tack "-gate" onto a political scandal. (Except climate change fiction, because clifi rhyme was irresistible :)


The Chronicles of the Holy Grail: The Ultimate Quest from the Age of Arthurian Literature
Malory: The Knight Who Became King Arthur's Chronicler
Christmas at Cold Comfort Farm
Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Sausages
Just read the first bit of the Tom Holt, which is about a pig and is hilarious. Bodes well.

Now I can finally get back to Moreta by McCaffrey which I started a while ago but had to put aside to get through some library books that had to be returned (including TFatL)


The first two were not for me. CoBaB is the YA to end all YAs and Invisible Library (yes, Brendan, I know!) was an attempt at expanding my palate that felt more like the orthodontic palate expander, actually. I came to loathe it, but then I was only like 50 pages from done, so I pushed through.
Let's Pretend was just like Jenny Lawson's Bloggess blog, so fun, but also anxiety-producing. I liked Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things better.
Now hoping to finish these before the end of the month:
Dark Matter - so far it's fast but not life-altering
The Dispossessed - life-altering, but my copy is really hard to read and it's already a dense book so I'm taking my time with it.
Carnival - coming soon!
and a comic book TBD

So, I gave up on the library since there was a big line of people before me and bought my own copy of The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden since it looks like the kind of book I'll really enjoy and want to keep.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Dance with Dragons (other topics)Leviathan Wakes (other topics)
The Hazel Wood (other topics)
Tooth and Claw (other topics)
The White-Throated Transmigrant (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
George R.R. Martin (other topics)James S.A. Corey (other topics)
Melissa Albert (other topics)
Jo Walton (other topics)
Max Anthony (other topics)
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What have you been reading this month?