Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What are you Reading this February?
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Feb 01, 2019 06:16AM
So, what are you reading while shivering in the polar vortex?
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Anyway, needed to find something else on my eReader so randomly picked Sisters of Glass by D.W. St. John. This might be another Baen one, don't recall where I got it, will see how it goes, they aren't *all* bad :)
Finished the non-SFF book I was reading and picked The Particolored Unicorn by Jon DeCles. This was a used bookstore find from some years ago, out of print now. It's a silly take on classic fantasy concepts, like how it was fashionable to own a white unicorn, but this one prince decides he wanted the one with the crazy colours. Or where dragons are used to heat your castle. Going to use it as my humour slot in my BINGO.
Finally, also on to the next Phoebe and her Unicorn book, number 6


Longs:











Shorts:

















Authors: Joe Abercrombie, Dale Bailey, Rhett C. Bruno, Pat Cadigan, P. Djèlí Clark, Michael Connelly, Dennis Danvers, Marina Dyachenko, Sergey Dyachenko, Greg Egan, A. T. Greenblatt, Daryl Gregory, Alix E. Harrow, Julia Meitov Hersey, Chi Hui, Victor LaValle, Kirstyn McDermott, Jeannette Ng, Julie Nováková, Delia Owens, Susan Palwick, Sarah Pinsker, Cherie Priest, Nancy Red Star, Alastair Reynolds, Kelly Robson, Lawrence M. Schoen, Hanuš Seiner, Nisi Shawl, Martha Wells, G. Willow Wilson
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Edited to add that I recently finished The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle (my edition was called The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle but it's the same book) which was fantastic! It's a murder mystery but definitely falls into the fantasy genre! Get it! Read it! Feel your brain explode!
Whoa. Robert Jackson Bennett's Vigilance is one angry, vicious, sarcastic satire. Unlike his Devine Cities & Foundryside series, this isn't some other world fantasy. It's a near-future dystopian US where the hit reality TV show is Vigilance, in which a few contestants, "actives," try to kill as many people as possible in the selected venue (you opt in when you enter such areas, like the mall, sports stadium or airport; the signs at the door tell you so.) The civilians are expected to fight back, of course. So, you have to ask yourself, are you prepared?
The story is mostly the PoV of the showrunner, who's all about the TMA's (Target Market Activations.)
Kind of a mashup of themes from Network, Hunger Games, and The Purge, but so over the top it's funny, too. Makes A Clockwork Orange seem peaceful. Trigger warning for ultramegahyperviolence and naked political opinions.
The story is mostly the PoV of the showrunner, who's all about the TMA's (Target Market Activations.)
Kind of a mashup of themes from Network, Hunger Games, and The Purge, but so over the top it's funny, too. Makes A Clockwork Orange seem peaceful. Trigger warning for ultramegahyperviolence and naked political opinions.

This passage from Adam-Troy Castro's latest space opera Draiken novella ("The Savannah Problem" in this month's Analog) caught my fancy:
The reply arrives, and it's nothing they could have expected: a few seconds from an ancient dramatic presentation, culled from Juje knows what obscure archive. Four beings, a human woman and three apparent aliens, or rather, three unmistakable human beings made up to resemble creatures who might be aliens or might be beings out of myth or might just be eccentric dressers, stare up at the sky in horror as some woman piloting a personal transport of some kind uses the vehicles exhausts the right words in the air. It's not any alphabet Draiken knows. It must date back to the era of the original artifact. But from the reaction of the woman on the ground and her oddly-attired friends, whatever those letters spell is supposed to reduce them all to despair.
The image freezes, and two words in a more recognizable lettering of Hom.Sap.Mercantile appear, providing the translation (SURRENDER DOROTHY).
Stang says, "I've got to hand it to you, Draiken. You have some interesting enemies."

*edit*
Found it, something called Storm Wars!, it just wasn't tracked as a sequel in GoodReads so I thought Particolored was standalone. It came out only 13 years after the original...the one review it has says it has even more of a cliffhanger ending, meh.
Anyway, my next book is non-SFF, should be a quick one though.
Grey Sister, book 2 of Lawrence's Book of the Ancestor Trilogy, was an enjoyable, exciting read, if a little slow getting started. I liked the way it started:
THE STORY SO FARNow I'm ready for the final book, Holy Sister, when it comes out in April.
FOR THOSE OF you who have had to wait a while for this book I provide brief catch-up notes to Book One, so that your memories may be refreshed and I can avoid the awkwardness of having to have characters tell each other things they already know for your benefit.

I'm planning on joining in on new series group read Furies of Calderon. And I'm also going to read Knight's Shadow for the buddy read.
Otherwise, I'm not sure what I'm going to read this month. I also thought I'd just say that I complete forgot to update the Jan what are you reading - but basically all I read last month was various Redwall books by Brian Jacques which fulfilled my talking animal slot on the bingo and was also just fun, plus the group/buddy reads!



Then I worked on the short story/poem/play collection by Jo Walton - Starlings.
Just got my hold for Cherryh’s latest : Alliance Rising

Time to start our series group read, Furies of Calderon by Jim Butcher, looking forward to getting into it. As a fan of his Dresden Files I'm interested to see how he does in a completely different genre.

Anyways will be jumping to Golden Fool next to continue the series. Am also still slowly making my way through The Complete Grimm's Fairy Tales from Zipes. Plan to take the full year to finish this.


The Last Unicorn by Peter S. Beagle
Rating: 3 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I didn't like it as much as I'd hoped but it was still a solid stand-alone fantasy read.



Moving on to American Gods next, with the aim to fill either "Fantasy in a Modern World" or "Featuring an Angel/Demon/God" slot on my Bingo card.


His thoughtful trends & meticulous attention to detail is appreciated. I'm reading another popular fantasy book now that has a neat system of magic, lots of action, & keeps stepping on itself with plot holes & nonsensical actions. None of that in this series. Highly recommended. I even want to go back & read the first 3 books in the series now since they take place 350 years after this one. That's pretty amazing.
Here's my 5 star review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



Tawny man trilogy is amazing but wait until you read The Fitz and the Fool trilogy; now that is an emotional journey.


Now for my unicorn theme - Rampant by Diana Peterfreund

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Trail of Lightning by Rebecca Roanhorse. Supernatural thriller. Audible's been trying to sell me this for months, so naturally I bought the ebook :)
Post flood (global warming on steroids?) world in which Navajo nation has closed itself off from the rest of the chaos (not that it's not chaotic in its own way.) This clifi event has also ushered in the return of the old Navajo spirits, for good or ill. The heroine is a professional monster slayer, knows a surprising number of immortals. She's also a messed-up sociopath, making her hard to like. I got a little lost at the ending — apparently a lot of folks needed killing, more than I could account for from my understanding of the plot.
Post flood (global warming on steroids?) world in which Navajo nation has closed itself off from the rest of the chaos (not that it's not chaotic in its own way.) This clifi event has also ushered in the return of the old Navajo spirits, for good or ill. The heroine is a professional monster slayer, knows a surprising number of immortals. She's also a messed-up sociopath, making her hard to like. I got a little lost at the ending — apparently a lot of folks needed killing, more than I could account for from my understanding of the plot.

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

Anyway, I'm next jumping right into Fool's Fate. Kind of sad that there will be "only" 3 more Fitz books after I finish this one.


Like the world's oldest profession, sexy stuff sells. Or can sell.

Chronin: The Knife At your Back, graphic novel from Tor. Set in 19th century Japan at the start of the Meiji Restoration.
I was really glad I didn't read the GR description, or the back cover, or the description in the article that recommended this as a February release, because discovering the story's multiple surprises was a lot of fun. (Page 65 in particular was a real What? moment that changed everything.)
In a related opinions: the Kindle edition is unreadable on the Kindle, since it insists on double-page landscape presentation, making the whole thing way too small. I read it on my desktop. I've never bought a graphic novel on the Kindle before, and am not likely to do so again (the Gahan Wilson cartoon collection doesn't really count, since it's single-panel self-contained cartoons, not a story.)
I was really glad I didn't read the GR description, or the back cover, or the description in the article that recommended this as a February release, because discovering the story's multiple surprises was a lot of fun. (Page 65 in particular was a real What? moment that changed everything.)
In a related opinions: the Kindle edition is unreadable on the Kindle, since it insists on double-page landscape presentation, making the whole thing way too small. I read it on my desktop. I've never bought a graphic novel on the Kindle before, and am not likely to do so again (the Gahan Wilson cartoon collection doesn't really count, since it's single-panel self-contained cartoons, not a story.)
I started State Tectonics, the conclusion of Older's near-future Centenal global political drama, but quickly realized I didn't remember enough about parts 1 & 2 to jump in without at least skimming previous books again. So, I put it aside after 3 chapters to get started on Glasshouse instead.

Anyway, with the next group read looming I'm starting on Glasshouse. Going to be a bit weird since by random chance the book I'm about halfway through on my eReader is turning into a cyberpunk book too (Sisters of Glass...what is with cyberpunk and "glass"?) And based on the first 20 pages of Glasshouse, I can see they are similar in that the main character is an aggression male who solves problems by killing a bunch of people. The reasons behind the aggression are different but the end result is that there's a lot of blood and wounds in both. Will see how reading them in parallel goes, may need to put the eReader one on hold or try to get through it quick to focus on Glasshouse.

I read:
Preludes & Nocturnes - finally! This is the medium I think is best suited to Gaiman's work.
Witches Abroad - utterly delightful.
All Systems Red - great fun! Except I listened to it and that was a mistake. From now on, I shall eye-read these.
Brown Girl in the Ring - A sort of UF dystopic horror? I loved it.
Check, Please!: #Hockey, Vol. 1 - a super sweet palate cleanser. If you're into slice of life graphic novels, this one was adorable.
Halfway to the Grave - *rubs face.* I just...don't like romances. I don't like them. I need to stop reading them.
So I did stop reading them, and read three pieces of "contemporary fiction" afterwards to clear my head.
Ntozake Shange is quickly becoming a favorite author. Read For colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf (a sort of poem/play) and Sassafrass, Cypress and Indigo (a slice of life book about sisters and womanhood.) Both were flipping excellent.
And also Valeria Luiselli's "Faces in the Crowd" which for some reason I can't link to but was too uh...experimental for me, let's say.
Now trying to finish Deadhouse Gates and Reaper Man. Hoping to start Black Leopard, Red Wolf and A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe this month, too.
Allison wrote: "Halfway to the Grave - *rubs face.* I just...don't like romances. I don't like them. I need to stop reading them..."
That's the title of a romance?
That's the title of a romance?

That's the title of a romance?"
Ha! Well, a paranormal romance anyways. I thought it was going to be urban fantasy (mystery A plot, maybe a romance subplot) but it was the other way around.

It continues to bite me in the behind. Which, incidentally, was something mentioned often in this book.

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

Thanks to a recent sale, I have most of the series on my Nook. Now just have to find time to read them all. Also took advantage of a recent sale on the Recluse series and have all but the 2 most recent and the short story collection on my Nook.

That's the title of a romance?"
..."
I loved that series.
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