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What are you reading in February 2019?
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Shel, Moderator
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Feb 01, 2019 09:05AM

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A Head Full of Ghosts by Paul Tremblay
The Great Victorian Collection by Brian Moore
Deep Betrayal by Anne Greenwood Brown
Maynard's House by Herman Raucher
Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho
I am so totally outside of science fiction this month, it's scary.


Christine wrote: "I halfway through The Goblin Emperor; while I find the story interesting, I'm having a great deal of trouble with the names. I wish the author had thought to put a list of character..."
pssst...the list and a glossary of how the naming works is at the back! I wish I'd known that upon my first read too!
I just finished The Riddle-Master of Hed last night and am continuing with the trilogy next; hoping to finish it before it's time to pick up Fool's Errand for the group series read.
pssst...the list and a glossary of how the naming works is at the back! I wish I'd known that upon my first read too!
I just finished The Riddle-Master of Hed last night and am continuing with the trilogy next; hoping to finish it before it's time to pick up Fool's Errand for the group series read.

Shel, I've seen the list and glossary, but neither is helpful; with all the variations on names, I can rarely find the name I'm looking for. I'm now 3/4 of the way through and am finally getting to know who is who
Christine wrote: "Shel wrote: "Christine wrote: "I halfway through The Goblin Emperor; while I find the story interesting, I'm having a great deal of trouble with the names. I wish the author had tho..."
Fair enough! Well, when you finish, dig through our archives and post your thoughts - the group read and discussed the book back in 2014.
Fair enough! Well, when you finish, dig through our archives and post your thoughts - the group read and discussed the book back in 2014.

Not sure what I'll dive into after that. I'm technically in the middle of Debt of Honor and a re-read of Royal Assassin but haven't picked up either in weeks.
In semi-written-for-adults-books, I've been following along with my oldest tiny human as he reads the Amulet series, which is beautifully drawn and a really good story so far. We just finished collection #7, so only 1 more published. We're also reading the hilarious and quirky and maybe-more-than-it-seems Alcatraz series out loud, and are currently on The Shattered Lens.
I am about 1/3 through Guardians of the Keep by Carol Berg, book 2 in her Bridge of D'Arnath series, and so far, I'm liking it as much as the first book. This is for a different Goodreads group.
Queued up after that are: Fool's Errand for our series read, A Sorcerer's Treason by Sarah Zettel, book 1 in her Isavalta series, and The Huntress by Kate Quinn, a post-WWII historical novel.
Queued up after that are: Fool's Errand for our series read, A Sorcerer's Treason by Sarah Zettel, book 1 in her Isavalta series, and The Huntress by Kate Quinn, a post-WWII historical novel.



I finished The Huntress by Kate Quinn. Parts of it were definitely a 10, especially when writing about the Soviet woman who was a pilot/navigator—her story was enthralling and well-researched. But the parts with Jordan, the budding American photographer, were pretty clichéd. Yet the whole story came together quite well and I ended up giving it 4 stars, 8/10. I received an ARC of the book in a publisher’s giveaway.
Then I started Sarah Zettel’s Isavalta series, beginning with A Sorcerer's Treason. Given that it is the first book in a series, I expected unanswered questions and loose threads, but there were a few too many unexplained things for me to really feel satisfied. 7/10. It appears the next book, The Usurper's Crown, actually is a prequel to the first book, so maybe that will help. Two things I really did like were the method of weaving magic by actually weaving/braiding the spells and the setting in our world—Sand Island and Bayfiled, near the Apostle Islands here in my home state of Wisconsin.
Next up is Fool's Errand for our series read.
Then I started Sarah Zettel’s Isavalta series, beginning with A Sorcerer's Treason. Given that it is the first book in a series, I expected unanswered questions and loose threads, but there were a few too many unexplained things for me to really feel satisfied. 7/10. It appears the next book, The Usurper's Crown, actually is a prequel to the first book, so maybe that will help. Two things I really did like were the method of weaving magic by actually weaving/braiding the spells and the setting in our world—Sand Island and Bayfiled, near the Apostle Islands here in my home state of Wisconsin.
Next up is Fool's Errand for our series read.

I remember thinking that the characters were fun and the worldbuilding was good but that the plot was too simple and characters generally followed a good/bad split along the lines of who did and didn't like the protagonist. Tor announced plans for a sequel last year.
I finished La Belle Sauvage, which was a fun return to one of my favorite fantasy series. I'm looking forward to the other two books, whenever Pullman gets them written.
I also tore through The Fifth Season, which was amazing. The growing realization of how all the characters were connected was delicious. The worldbuilding was fantastic as well and I'm looking forward to seeing where it goes in books 2 and 3.
Now I should really start Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI for one of my IRL book clubs but I'm avoiding it with Royal Assassin. As much as I love dark fantasy, true crime is not really my thing.
I finished the Riddle-Master trilogy the other day - I always feel like finishing a Patricia A. McKillip book is like waking from a lovely dream :) Such a satisfying ending!!
Next up is Fool's Errand for the series read.
Next up is Fool's Errand for the series read.

I’m also reading Clark Ashton Smith’s The Door to Saturn and Andy Duncan’s fabulist An Agent of Utopia. Next on the list Josiah Bancroft’s steampunky The Hod King and Sam Miller’s Blackfish City.

The Golem and the Jinni - (Started in January)
Giant Days, Vol. 1
Dead to the World
Giant Days, Vol. 2
Saga, Vol. 1
And I am currently reading Dead as a Doornail. I am not yet sure if I will read Giant Days, Vol. 3 or Saga, Vol. 2 next.
Nyssa wrote: "So far this month I have read:
The Golem and the Jinni - (Started in January)"
I LOVED that book!
The Golem and the Jinni - (Started in January)"
I LOVED that book!

The Golem and the Jinni - (Started in January)"
I LOVED that book!"
It is terrific!!
Zipped through Fool's Errand (so good!) and now reading a collection of short stories (usually not my favorite thing but several authors I like and a theme I love) called Return to Avalon.


After I finished Fool's Errand, I wanted to read something completely different so I started Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End. But then I had a really bad day and needed some brain candy, so I spent some time with Toby Daye in Ashes of Honor, zipped through it in two days, and now I'll go back and finish the nonfiction before moving on.
I got sidetracked by Creating Moments of Joy Along the Alzheimer's Journey: A Guide for Families and Caregivers, Fifth Edition, Revised and Expanded which was given to me by a therapist after several meetings related to my sister who has Down syndrome and Alzheimer’s disease. (My dad also had Alzheimer’s.) Poignant, funny, sad...
Hoping to finish The Usurper's Crown in a couple days so I can start my March reads for this and another group.
Hoping to finish The Usurper's Crown in a couple days so I can start my March reads for this and another group.

However, things looked up from there. I read three 5-star books this month: Ancillary Justice (sci-fi opera), Thin Air (historical fiction/horror), and one of our books this month, Sorcerer to the Crown (regency fantasy).
I also really adored the second in The Broken Earth trilogy, The Obelisk Gate, because Jemisin is just an amazingly talented storyteller.
Craven Manor was a great haunted house read and I'll definitely be looking for more from Darcy Coates.
In the motley-crew-of-hippos genre, I had a ton of fun with the flawed but lovable novella River of Teeth and was intrigued by the psychological character drama that took center-stage in the zombie apocalypse in This is Not a Test.
And in non-fiction, my 7-year-old dino-loving self was quite pleased with The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs: A New History of a Lost World, though she could have done without some of the self-congratulatory authorial inserts.

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Books mentioned in this topic
The Book of M (other topics)Past Tense (other topics)
The Terracotta Warriors: Exploring the Most Intriguing Puzzle in Chinese History (other topics)
Sorcerer to the Crown (other topics)
After the Fall, Before the Fall, During the Fall (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Edward Burman (other topics)Frederic S. Durbin (other topics)
Patricia A. McKillip (other topics)
Sarah Zettel (other topics)
Kate Quinn (other topics)
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