Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What are you Reading this March?
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SA
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Mar 02, 2019 05:44AM

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Nebula Award nominee. My main reason for not reading this earlier was "stupid title". Actually, it's a very engrossing story, begins in a distant future of very high tech eventually takes us time traveling to ancient Mesopotamia. I added it to my Hugo noms. (Goodreads says 240 pages, which raised my eyebrow. I read the ebook, but it ain't that long. Must be really large type.)

Longs:



















Shorts:












Authors: Kate Atkinson, A.C. Buchanan, Tara Isabella Burton, S.L. Byrne, Nino Cipri, Seth Dickinson, Nicholas Eames, Vanessa Fogg, Neil Gaiman, Hazel Gold, Rebecca Hanover, Kate Heartfield, Simone Heller, Kij Johnson, Tim Johnston, Stephen King, Richard A. Knaak, Carmen Maria Machado, Melissa Marr, Helen Marshall, Sam J. Miller, Lauren E. Mitchell, Erik A. Otto, C.L. Polk, Richard Powers, A.E. Prevost, Diane Setterfield, Adam R. Shannon, Penny Stirling, Rachel Swirsky, Bogi Takács, Adrian Tchaikovsky, Tade Thompson, Karin Tidbeck, Lavie Tidhar, Cameron Van Sant, Martha Wells, Rae White, Rem Wigmore, David Wong
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My thoughts exactly. For what it's worth he's more empathetic in the newest four books so it gets easier as you go, but then sometimes the female protagonist takes his place as being the annoying one :) I read all 10 about 3-4 years back. I tried to focus on the other characters and the world, and resisted the urge to take some big heavy object to beat some sense into him and get him to stop complaining already.

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

Gardner Fox was also a prolific writer of superhero comics in the early days of the Silver Age (late 50s through to late 60s), and wrote a lot of the most popular issues on title like the Justice League of America.


Pierre wrote: "Last month I reported reading Kings of the Wyld; this was a DNF, I lost interest in the story which reminded me of a silly video game...."
Kings of the Wyld is an odd adventure-comedy, a sort of "adventuring bands as rock stars" world, and a bit roman à clef, often quite obscure in its references.
Kings of the Wyld is an odd adventure-comedy, a sort of "adventuring bands as rock stars" world, and a bit roman à clef, often quite obscure in its references.




In electronic format I finished Sisters of Glass....ugh, I think the only place I've encountered such stubborn, dense, frustrating, annoying and sometimes downright dumb characters was in none other than the Thomas Covenant books we mentioned just above. I don't recommend, even though it was free to download, I think from Baen.
Started on the contemporary group read A Shadow in Summer by Daniel Abraham. A bit early but I'm slower to read my e-books since I only do it while I commute to work, so need a head start.
Andrea wrote: "In dead tree format I finished Good Omens and started the final installment of the Broken Earth trilogy - The Stone Sky by N.K. Jemisin..."
Were you planning on starting a buddy-read topic for that?
Were you planning on starting a buddy-read topic for that?

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

Starting on Academ's Fury by Jim Butcher. Hopefully didn't lose too many group readers after the first book.

Anyways that one took me a while to read. So much story and worldbuilding to digest! So now I'm in the mood for a few quick reads before I dive into the Rain Wilds. So my next book will be with my ol' pal Indridason for another Detective Erlendur mystery Arctic Chill




Complex sci-fi story about an archaeologist who's living on an alien planet and studying it's extinct civilization while various factions are searching the galaxy for him. Includes several side plots.
Plenty of techno-speak and science jibber jabber in this compelling story. 4 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



They're fun books. I'd suggest just reading these 5 & then stopping. I didn't find the Mallorean as good, but it's not awful. A minor disappointment. Belgarath & Polgara were a waste of time, IMO.
I also really liked his Elenium trilogy. Again, I found the follow up trilogy, the Tamuli, weak. Not bad, just not as good.

I recommend doing two things with those
1 - Wait several years after reading Belgariad and Mallorean, and pick only one, it makes for a nice recap once you start already forgetting things, but if it's already fresh it frustrating to go over things you already know
2 - Wait many more years before reading the other, since they cover the exact same timeline so a lot of duplication, even when the characters aren't together, the world events are the same and they still kind of keep in touch. Plus the two characters have the same "voice", Polgara grew up to be just like her father in personality so even that comes off the same.




Now gonna read The Marrow Thieves shifting to a bit of dystopian fiction.

Man oh man is right! Hobb is severely emotionally exhausting.
Finished Dragon Champion - enjoyed, but didn't blow me out of the water.
Pretty excited to start The Redemption of Althalus tomorrow! Got no plans other than snuggling up and getting my Eddings fix :)

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

Genre-wise I would call it near future dystopian/apocalyptic low fantasy. It was definitely written with more middle school and high school audiences in mind, which I don't read a ton of so that may be why I was having trouble getting into the story at first. I found it a difficult book to rate. In the first half of the book I found it more mediocre and there were a lot of inaccuracies and inconsistencies that detracted from the story for me. But by the second half I felt completely sucked into the story and I really adored the ending. Strong themes of family, community and inter-generational relationships, not to mention resilience and resistance against Canada's ongoing colonialism and genocide of Indigenous folks.
Next I'm going to read Moon of the Crusted Snow which is more near future apocalyptic fiction taking place in Ontario (Marrow Thieves did as well) and also written by an Indigenous author. My partner read it not long ago and loved it, so I'm pretty excited to start.


Finished reading Crucible, which is not marketed as a sci fi book, but would probably be interesting to anyone interested in stories about artificial superintelligence. It was fairly well researched and put AI conundrums into a relatable context.
Next I'll be working on Reincarnation Blues and The Calculating Stars.

Starting on another unicorn book - Ascendant by Diana Peterfreund. Unfortunately this looks like a trilogy where the author never wrote, and doesn't look like ever will write, the third book :(

Let me know if you’re planning on doing The Vor Game which I hope to get to next month or so

Let me know if you’re planning on doing The Vor Game wh..."
I am, though my library lost it's copy of Young Miles (the omnibus). I later noticed that they have placed an order for it The Vor Game standalone. I've got it on reserve but it's been that way since December, not sure how long it will take to get into my hands!

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Jim wrote: "A Closed and Common Orbit was good. Not as good as The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet, the first of the series, but that's a tough mark to make...."
I actually liked it more than the first book in the series, even given only one character was carried over from the first book, and even that not completely. Fewer characters made it more focused.
I actually liked it more than the first book in the series, even given only one character was carried over from the first book, and even that not completely. Fewer characters made it more focused.

Pepper's story/thread was excellent. The other was just too long & repetitive, IMO. Also, Chambers' tool/tech descriptions were even worse, if that's possible. They wouldn't be so bad if the rest of her writing wasn't so good. As it is, they stand out like a sore thumb.

The Belgariad is one I have a fondness for! I'm not sure how well it ages but it's what cemented my love of epic fantasy.
I'm having a slow month because I chose ponderous tomes.
Early Riser was interesting and quirky but didn't quite solidify for me. As a somewhat runny flan of a story, it was still fun.
Almost done with Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell and really enjoying it. The audio narrator is great, and it's a nice break from the action-heavy books I've been reading lately. I love Regency literature and eerie, atmospheric faerie stories so this is really made for me.
DNFed A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe. Too nonsensical for me and the characters were all jerks.
Starting A Stranger in Olondria and trying to decide whether Memories of Ice is worth a 40+ hour investment or if I should cut my losses.


Now I'm in the mood to switch back to a fast-paced mystery so going for The Couple Next Door since we already have it around the apartment.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Riddle-Master of Hed (other topics)The Lore of the Unicorn (other topics)
The Rithmatist (other topics)
Calamity (other topics)
Sea of Swords (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
C.L. Polk (other topics)Odell Shepard (other topics)
Patricia A. McKillip (other topics)
Kate Atkinson (other topics)
Drew Hayes (other topics)
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