Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
>
What Have you been Reading this May?
message 1:
by
[deleted user]
(new)
Apr 30, 2019 06:33PM
So, what may you be reading this month to kick off the Reiwa era?
reply
|
flag

=======================================
Completed:
Mid to Longs:












Shorts:




=====
The Book of Magic by Gardner Dozois:















The Biography of a Bouncing Boy Terror: Chapter Two: Jumping Jack in Love by Ysabeau S. Wilce
A Night at the Tarn House by George R. R. Martin
=====
=======================================
Authors:
Joe Abercrombie, Eleanor Arnason, Elizabeth Bear, Rhett C. Bruno, John Crowley, A.M. Dellamonica, Gardner Dozois, Andy Duncan, Kate Elliott, Mariana Enríquez, Matthew Hughes, Marlon James, Margaret Killjoy, Yoon Ha Lee, Megan Lindholm (Robin Hobb), Scott Lynch, Ling Ma, George R. R. Martin, Megan McDowell, Annalee Newitz, Garth Nix, K.J. Parker (Tom Holt), Rachel Pollack, Tim Powers, Rebecca Roanhorse, Patrick Rothfuss, Jodi Taylor, Lavie Tidhar, Greg Van Eekhout, Carrie Vaughn, Sage Walker, Peter Watts, Ysabeau S. Wilce, Liz Williams, J.Y. Yang
=======================================
Mark Lawrence strikes a different tone from his usual Grimdark in his short, contemporary YA SF novel One Word Kill. (well, the protagonist is a teen dealing with leukemia in 1986, so no all rainbows & unicorns.) Interesting enough plot to hold my attention.


Next I'm starting Blood of Dragons, the fourth and final book of the Rain Wild Chronicles.


Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency by Douglas Adams
Rating: 2 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Neil Gaiman And Charles Vess' Stardust by Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess
Rating: 5 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
And I started reading:

Equal Rites by Terry Pratchett

The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year: Volume Eleven edited by Jonathan Strahan

Now something light and related to unicorns - Pip Bartlett's Guide to Magical Creatures by Jackson Pearce



Holy Sister by Mark Lawrence was an excellent climax to his Book of the Ancestor trilogy. Interesting world mix of SciFi and Fantasy, and while it leaves a pile of corpses, it's not as grimdark as his Broken Empire trilogy.

Currently working my way through American Gothic Tales which I picked up at the Old Book Sale. Mostly horror but there are some classic Bradbury, Le Guin, and Ellison tales included. Creepiest story so far was "The Yellow Wallpaper". Shivers!
Also reading Birthmarked which I think may be young adult (again picked up at the Old Book Sale), but I'm liking the world building so far. It's set in a dystopic future (of course) where the poor people outside the walls are forced to advance (give up) many of their children to the rich people living inside the walls of the city. Only a little ways in, but I am intrigued.

Thank you. Now I know not to try the Broken Empire series. Like my stories with some good characters hanging onto their hope! I was considering it because I do like his writing. Maybe I'll try One Word Kill instead.

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

The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet which remained very cute.
Semiosis which did a lot of neat stuff but didn't quite gel for me. More plants, fewer humans please! Sort of my life motto, tbh.
Rocannon's World was very Le Guin-y but not as polished as some of her later works.
Dreamsnake surprised me! I don't tend to love 70s scifi but this was so much fun. Love me a medicine woman type story. With sneks!!
Penric's Demon was my third time with McMaster Bujold and it ended up being the charm. I chuckled quite a bit at our hapless narrator and his multifaceted uh...friend.
Leviathan was cute for an alt history steampunk war novel? I didn't know what I was getting into. The audiobook was especially impressive.
Spinning Silver was a-may-zing. I was on the fence about starting it because I didn't particularly like Uprooted but this blew me away. I loved every second of it and closed it with a happy sigh.
The Invisible Man was a trip! I don't think it was meant to be humorous, but I found it very funny. And bigoted, but let's focus on how precious this dude's plot for world domination was.
Now reading Theft of Swords which I'm cautiously optimistic about and Arrows of the Queen which I almost got into a fight with, but we worked it out.
Faith wrote: "My review of A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World by C.A. Fletcher:"
Kind of sleazy to steal the title of Harlan Ellison's A Boy and His Dog.
Kind of sleazy to steal the title of Harlan Ellison's A Boy and His Dog.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
Have you ever read or seen Ellison's story? I'd be interested in a comparison.

Also working through the Safehold Series on audiobook. Currently reading By Heresies Distressed.


This is a science fiction-mystery.
After four brilliant women invent time travel, a whole culture develops around the phenomenon. When a murder occurs, some people before and after the crime (chronologically) become intent on investigating.
Very complex plot but it's a good story. 4 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



Just started




Since I have been advised not to jump directly to The Mallorean, for a change I am starting The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss. This will be my first e-book, that I just downloaded on my tablet, to be read with the Kindle app there.
Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik
Entertaining, if you can track all the PoV switches. In setting reminiscent of last year's The Bear & The Nightingale, but with more action. I guess Russia is the new England, fantasy-wise. I keep thinking the Staryk are winter faeries.
Now starting on Captain's Fury for series discussion.
Entertaining, if you can track all the PoV switches. In setting reminiscent of last year's The Bear & The Nightingale, but with more action. I guess Russia is the new England, fantasy-wise. I keep thinking the Staryk are winter faeries.
Now starting on Captain's Fury for series discussion.

The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet which remained very cute.
Semiosis which did a lot of neat stuff but didn’t quite gel for me. More plants, fewer …”
I love Theft of Swords. I’m planning to re-read it after this current book (All Those Explosions Were Someone Else’s Fault). I also loved Spinning Silver, which I read a couple months ago.

After that I decided to jump into a gaslamp mystery I had bought a couple years ago at a booksale and never got around to reading, The Shadow in the North. I finished that one today. It ended up being good fun and I rated it 3/5 stars, despite a somewhat ridiculous ending.
I've now started the 2nd book in Eden Robinson's Trickster trilogy, Trickster Drift. I'm only 22 pages in, but its already hit me in the feels. I absolutely adored the first book, Son of a Trickster, which I read last summer. I've been very excited and almost nervous to read this follow-up

Starting the group series read, Captain's Fury by Jim Butcher. The third book was an improvement over the first two, let's see if the trend continues.




I'm not going to make it through the Nebula novels before the announcement so I'm trying to finish Gods, Monsters, and the Lucky Peach (which isn't awful but isn't holding my attention either) and then Fire Ant so I can at least get through the short fiction.
Caitlin wrote: "Finished Trail of Lightning which I really enjoyed until about 80% but that ending was seriously rushed and confusing...."
Yes, I said the same thing when I commented on reading it a couple of months back. The ending just didn't make sense to me. I figured the magic hoops would do something inexplicable, but the motive baffled me: "A did it, so let's punish B & C"?
Yes, I said the same thing when I commented on reading it a couple of months back. The ending just didn't make sense to me. I figured the magic hoops would do something inexplicable, but the motive baffled me: "A did it, so let's punish B & C"?
Binti — The Night Masquerade left me similarly confused. Either I or the author lost track of an intergalactic war someplace. I thought this was a conclusion. but now I'm guessing there's more coming?


This started as fan fiction to "Remembrance of Earth's Past' trilogy by Cixin Liu and then was published.
It's a continuation of the story about the Trisolarans and all that jazz. 😎

Yes, I said the same thing when I comment..."
Yeah, I can't make sense of most of Maggie's decisions in that last bit. (view spoiler) And compared to the slowish lead-up to it, it was strangely rushed. I really enjoyed the world building though so I'm hoping at least some of it will be resolved in the sequel.


Diving right into the next group read, The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal. I'll be honest and say I'd rather read a non-fiction book about women in the space agency and their accomplishments than some alternate history version with imaginary women, but I'll keep an open mind and give it a try. About 60 pages in and the story is moving fast and keeping me interesting and the fact it's a period piece adds to it (we're not just covering women in this book, it's also got race and religion relations from that time period).


Now going for some non-fiction with an autobiography called A Two-Spirit Journey: The Autobiography of a Lesbian Ojibwa-Cree Elder. I started a couple pages last night but today got sucked into it and will soon be 100 pages in.


Diving right into the next group read, [book:The Calculating Stars..."
Somehow missed that this was a discussion for this month. Already picked up the audiobook awhile back so this will be good motivation to start it.

It was very different, but I think I liked it overall.

Is it bad that when I saw the title of the book that I thought it was about Oak Island? I'm addicted to that stupid show.

Hehe, I hadn't ever heard of Oak Island (or the show) until I looked it up after seeing your comment :)


This book started out as a fan fiction continuation of Cixin Liu's epic trilogy,

The story picks up after an epic battle between aliens and humans.....where things didn't go so well. I applaud the author's efforts, but the book is only so-so. 3 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Books mentioned in this topic
The Kingdom of Copper (other topics)The City of Brass (other topics)
The Kingdom of Copper (other topics)
The Left Hand of Darkness (other topics)
The Kingdom of Copper (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
David Weber (other topics)Beatrice Silverman Weinreich (other topics)
Annalee Newitz (other topics)
Patrick Rothfuss (other topics)
Jonathan Moeller (other topics)
More...