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What We've Been Reading
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What Have You been Reading this November?
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Andrea
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Nov 01, 2019 11:52AM

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On my eReader I've got The Apocalypse Troll by David Weber. I believe I got that one from the free Baen library.

I have enough time to finish 6 books to complete my reading challenge.
















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Authors: Chloe Benjamin, Taffy Brodesser-Akner, Michael Connelly, Alix E. Harrow, Nalo Hopkinson, Mark Lawrence, Toni Morrison, Sylvain Neuvel, Annalee Newitz, Emily Tesh, Tade Thompson, Glendy Vanderah, Ruth Ware, Colson Whitehead

On the kids bedtime reading list currently is ‘the hobbit’; a bit advanced for them but it sends a 6 year old and a 2 year old to sleep nicely while keeping me entertained. Parenting level EXPERT 😁

I'm confident I will achieve my reading challenge for the year - 7 books to read in 2 months - although this usually the busiest time of the year for work. I have accepted that I won't complete all 10 Thomas Covenant books this year.



I've now just started The Hallowed Hunt and already pulled into it.
As far as goals, I completed my GR goal of reading 38 books. I think I've technically completed my SFF Bingo goal of getting 12 squares. I'll probably complete my Women SFF author challenge too. I don't think I'll make my targets for historical SFF or sub-genre challenge, sadly. But I've been enjoying my reading immensely either way, and that's all that counts.

Now, I'm reading Blood Song, and I really, really like it!
Kivrin wrote: "Let's see...I finished The Poppy War at the end of October. It was good, but it got too grimdark for me in the end. Not sure I'll continue the series."
Book 2, The Dragon Republic, is even darker.
Book 2, The Dragon Republic, is even darker.

Book 2, The Dragon Republic, is even darker.."
I had a feeling it would be. I think I can forego the rest of the series. I did enjoy all of the Chinese myth references, but I like a little light and hope in my stories.



Spook Country follows three groups of characters whose story threads merge as the narrative unfolds. The action moves from various parts of the United States to Canada as the protagonists pursue their mysterious agendas.
Good suspense novel. 3.5 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I'm planning to read The Martian soon too :) It's my Hard SF slot on my BINGO challenge.

But I'm back now and back to my unicorns with Ariel by Steven R. Boyett which is one of the ones I wanted most to read. The first handful of pages was a good start.
I also finished reading The Book of the Unicorn by Nigel Suckling (very nice artwork), so started the anthology The Unicorn Trade by Poul Anderson though the title "story" is actually a two page poem, but as I've never read anything by Anderson before figured I'd give it a try anyway.
Finally, on my eReader I started The Secret Country by Pamela Dean
Andrea wrote: "so started the anthology The Unicorn Trade by Poul Anderson though the title "story" is actually a two page poem, but as I've never read anything by Anderson before figured I'd give it a try anyway...."
Poul Anderson was one of the major authors from my early days in SF. His books occupy a surprisingly large linear space on my bookshelf; more than Clarke, though less than Heinlein or Asimov. I would not have expected a unicorn story from him (much less a poem.)
Poul Anderson was one of the major authors from my early days in SF. His books occupy a surprisingly large linear space on my bookshelf; more than Clarke, though less than Heinlein or Asimov. I would not have expected a unicorn story from him (much less a poem.)

It's a joint venture with his wife Karen, she wrote the poem. It wasn't so much about unicorns as it was about imagination in general. A trade in magical creatures and things.

Now reading a mystery, Someone We Know



The devastation of war results in huge corporations having control of most things on Earth...and the corporations would do anything to get their hands on a proto-cyborg (an intelligent golem) that protects a small community.
Good book. 4 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Well, I finally read The Golden Compass, one of those classic things I was supposed to have read 20 years ago. Motivation was to read it before watching the HBO series which started last week (though I'd seen the movie back in theaters years ago.) I suppose I have to finish the trilogy. (I actually bought the ebooks 3 years ago when Amazon had them on sale.)

Decided I'm still in a mystery/faster read mood so I'm now reading A Study in Scarlet (Sherlock Holmes).


I have to agree that the first book was the best. And possibly why they never made the other two movies? Especially as the third book must have had religious groups banning it, given it's portrayal of God and the angels. I kind of figured they couldn't ever make that movie. Wonder what the TV series will do.
Andrea wrote: "I have to agree that the first book was the best. And possibly why they never made the other two movies?..."
The 2007 The Golden Compass movie did very poorly at the US box office ($70mil vs $180mil production costs), though it did very well internationally ($300mil.) The US performance combined with the 2008 financial crisis probably doomed the sequel.
Andrea wrote: "Wonder what the TV series will do?..."
I watched the first 2 episodes of the BBC/HBO series today. They seem all-in on book 2, at least, since they already have people stepping through portals to modern world. (Also, the 1st scene featured a helicopter, which has me confused, but I'm only 1/4 in to The Subtle Knife.)
The 2007 The Golden Compass movie did very poorly at the US box office ($70mil vs $180mil production costs), though it did very well internationally ($300mil.) The US performance combined with the 2008 financial crisis probably doomed the sequel.
Andrea wrote: "Wonder what the TV series will do?..."
I watched the first 2 episodes of the BBC/HBO series today. They seem all-in on book 2, at least, since they already have people stepping through portals to modern world. (Also, the 1st scene featured a helicopter, which has me confused, but I'm only 1/4 in to The Subtle Knife.)


I read this many, many years ago, but I remember liking Book 2, The Subtle Knife, the best. Don't remember why now.


That fills in one of my BINGO slots, and the next book, The Martian by Andy Weir will fill in yet another.


Now switching back to fantasy with Sheepfarmer's Daughter

I'd say its a really good series if you love your dark and war fantasy reads

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

In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination by Margaret Atwood & Changeless by Gail Carriger



Now, a problem...I have four books I wanted to finish in November and one week left. So one got booted out (sorry Kathy Reichs...next year, I promise...pretty sure I said that last year too...) I think I can finish Third Watch: Acorna's Children by Anne McCaffrey by Sunday (yay extra weekend reading time + easy to read book), so that leaves most of a week to finish another...the third will probably have to be kicked out of this year since my December is pretty full too. Will see.

So tomorrow I'll borrow The Hidden Land by Pamela Dean from OpenLibrary to continue the trilogy. The downside of OpenLibrary is reading the scanned epubs and their typos, I still don't know if one character is supposed to be called Fence or Pence (and neither could the scanner apparently).

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