Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What have you been Reading in January 2020?


I haven't started a new book yet, still reading the one I began on December 29, Sword of Kings. Its the latest Saxon Stories book published earlier this year. So far I'm enjoying it as usual, but I found something about the dialogue between Uhtred and Finan feels like Cornwell is writing it more like the TV series than the way its usually written in the books. Just a weird feeling I have that he's allowed the TV show to influence him a bit. Still really enjoying it though.

Completed:

















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Authors:
Jennifer Ackerman, L.X. Beckett, Chanelle Benz, Sue Burke, Roshani Chokshi, Hafsah Faizal, Theodora Goss, Dean Koontz, R.F. Kuang, Derek Künsken, Alex Michaelides, Erin Morgenstern, Téa Obreht, Ann Patchett, A.G. Riddle, V.E. Schwab, Tara Westover

Anyway, I just finished Fahrenheit 451.
I'm reading It and I, Jedi.
And I have my yearlong H.P. Lovecraft reading.

Now going for some general fiction with Medicine Walk

Now, I had this nice pile of books I pulled out for the next couple months, but instead of picking something from there, my sister came home from visiting a friend with a couple borrowed books. Seeing as she can't read two books at the same time, she offered to let me read Perdido Street Station by China Miéville. My first reaction was "No, can't *start* another series when my goal for the year is to complete already started series" but in the end, since I'd heard a lot about Mieville and I've never read any of his books, I gave in. I just can let a book back out of my house without reading it first :)
Going to be a dark start to the year, along with F451 I had Divergent and Dark Tower and now Perdido Station, as well as a Kathy Reich mystery which usually involves the gruesome dead. Wasn't that I particularly wanted to be morbid but just worked out that way.




The cover looks like the book's about hackers but it actually isn't; the tale reflects ways to use and abuse the gig economy with an amoral net platform.
And In the Shadow of Vesuvius

A great fun 1902 murder mystery in the ruins of Pompeii.


When an artificial intelligence program gets loose and runs amok, it's creator enlists the help of a CIA agent to try to stop it.
Thin plot. 2 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

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

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
This pointed to your review of The Rats.

Also, I really hate when a truly evil character with no redeeming features gets his own POV/thoughts exposed, not because I don't want to be in their head, but it's just so two-dimensional, all they can think about is drowning kittens and stealing candy from kids while wringing their hands and cackling evilly at how wonderfully evil they are. Always comes off as a cartoon character. I recommend writers be really, really careful when they choose to go inside their villain's head...
Now as I was figuring out what series I had started but didn't finish I had my shelf sorted alphabetically and found that The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is actually a huge series. They were all free on GR itself so thought it might be fun to see what I missed as a kid, starting on The Marvelous Land of Oz. Plus kids books are great when commuting since doesn't matter when you are forced to interrupt your reading because you get to your stop :)

It always used to surprise customers in the bookstore I worked in to discover that there were a series of Oz books. They are all free on Project Gutenberg as well, along with all the rest of Baum's works.
Andrea wrote: " found that The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is actually a huge series..."
I've had it as a low-level goal to check out the Oz series beyond that first book for a couple of years. There were a couple of motivations, but one strange thing that sparked my interest was the Wearing the Cape superhero series. Several Oz characters leak thru into it, reminding me how ignorant I am of everything beyond the 1st book.
However, one of my goals for this year is to get back to reading non-fiction, which I've not done much of in the past couple of years. So my TBR list gets ever longer.
I've had it as a low-level goal to check out the Oz series beyond that first book for a couple of years. There were a couple of motivations, but one strange thing that sparked my interest was the Wearing the Cape superhero series. Several Oz characters leak thru into it, reminding me how ignorant I am of everything beyond the 1st book.
However, one of my goals for this year is to get back to reading non-fiction, which I've not done much of in the past couple of years. So my TBR list gets ever longer.

Someone let me know if it’s worth continuing the series with them 😊

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

I didn't mind so much that Oz The Great and Powerful was inconsistent with any of the books because of that.

I'm now reading the first Detective Perez book by Ann Cleaves, Raven Black. 100 pages in and liking it. Like that it takes place just after New Year's. It's been a while since I watched the first Shetland season so I can't remember what the conclusion of the first mystery was and not sure if there are differences with the show.

Some of the changes should have been done more whole-heartedly or not at all. If you want Dorothy to learn in the course of her adventures that there is no place like home -- a sentiment she expresses in the opening of the book -- you need her to, say, go see the Wizard because he can get her permission to stay in Oz.

That's a pretty good one, especially if you've previously read The Lore of the Unicorn


it's been entertaining to see how she unfolds another chapter of the long tale. So I also purchased the novella, Knife Children...and shall finish it today (only 20% to go).

I enjoyed the individual stories in those novellas! For me, their tales fleshed out much more than the characters' causes in the overall story.
And, o yes! I'm looking forward to the final book.


I'm now reading another mystery Black Skies which is an Detective Elrendur book without Erlendur. I've already read all the books in the series with him as the MC and now the only to remaining are this one (which has his colleague Sigurdur Oli as the MC) and one other that also has another of his colleagues as MC. I'll have to reread all the Erlendur books at some point, I really enjoy his character a lot

There is no internal consistency in those books. Most of them were pretty bad, honestly.


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

On a brighter note, also finished the Gods of Blood and Empire: really enjoyed both of McClellan’s trilogies.

Currently reading The Last Wish as I begin my journey into the Witcher world.

Yeah...even in just this second one, everyone seems rather mean to each other, then they realize it and tell each other not to be mean. But then I thought of the old Disney cartoons where everyone was beating everyone else to a pulp and that was supposed to be funny or at least entertaining so "being mean" was viewed a little differently then. I'm guessing there's a reason people know there's the first book (and not just because of the movie) but unaware of the 13 others.
Finished Perdido Street Station, I see why it falls under the "weird" genre (not a spoiler...the character Lin doesn't have an insectoid head, she has a whole insect for a head, with all it's legs and a butt that exudes stuff, etc, and that was one of the more normal creatures wandering about). However, I see why it got nominated for a bunch of awards and won a few (yay, filled that BINGO slot). I liked that the main character was this overweight absent-minded inventor kindhearted kind of guy. I'll read the rest of the trilogy.
Started on Divergent so that I'll eventually be able to watch those movies I recorded ages ago :)
So far not doing good on "finishing series I started" but doing really well with "starting new series" which was not my plan for the year, oh well LOL

After all I discovered that the Sorcerer's Apprentice was only about 50 lines long, if that, so I wasn't sure I wanted that to count as having actually read something :) I mean took only a couple minutes, seemed too easy for a reading challenge.
Books mentioned in this topic
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (other topics)Kill Order (other topics)
The Last Human (other topics)
Under the Knife (other topics)
The Ball and the Cross (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Andy Peloquin (other topics)Lee Bacon (other topics)
Kelly Parsons (other topics)
G.K. Chesterton (other topics)
Derek Künsken (other topics)
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New year, new books? What have you grabbed off the stack?