Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What Have You Been Reading This April?
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Apr 02, 2020 05:49AM
So, what have you been reading in lockdown?
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Completed:









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Avatars Inc: 2030 Add Oil by SL Huang, 2033 La Mer Donne by Sarah Pinsker, 2037 Elsewhere by James S.A. Corey, 2039 Two Watersheds by Kelly Robson, 2040 At the End of a Most Perfect Day by Nino Cipri, 2041 Oannes, From the Flood by Adrian Tchaikovsky, 2042 A Bird Does Not Sing Because It Has an Answer by Johanna Sinisalo, 2044 Incarnate by Indrapramit Das, 2047 Waiting for Amelia by Robert Reed, 2048 Robot and Girl With Flowers by Paul McAuley, 2052 Banding by Julianna Baggott, 2054 Uma by Ken Liu, 2055 Neuro-Dancer by Tom Sweterlitsch, 2058 The Final Performance of the Amazing Ralphie by Pat Cadigan, 2059 Thirty-three by Tade Thompson, 2061 The Search for [Flight X] by J.Y. Yang, 2064 Behold the Deep Never Seen by Merc Fenn Wolfmoor, 2065 The Ulgrieb Case by Jeffrey Ford, 2066 Overburden by K Chess, 2068 Harmony by Dr. Harry Kloor, 2069 Bounty by Charles Yu, 2071 In the Lands of the Spill by Aliette de Bodard, 2074 A Mountain to Climb by Julie Nováková, 2079 Porcelain Claws in Cinnamon Earth by Madeline Ashby
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Authors:
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Holly Black, Jeanine Cummins, Hao Jingfang, Ken Liu, Seanan McGuire, Tochi Onyebuchi, Kate Quinn, Nora Roberts, Ann VanderMeer








In this sci-fi sequel to 'The Andromeda Strain', the nefarious alien microparticles are back.....and this time they're building a large structure in the Brazilian rain forest.
Good story. 3.5 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I was curious about that one, this year I'm doing a "complete series I've started theme" but this one I wasn't sure about given the original author, well, would be writing from the grave, so I was a bit leery if this would be any good seeing as the original wrapped itself up just fine and a sequel was unnecessary. Thanks for the review!

Started Torn and Zoe's Tale and just started gamma reading Age of Empyre.

I was curious about that one, this year I'm doing a "complete series I've started theme" but this o...
Thanks for the review!"
You're welcome. 🙂



I'm now halfway through

Next will be

Andrea wrote: "Finished the Reich's book and now I'm back to the Dark Tower with book number 4 - Wizard and Glass by Stephen King. This one is noticeable longer than the three that came before it, probably double the size of the first and I had the updated/extended version."
Ah, just wait until you see that doorstop of a number 5 :)

I read The Anubis Gates, and I can see why people would love it, but it wasn't really my cup of tea.


I then read another mystery, The Woman in the Window. Enjoyed it throughout, definitely emotional at times but was not a big fan of the conclusion if I'm honest. 3.5/5 stars
Anyway, tonight I was in the mood for some Warhammer so have dived back into the Horus Heresy with Fulgrim. Will see what the Emperor's Children have in store. Hope we get to see lots of Saul Tarvitz, though Solomon Demeter seems a promising character so far. I hope Eidolon is not a main pov though 😆
The Bone Ships by R.J. Barker was a pretty good seafaring yarn in an interesting fantasy world with a good cast of characters, though I wish the author wasn't so quick to use the "cavalry arrives in the nick of time" trope so often or predictably.
JT wrote: "Just beginning Jordan/Sanderson's book #14 in the WOT series, "A Memory of Light." It's my 2nd time reading the series, but the first time I didn't make it all the way through. So I restarted it! ..."
I loved it! :) More comments in this topic.
I loved it! :) More comments in this topic.
For anyone who enjoyed Ian Tregillis's The Alchemy War alt-history steampunk fantasy trilogy, the current issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, March/April 2020 features an excellent prequel novella by Tregillis that'll fill in the backstory of Mab and the origin of that interesting artifact she has.


I got mine all used, and they are almost all different editions which is kind of neat but looks horrible lined up on a shelf!. Some short some tall, so it's actually hard to compare their sizes :o) My 5 looks a little less thick, but then it is taller, something between a mass and a trade paperback, odd size really.

I like the guys, I just like Rincewind and the witches more :)
Andrea wrote: "I got mine all used, and they are almost all different editions which is kind of neat but looks horrible lined up on a shelf!"
I have this edition (almost):
www.amazon.fr/gp/product/1444723472
so the spines look like this:

except with "DARK TOWER" written across the entire length. I think it looks pretty cool.
Book 5 is even bigger than the final one!

But then he's revised some of them, I have the first one "revised and expanded" though it's still the shortest one even with the expansion. It's kind of funny because I read The Stand abridged (I can't imagine how that 800+ abridged book could be even longer!!) and read the Gunslinger expanded.
King does have a talent for really dragging things out (The Stand in particular was looooong, but was worth it to see how it ties into The Dark Tower just now, I read Salem's Lot and The Eye of the Dragon for the same reason). The first two books were fine, the third started to drag but I was still ok because I tried to solve all the riddles myself so that entertained me enough. However I'm starting to feel the "longness" in this fourth book. You know, where you feel you could chop off a third of the pages and not lose anything.
I may need to take a break after this one for a little while. Or maybe read Wind and then break before that massive Wolves.

I've only read three King books so far, but The Dark Tower looks promising.

It's definitely interesting with a lot of questions and mysteries. There are gunslinger "knights", and magicians, and portals, and bears with satelite dishes on their heads that cough up worms, and evil intelligent trains...I am much impressed with King's imagination to come up with this crazy stuff and somehow make it all work together. It's SF, and Fantasy, and Horror all combined. And like Pixar films, all his other books touch upon the Dark Towever world, I'm not really into horror so I picked the three that had the strongest connection.

I think Stephen King's best work is his earlier stuff - when he wasn't such a megastar and actually had to pay attention when editors told him to shorten it :)

In other readings, I'm up to book 46 of Bleach, I have 4 more and then I have to hope the library opens again some day.
I'm up to book 12 in the Oz series, with only a couple more after that. Since I no longer commute my e-reading has slowed down.

Yeah, I'm afraid book 5 is exactly like that; I liked it and it's got this western vibe, but it is loooong and a reminder that sometimes less is more (and that King needs a ruthless editor). Stil, looking forward to finishing the series, hopefully this year.

I am ready for some science-fiction for a change, and I'll tackle the Vorkosigan Saga by Lois McMaster Bujold, starting with Falling Free. Quite a while ago I read the next two volumes in a French translation, and liked them but did not continue. I'll re-read them in the original version this time.

Opens with a lock-down. Which obviously, given the length of time it takes to write a book, is a coincidence.

I've decided my favorite character is Oy :)
(view spoiler)
Now to my yearly installment of the Vorkosigan Saga with Miles, Mystery, and Mayhem by Lois McMaster Bujold which contains Cetaganda, Ethan of Athos, and "Labyrinth". Looking forward to something light compared to King, and short (the two books + story together are shorter than Wizard and Glass!)

Carrying on with the next book in the series, Descent of Angels



Madam Bovary can be quite the poisoned chalice. For many readers, classics like that don't cut mustard anymore. This is only my personal experience and opinion.

https://stanleywheeler.blogspot.com/2...

Books mentioned in this topic
The Girl Who Wasn't There (other topics)Along the Tapajós (other topics)
Sad Cypress (other topics)
Legion (other topics)
The Bone Collection: Four Novellas (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Fernando Vilela (other topics)Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (other topics)
John C. Wright (other topics)
Hao Jingfang (other topics)
Martha Wells (other topics)
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