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What have you been reading this November?
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Andrea
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Nov 01, 2020 07:04AM

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Seems this year I'm reading those classic dystopias, started with Fahrenheit 451, and planned to end with 1984, both of those are re-reads but this is my first time for A Brave New World. Maybe I should try to squeeze in We as well...
Also went through the free books on Rivetedlit.com and I'll start with one that is a standalone and not available at my library - The Lady Rogue by Jenn Bennett. It's got a Dracula connection so I guess my October reading isn't completely done yet...
And to wrap up my start of November, I've got Kabumpo in Oz by Ruth Plumly Thompson on my eReader if I get around to it, those Simon and Shuster freebies get priority since they expire at the end of the month :)


Completed:











==========================================
Authors:
P. Djèlí Clark, Ken Follett, Tana French, Hank Green, Micaiah Johnson, N.K. Jemisin, Stephen Graham Jones, Alex North, Karen Osborne, K.J. Parker, V.E. Schwab
==========


Now something light, The Silver Chair by C.S. Lewis


Also ear reading Moon of the Crusted Snow -


In this book anthropologist Eben Kirksey updates us on cutting edge genetic manipulation that could change the human race.
Lots of interesting information presented in an interesting format. 3.5 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...






Now on to a historical novel, but since everything Arthurian is more or less made up, no matter how much research went into it, it's kind of a fantasy too :) Black Horses for the King by Anne McCaffrey

This was the sort of thing that led to her being hailed as the next Leigh Brackett. . . .

It's the third and last of his trilogy.


Next up, and by coincidence, another horse tale as I continue with my journeys through Narnia - The Horse and His Boy by C.S. Lewis
I'm also down to the last two Bleach books. I counted and there are at least 9 storylines/battles still ongoing. Will be interesting to see if they all get wrapped up, gonna really have to cram them in. Would be a bit of a disappointment if the final battle has to be squeezed into a couple pages. It was what disappointed me in Eragon, after all the long drawn out battles along the way, the climax was a page or two at most, or at least felt that way (and also the longest denouement ever)


In this sci-fi novel, one of Saturn's moons leaves orbit and heads for outer space. A mining spaceship follows the departing moon with unexpected consequences.
Good story. 3.5 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

For my dead tree reading decided to get another Star Trek book in this year - Bloodletter by K.W. Jeter


It was a great ride, I enjoyed the various themes mixed in there and liked the characters. I wonder if King added the coda because he feared backlash or if he intended to write it anyway; for me I'm glad he wrote it because while I agree that it's the journey not the destination (view spoiler) I also believe that it's the author's job to have an idea of how things end so I don't like endings which are too open and which explain nothing.
It's probably the most meta series you can ever write, (view spoiler) .
Also I'll remember Stephen King as the only writer to call himself a "miserable excuse for a man" with a "yellow, lazy ass" in his own works of fiction (:
I also watched the movie, and in fact I didn't need to put it off until I'd read the books, because as it turns out you can watch the movie and still not have a clue as to what the books are about, so no spoilers there.
Yet my quest in not over as I still need to read The Wind Through the Keyhole; also while reading the series I wished I had read Salem's lot and re-read Insomnia as those books are strongly tied with the series so I'll probably read the former next year.
I am now reading

Given the size of those books I don't expect I'll finish both this year.["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>


It was a great ride, I enjoyed the various themes mixed in there and liked the characters. I wonder if King added the coda because he feared..."
My reactions were very similar, though I had the benefit of having read 'Salem's Lot twice, and I'd read The Stand (which connects in one scene but not as important as 'Salem's). I had not read Insomnia though, heard it had connections with the Crimson King which I thought might be good since (view spoiler)
I'm still working my way through Hearts in Atlantis, but I think the only story that actually ties in with The Dark Tower is "Low Men in Yellow Coats". I looked it up after having read the last book and there was that mentioned but unexplained bit regarding Ted Brautigan's adventures in our world.
Oh, and my understanding is that Piranesi is not connected to Johnathan Strange but I could be wrong.["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>


Books mentioned in this topic
Mission to Horatius (other topics)Manners and Monsters (other topics)
The Magician’s Nephew (other topics)
The Dark Tower (other topics)
The Wind Through the Keyhole (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Tana French (other topics)C.S. Lewis (other topics)
N.K. Jemisin (other topics)
Ruth Plumly Thompson (other topics)
K.W. Jeter (other topics)
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