Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What have you been reading this July?
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Andrea
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Jul 01, 2022 08:32AM

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I thought the books went downhill. I really liked the first one & stopped after reading "Golden Son" although I believe there are a couple more now. When I read it, it was the last & I was glad to stop.


I loved both Red Rising and Golden Son. The end of Golden Son had me tweeting crazily at Pierce Brown in excitement and dismay! I enjoyed Morning Star but not as much as the first two. I started the next book in the series with great anticipation but felt totally dismayed at the direction the story took and never finished it.


Was it the arrogance? The almost seeming omnipotence? (Did..."
It's been too long since I read the book for me to remember. I thought it was the third book, not the second, but I did write a review of them.
My review of "Golden Son": The adventure continues as Darrow enters high society & faces dangers that his fighting prowess is ill equipped to handle. I gave this only 3 stars since it dragged in places, especially in one part before a battle. There was a lot of repetition of the trust theme making people better, but there doesn't seem to be any conclusive evidence either way nor does Darrow stick to one path, so it just became boring to listen to his thoughts on the subject. There was a fair amount of action & some interesting scenes around the solar system, though.
The ending is what pulled this down from a possible 4 star to a 3 star. I hate cliff hangers & this ends on the worst kind. I'm going to read the third book, but I'll read another in between to cleanse my palette. I'm a bit peeved at Brown right now & if I have to listen to Darrow whine about his guilt when someone else does something crappy again, I might scream.
This was very well narrated with an Irish accent that fit the story perfectly.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I rated it slightly higher than the second book, but not as high as the first. The few spoilers in my review are hidden under spoiler tags. They're not bad ones, anyway.

text:












Audible:

==========================================
Authors:
Chelsea Abdullah, Melissa Albert, Becky Chambers, Blake Crouch, Akwaeke Emezi, Alix E. Harrow, Chuck Klosterman, Nina LaCour, Emily St. John Mandel, Cormac McCarthy, Erin Morgenstern, Ava Reid, Anna Smith Spark
Narrators:
Dominic Hoffman

@Kivrin too - ..."
Just to be clear, I gave the first book 4 stars & thought the rest of the trilogy would be better, but they only got 3 stars so my reviews reflected my disappointment & I didn't address all the good stuff - bad of me. Still, that sort of rating means they were pretty good, not a waste of time.

I am starting Holy Sister so I can finish off that trilogy.

Finished Metro 2033 - it has the same flaw as most post-apocalyptic novels (like The Stand) in that the main character takes FOREVER to get from one place to the next but it got weird enough by the end that I'm contemplating borrowing the next one from the library, just to see where things go.
Finished The Machine Crusade - these books are also way too long. It is multi-POV which is fine, except that the authors think our attention span is only as long as the current chapter so every time we return to a POV we're kind of reminded who that person is and what his motivation was. Also, they are stretching my belief that all key elements (Guild, foldspace, Bene Geserit, Fremen, Spice, mentats and more) all have their origins during this 30 year or so time period, when there are still at least a thousand years till we get to Paul's time. The chance of everything being invented (and mostly by one person!!!) is a bit much. Also I hate reading from the POV of an evil character since you get sentences like "And he squashed a few humans to vent his frustration". That just makes the villains feel like caricatures, the mustache twisting, hand wringing, cackling kind that take evil to the next level...but maybe that's just me :)
I've also bee reading the little kid version of Star Trek Academy books, most of which are available on OpenLibrary, about halfway through.
And I also got my hands on a free copy of a Star Wars little kid book...OpenLibrary unfortunately does not have most of the rest of that series, oh well. Annakin gets on my nerves anyway, he's an annoying kid with a chip on his shoulder.
Now I'm behind in my reading plans, I've been reading one Ender book each month but didn't read one in June, just getting to it now - Shadow of the Hegemon by Orson Scott Card - will see if I can fit two of them in this month to catch up.


I'm now re-reading Sword Song and already happy to be back again. A stressful work week and an injection of Uhtred-level "take no s**t" motivation is always nice, lol.


There is a sequel to Sand coming out in October. It's called "Across the Sand". Can't wait to read it!

I've heard of it but I've never read it."
I agree with others. The Wool series is very good. And I enjoyed Sand and Beacon 23 as well.


I've read

I'm almost finished with

I'm also reading


So many books! Admittedly starting the year by deciding to read the entire Dune series (including books by the son of which there's about 20), Asimov's robot novels/short stories, and Card's Ender series (which has soooo many spinoffs duology/trilogy), it doesn't leave room for much else :o) Maybe 1 or 2 a month.
Herbert's son's books are ok, the first trilogy I actually enjoyed (Prelude to Dune), I'm mostly slogging through the next trilogy (Legends), but I look forward to jumping to the future to see where Frank Herbert left off since the last book ended threads dangling, I'm hoping to enjoy to two books his son wrote to wrap that up.
Asimov's stories were great, but the novels aren't impressing me all that much. On the other hand I've absolutely loved every Orson Scott Card book so far.
One thing I've been squeezing in are graphic novels/manga - gotten through L'expédition and Les cavernes. Someone here had mentioned this series and I've gotten quite into it, if for nothing else than the really inventive alien species. I've also been pillaging the library for every Star Trek graphic novel they have. Every time I thought I found them all I tried a different search criteria and found more.
Hard to believe but counting graphic novels, kid books and short stories, I've already read 107 books this year!!






The first book was so slow; I don't know if I want to continue.

Looking at some of the reviews I'm kind of going with this guy, and also agreeing with them that at least the artwork was good:
"A story about a killer planet is always going to be goofy but, even accepting that, Remina is badly written and so coconuts as to be laughable. The dialogue is always awful, the plotting is child-like and one absurd thing happens after another until you don’t care about any of it. "
I like his choice of words "coconuts" :) I got through it as fast as I did since most of the dialog was "hah hah hah" i.e. a person panting as they ran, or "Aaaaaah!!!!" as they were tortured. Oh and lots of "KILL!!!", must not forget that. Those three syllables felt like a third of the dialog :)
Interesting thought though, if a giant planet had a giant tongue that would wrap around the Earth and then yank back to make it spin really fast, would it create a wind that would pick up an angry mob in Japan, and whip them around the world in a few hours? And where was everyone else? Were there several billion people flying around?
I think I'll go back and finish the last Betelgeuse book L'autre. This one also has a whole lot of weird but written in a way that you feel if you keep with it (the overall series keeps going for a LOT more books), at least some of it will be explained!

And back to Dune, gotta keep working on those - The Battle of Corrin - by Brian Herbert
I also found A Wrinkle in Time: The Graphic Novel by Hope Larson in the library so that's what I'm reading after Remina.



Me, too! Yeah, I get the whole "reality" and real life is "messy" things, but that's not why I read books. I want hope and joy and at least some happiness when I finish a book. I don't get a lot of enjoyment out of reading 200 plus pages and "everyone dies". C'mon. Give me something! That's why I tend to avoid the grim-dark stuff.

Me, too! Yeah, I get the whole "reality" and real life is "messy" things, but that's not why I read books. I want hope and joy and at least some ha..."
Me, too, Kivrin. I like happy escapes. Or at least pleasant endings.


I have started Yellowstone Fallout, the third book in the series.


Exactly. Why would I want to read about people I despise? That's a big "did not finish" for me.

Yep. Everything you just said. I have read some books like this, and they were horrible. For me, at least. There has to be hope and virtue in there somewhere.

I read "The Power". I enjoyed it.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Erin Morgenstern (other topics)Dominic Hoffman (other topics)
Becky Chambers (other topics)
David Seed (other topics)
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