Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What have you been reading this September?
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Tony
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Aug 31, 2022 09:36PM

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I am now starting The Magic of Recluce by L.E. Modesitt Jr., based on the many recommandations about that series.


My core must reads:
- 3 Brian/Anderson Dunes (Sandworms of Dune started)
- 1 Card Ender series (Ender in Exile)
- 1 Asimov Robot series (Robots and Empire)
Then:
- 1 book to fill my fairy tale slot in BINGO (Cinder)
- 1 book which I'm supposed to read so I can pass it along to a friend (Altar of Eden)
- 1 free book on rivetedlit.com (Dealing in Dreams)
- 2 Starfleet Academy little kids book (yay for OpenLibrary have all kinds of hard to find stuff)
And as many graphic novels from the library I can cram in. And there's always the temptation to borrow a novel that catches my eye...I need to finish that French cat world domination trilogy LOL
Kivrin - that trilogy was something on my sorta-to-read list since I found it in my library, guess I won't have time for it this year, too little time, too much to read, but if I do another SF year I'll know that it's a decent series worth checking out :)

It was a pretty fast read...but I do read really fast according to my kids. A good story, some really good characters, and some pretty exciting twists and turns. YA all the way but worth the read when you get the chance.

text:







Audible:


==========================================
Authors:
Sarah Addison Allen, Michael Connelly, J.S. Dewes, Jamie Ford, Ann Leckie, Sunya Mara, Mary McMyne, Taylor Jenkins Reid, Marianne Wiggins
Narrators:
Adjoa Andoh, Titus Welliver


Continuing with the Aldebaran series with one final trilogy - Retour sur Aldébaran, Épisode 1 by Luiz Eduardo de Oliveira (Leo). I got into this series because someone in the group mentioned it and I got hooked! After these three there's the start of another subseries but there is only 1 book so far, will have to wait for the rest to be published :) Annoying when that happens LOL




Blather on! Interesting the various iterations truly ancient tales have gone through. We would probably recognize nothing of the tales if we heard them as they were first told. I know I had a slim copy of the stories when I was a child (must check the attic to see if it is up there), but I'd like to read a version that is less sanitized and more "historic" if you will. Yes, Burton was quite a character. If you haven't read "River of the Gods" by Candice Millard, it's quite interesting. To be honest, I knew nothing about Burton until I read it.
Oh, and have you read In The Night Garden by Catherynne Valente? It gave me a very "Arabian Nights" feel.

I just checked out the Catherynne Valente and it looks great. I have a feeling I will like that, so I added it to my 'wants to read.' Though sadly it will be next year before I will be buying books again. (Touch wood).
The way stories mutate over time really is fascinating yeah. The one I like best is the 'reattributing' thing. You get it a lot in Arthurian Mythos. Back to those wandering storytellers again. If you are a storyteller and there is a new fad going around, let's say Robin Hood is flavour of the month but you only know two Robin Hood stories and your regulars have heard them both, what do you do? You go back to some old stories you used to tell years ago that people will have forgotten and you recast all the characters. So, you can turn Arthur and the Knights of the round table into Robin Hood and his merry men and tell the same story with a couple of tweeks. That same story though might already have been a story of Lugh or Cuchulain repurposed as a King Arthur story. And on and on it goes... I keep meaning to do something based on that but never seen to get around to it.☺
Anyway, Michelle has warned people before about not encouraging me, you obviously didn't get the memo. LOL ☺.
More than enough from me I think, hobby horses have had plenty of exercise. I blather no more but thank you for the opportunity to go on and on and on... And for the excellent recommendation.



Oh Robin, do you know what auto-correct did to me yesterday?! I was trying to message, and the sentence had these two words "put in". Of course my Kindle changed it to Putin!
I guess kindles must be up on current affairs :)


The Burton translation is the only currently available English translation of the "full tales". Published in 1885, it is 10 volumes, with a further 7 supplemental volumes published between 1886 and 1888.
The Burton Club rereleased all 17 volumes with slight changes (both from the original and from each other between editions) in the early part of the 20th Century.
Both series are available as free downloads from Project Gutenberg.

Also finished Sandworms of Dune, which means I've technically finished the original series I started back in January. I wonder how it would have turned out had Frank written it? Hunters of Dune was good, but Sandworms sort of ended with me rolling my eyes a bit, but maybe it was all in the original outline and it's just the writing style that would have been different had Frank Herbert been the one to finish it rather than his son. On the whole, happy to have the mystery at the end of book 6 solved though. The only flaw was that it would have been impossible to guess the Enemy having only read the first 6 books, but then Frank had plans to write the missing piece as well.
Now to Robots and Empire by Isaac Asimov and the Deep Space Nine graphic novel Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Too Long a Sacrifice. That's the last dead-tree graphic novel my library has...but I made the mistake of checking what they had in ebook form...and they have a LOT more. Guess when it gets too cold to physically walk to the library I'll switch to the non-physical books :)


Very entertaining! https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Okay, I don't want to read THAT many Nights! LOL! I'm looking over different versions trying to decide what I want to read. Burton's edition is not at the top of my list right now.

It contains all of the 'greatest hits,' around fifty stories in total that cover the various styles of story pretty well and keep a good feel for the general Arabian Nights atmosphere. It has loads of b/w illustrations taken from the 1859 EW lane translation that really fit and enhance the text.
Sorry I couldn't just link it in but I am on the mobile app.☺

Hello Jay from Manila :)


I am currently reading

@Kivrin, I read the first of the Aurora books, but when I finally got started on book 2, I had waited so long I couldn't remember any of the characters! So I plan to wait until I have time to read both the last 2 back-to-back.

I hate it when I do that. I have James Islington's last Licanius triology book, but I haven't started it because I know I have to go back and reread the first two. Luckily, my son had all three of the Aurora books so I sort of binged them.

Hi Jay,
I expect the weather in Manila is more pleasant than the weather in Sydney 😃

I'm in the same scenario for the Temeraire series, I left it for so long now I feel I need to start over if I am to finish it. And it's a lot more than just 3 books :)

I am about a third of the way through Dead and Breakfast.


Valérian et Laureline l'Intégrale, volume 1

I haven't been reading a ton of sci fi and fantasy this month, mostly focusing on the library's read-vote-win nominations, which cover multiple genres: The Moonlight School, The Unkindness of Ravens, Miss Lattimore's Letter. Also The Tell-Tale Start and Fatemarked.

Yes, it maintained that format, at least to some extent.


Starting on La Planète des chats by Bernard Werber to wrap up the trilogy.


I have started reading The Galaxy Primes

So, on I go now with The Magazine Of Fantasy and Science Fiction for July/August 2018.
Who said time travel isn't possible? ☺☺
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