SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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What are you reading in February 2010?


Congratulations!

Yes, congratulations on ver. 2.0!! I hope you'll keep us updated. :)

Darwinia
The Time Machine
The Swarm: A Novel (881 pp!!)
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency
and a re-read of Cat's Cradle
I'd love to get to Perdido Street Station, but that might be wishful thinking.

Moving on to Jim Butcher's Small Favor next.
Then probably Michael J. Sullivan's Avempartha
Then maybe book 2 in the new Modesitt Imager universe.

That is a great book!
I am reading Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut at the moment.

Good sequence so far. Not enough depth but very much readable.


I would have liked to start on the sequel, The Other Lands, right away, but my turn came up at the library for Suzanne Collins' second Hunger Games novel, Catching Fire, so I'm reading that now. So far it's good, but not great.

I love that series :)
Other than the club reads I'm reading Bard of the Middle Ages and still slogging through Color: A Natural History of the Palette. Then I may get to The Two Towers :)

I'm reading River of Souls - The Epic Journey by Greg DiMase. Set on a planet inhabited by human females in the Large Magellanic Cloud. A group of revivable early-humans of both sexes are discovered frozen in ice at the northern region. Since this archeological find could severely upset a religious structure that once controlled the planet for thousands of annuals, the scientific team decides to keep the facts hidden at first. Eventually, they reveal the secret, only to have the religious factions start a war to take over the planet, spurring the scientific group to escape by trying a "quantum-leap" to the River of Souls, our Milky Way galaxy.
Definitely enjoying this one. On e-book format which I usually don't care for but the author keeps me interested so I keep going back.
Also reading Kingdom of the Grail by Judith Tarr. I thought this was an Arthurian novel but upon reading, I find it's set much later than Arthur's time. Merlin's still trapped and one of his descendents promises to find a way to release him. I was less than enthusiastic to continue. Once I got 30 pages in, the story started to take on a life of it's own, it doesnt need to hang on Arthur's coattails.



R





oh, I didn't know he had a new one. I've really enjoyed his other books so I will look this up!



oh, I didn't know he had a new one. I've really enjoyed his other books ..."
He also had another novel coming out this month, Black Hills.



Regarding D. Simmons, i will pick it up when I am in the US next week.


Are you liking it? I loved so many of the mental visuals I got from that book - it's probably the closest I ever got to understanding how an author paints with words.
Barb wrote: "I am reading Cryptonomicon. I imagine I will be reading it for the rest of February at least.

The Will of the Empress - Tamora Pierce
Paladin of Souls by Lois McMaster Bujold
Beyond the Shadows by Brent Weeks
Sheepfarmer's Daughter by Elizabeth Moon
The Baker's Boy by J.V. Jones
I'll be moving on to the following very soon
Maze Runner by James Dashner
The Black Company by Glen Cook
The Ship that Sang by Anne McCaffrey
Darkfall Landover by Marion Zimmer Bradley


Maybe if you read the time travel book FIRST you can figure out a way to get more time to read the OTHER book. :)


Actually, there's only one book, Erick. Galileo's Dream is the time travel novel by Kim Stanley Robinson, and I gave up on it after 160 pages. It wasn't what I expected. I was very disappointed in it.

I think that's probably true of all of Heinlein's work.

obb's

That series is definitely in my top five.

I agree, especially since they all hold up to re-reading at any age.


I really enjoyed that one too - scored a discounted copy from audible, which was nice. I'm not sure I would have had difficulty understanding it if I had read it when I was younger though. Were there particular parts you were thinking of? Maybe I'm forgetting some of the details.



How do you like "A Hymn Before Battle"? Is that your first John Ringo?

Hymn is my first Ringo, and it's surprisingly good. I'd probably rate it a high 4 right now based on the first seventy pages. It'll be clearly dated in a couple decades thanks to the whole "I'm a web developer" main character, but it's pretty compelling. A guy at work recommended it.

I hope you enjoy the rest of it. I have read a lot of John Ringo and really enjoy his writing. His stories have pretty simple characters and plot lines but I still think he does a good job telling a story. Of course, Hymn is the first in a pretty extensive set of stories. I think about ten or eleven books in all.

Dooooooh! And here I was getting ready to take a rest on long series for a while. I guess I'll be giving my Opus a workout. :p

I think that the only books that I really liked that he co-authored was the March series with Weber.
I also enjoy the Recluse series.


Mistborn: The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson
and it lived up to my high expectations. A well crafted story with some original ideas. It was a little slow in parts but well deserving of a five star rating.
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I started reading the next Vorkosigan novel this morning - Memory.
After Memory, I'll read Flesh and Spirit by Carol Berg.
Not sure where I'll head after that. I'm not enthused by my book club reading for February/March, so I may just tackle more of my own-but-unread shelf. I will read a few mysteries this month as part of my local library's Readers in the Rue Morgue contest. Typically, it doesn't take me long to read through a good mystery, so those will be fun.