SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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What are reading in 5/11?
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Kevin
(last edited Apr 30, 2011 01:51PM)
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Apr 30, 2011 09:55AM

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I won't plan anything this month. Just read whatever happens to grab me.
Though I did get Grunts and Territory yesterday. So those two might get read in May.
Though I did get Grunts and Territory yesterday. So those two might get read in May.


Will do, Jackie. It, and Grunts, were in our recent poll and they both sounded interesting enough that I went ahead and ordered them.
Gotta love it when you get a free gift card from Borders. It was most serendipitous :)
Gotta love it when you get a free gift card from Borders. It was most serendipitous :)


Well damn. I was looking forward to it, too.


Given time, I could improve "thundered down," but it's difficult to nitpick when you don't know the context. :-)


A) Margaret Atwood "Handmaid's Tale"
B) Neil Gaiman "American Gods"
C) Kim Stanley Robinson "Red Mars"
D) Ursula K. Le Guin "Lathe of Heaven"
E) Michael Moorcock "Behold the Man"


Meat: A Benign Extravagance, by Simon Fairlie, which is fascinating but too dense to read for very long;
Passion Play, by Sean Stewart, which is wonderfully written but somehow not grabbing me;
World-Building, by Stephen L. Gillett, which I've almost finished but which has stopped being useful so I haven't felt like pushing through the last 20 pages;
and
Quatrain, by Sharon Shinn, which I wanted to be light and fun (I've been a fan of Shinn since Archangel) but which is kind of crappy so far.
I have the following two volumes waiting to be read so I can review them:
Embassytown, by China Miéville
and
Cut Through the Bone, by Ethel Rohan
I've promised my dad I'm going to read Until I Find You, by John Irving.
And various book groups I'm in have several titles that I want to read planned for discussion in May.
But in my current mood I'm probably going to pick up some more Georgette Heyer. She's shot all my reading challenges to hell this year, but I just can't hold it against her. (Mostly because her novels are delightful, but also because she's dead so I don't think she'd care.)

"A) Margaret Atwood "Handmaid's Tale"
B) Neil Gaiman "American Gods"
C) Kim Stanley Robinson "Red Mars"
D) Ursula K. Le Guin "Lathe of Heaven"
E) Michael Moorcock "Behold the Man" "
that's five classics right there. Every one a five star book, IMHO



I was not really impressed with any of his books, especially after I read a lot of fantasy. All them were quest fantasy based is what I hated the most, but it was good for the early 80s when epic fantasy was just basically starting up.

This title is amazing"
Denae - It's a good story, quite different, but I'm not sure it lives up to the title. The title does catch your attention though. I've got The Toyminator still to read.


I'm almost done with the Hyperion books: Rise of Endymion
I'm planning on giving both book group titles a shot: Opening Atlantis, The Blade Itself
My classic selection: The Hunchback of Notre-Dame
Gotta hone those parenting skills: The Happiest Toddler on the Block: The New Way to Stop the Daily Battle of Wills and Raise a Secure and Well-Behaved One- to Four-Year-Old
Continue with Dresden: White Night, Small Favor
Okay, I now think I'm a bit nuts to have that many titles. Oh well. I was never known for my sanity.
Someday I'll finish off the Hyperion books...

The writing is charming, the protagonist is likeable, and it sort of ambles along at its own pace. More like reading THE HOBBIT than LOTR, if you take my meaning.
I'll write a more complete review soon, but I found this a pleasant read. Be forewarned that it does leave you hanging at the end, since it sets up for a sequel.


For now, I'm going to read Corvus (The Macht #2).

So my current reading list is comprised of The Scarlet Letter as my "classics read", The Wealth of Nations for my school read, and Have His Carcase to read on the computer. Slowing down to do some writing and homework in between books might be good...

So my current rea..."
The Wealth of Nations is one of the most often referenced and least actually read books.

After that I don't have any plans for the month other than chipping away at my owned-to-read shelf.

Lots of those on my shelf. Comes with the territory, I suppose. When you take a minor in History and Philosophy of Science, these things happen to you. Smith is one of my readings for a History of the Enlightenment in England course, together with Gibbon, Fielding and Hume.


Next on my to-read:
-War of the worlds
-The Man in the Gray Flannel Skirt (giveaway win)
-Catch-22
-Island

Started Old Man's War on the Nook and The Black Company plus a re-read of House of Chains for other group reads

Right now I'm reading the latest issue of Asimov's Science Fiction magazine on my Kindle, and I want to dive into Boneshaker when I'm done with the magazine. Also, as soon as I get the chance I'm going to pick up Theories of Flight by Simon Morden. I finished the first book in his Metrozone trilogy, Equations of Life, and reallly enjoyed it. Lastly, I want to pick up Fuzzy Nation by John Scalzi when it's released next week.

Lots of those on my shelf. Comes with the territory, I suppose. When you take a minor in History and Philosophy of Science, these things happen to you. Smith is one of my readings for a Hist..."
I studied Middle Eastern history with a focus on comparative Islamic political philosophy. I have developed a love/hate relationship with treatises, manifestos, and thick books written in an archaic manner.

Going to try a historical mystery with The Alehouse Murders by Maureen Ash.



It'll be nice to see how the book turns out.


How far are you on A Wizard of Earthsea?

i've heard good things about it, although i am leery as i dislike Martin Amis generally
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