SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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What Else Are You Reading?
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What Are You Reading? 2017 Thread



I haven't seen the movie. I'll consider watching it after the book. I am a fan of Carl Sagan in general, so I have high hopes for the book.
I finished Fated and my initial impression remained throughout. It was a lot of fun, it did all the things I generally like in urban fantasy, and it was exactly like Dresden. Which I guess gives me hope for books that people compare readily to other works and fan fic as an art form.
I'm about 1/4 the way through Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things, which was not my intention to start now, but I was stuck on an island without my next book. C'est la vie. It's the Jenny Lawson we know and love from her blog, and I really appreciate the focus on mental health and awareness.
I'll likely finish that shortly and then I'll be starting London Falling!
I'm about 1/4 the way through Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things, which was not my intention to start now, but I was stuck on an island without my next book. C'est la vie. It's the Jenny Lawson we know and love from her blog, and I really appreciate the focus on mental health and awareness.
I'll likely finish that shortly and then I'll be starting London Falling!

I haven't seen the movie. I'll consider ..."
The film is long but well made and worth viewing. The book is excellent.


If you haven't tried it, look up Days Gone Bad by Eric Asher. I enjoyed listening/reading to the first three of the Vesik series. If you sign up for his email list, you can get the first book for free. =)
Vesik and Alex Verus were both recommendations on Audible for Dresden fans. I enjoyed both!
Slowly working my way in Sorcerer to the Crown. It has interesting characters & setting. The writing is overdone and sometimes hard to get past but I'm determined to finish it.
Wrapped up Dreamer's Pool & I really enjoyed it! It wasn't what I thought it would be. I had this idea that it would be an epic revenge themed adventure but it's not. Great characters & draws strong emotions. It's more like an old school fairy tale rather than the cleaned up kiddie ones.
Next: Dark Matter and Slaughterhouse-Five
Soo wrote: "If you haven't tried it, look up Days Gone Bad by Eric Asher. I enjoyed listening/reading to the first three of the Vesik series. If you sign up for his email list, you can get the first book for free. =)..."
Thanks, Soo! I appreciate the recommendation and have added it to my list :) Great tip about the free book too!
Also Juliet Marillier is one of my favorite authors, glad to hear that the Black & Grimm series is interesting as well! I really must get to it.
Thanks, Soo! I appreciate the recommendation and have added it to my list :) Great tip about the free book too!
Also Juliet Marillier is one of my favorite authors, glad to hear that the Black & Grimm series is interesting as well! I really must get to it.

There was a lot about it that I liked, but it didn't quite gel for me. Decided I am going to read the sequel, to see if it the sequel "settles into its stride" or if it is simply that the series is not quite to my taste.

In my opinion, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? is a good early choice, and also..."
I loved Do Androids Dream... it's my favorite of Dick's.


Juliet Marillier answered a question I had about Blackthorn & Grim. I have to finish it now. Ha. Must satisfy the bookworm curiosity.
Had a slight detour & fun reading this contemporary romance, The Photographer's Assistant. Free book on Amazon.
Almost done with Dark Matter and it's so good! I have my fingers crossed for the ending.
Slaughterhouse-Five was a book recommended to me to read in May and I decided to give it a go. Woah. Poetic crack. I can't decide if it's amaze balls or slightly coherent insanity.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
I just finished the first book, Lightless, which I gave one star to because it is relentlessly idiotic and dull.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I'm going to read a few of his books from the fifties before starting the LOA collection. I want to get a feel for how PKD grew as a writer. I just read The Cosmic Puppets and found it to be a good early novel.

I have this audio on my phone and I've been hesitant. Thanks for the info.


I really want to read The Stars Are Legion, but at this rate the only way I'll find time for it is if I skip some book club reading :P
I just finished reading Blackbirds and it was one of the most psychologically aggressive books I've read that was not about genocide and it is probably in my top five urban fantasy series at present. So, take that for what it's worth. (My review)
And as a sort of strange antithesis, I also just finished Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things which is the happiest book about the saddest conditions I've ever read. I laughed, I pretended not to cry, I forced my guy to listen to parts that made me laugh too hard to read out loud. Good stuff. (My review)
Now reading London Falling, which from the description should be a nice, easy going romp to soothe my rumpled feathers after Blackbirds. Right? ;-)
And as a sort of strange antithesis, I also just finished Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things which is the happiest book about the saddest conditions I've ever read. I laughed, I pretended not to cry, I forced my guy to listen to parts that made me laugh too hard to read out loud. Good stuff. (My review)
Now reading London Falling, which from the description should be a nice, easy going romp to soothe my rumpled feathers after Blackbirds. Right? ;-)

Also reading the last Discworld book by Terry Pratchett, Raising Steam. I held off reading it for a while now, I just couldn't bring myself to finish the series off. I'm going to miss him so much, knowing I'll never read another new book with Rincewind, Moist, Carrot, Vimes, Susan, Death, Granny Weatherwax and all the other great characters that inhabit the disc-shaped world on the back of Great A'tuin.




Dark Matter - Smart, compelling and thought provoking.
Monster - Fun book with interesting magic/alt-world system. The main characters aren't likeable but still engaging.
Follow Me Back was great! Because it was all that I thought it would be and still managed to surprise me.
Almost done with The Silent Corner and I can't wait for Koontz to write more Jane Hawk books. This is a great start to a series.

Contact - ★★★★☆
Bob was buckets of fun. Highly recommended for geeks seeking a funny, light-hearted... something.
Contact on the other hand was a much more meaningful book.
I was listening to Bob while reading Contact and during the slow-going first half of Contact I kept wishing I was listening to Bob instead. The second half of Contact was somewhat profound.



It's about time! How you managed to horde that for 6 months without reading it is beyond me.

1. Regarding Ducks and Universes by Neve Maslakovic. This one had a cool premise, or at least one that appeals to me personally, but I didn’t feel like the author took full advantage of the interesting setting she created. My review.
2. Raising Steam by Terry Pratchett, the last book in the Moist Von Lipwig subseries of Discworld and the second-to-last book on my publication order reading list. This is one of the Discworld novels that I’ve liked the least. The subject matter didn’t really interest me, and I thought some of the characters, particularly Vetinari who is one of my favorites, didn’t sound like themselves. My review.
3. The Shepherd's Crown, the last Discworld book. I liked this one pretty well. It’s hard to believe I’ve actually reached the end. It took me 1 year and 21 days to read the series from start to finish, reading quite a few other books in-between to avoid burnout. It was a fun ride. My review.
Now I’m detouring from SF&F briefly to read a classic, A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens. I think I already mentioned this a few months ago, but this year I decided to try to get some non-SF&F classics into my reading diet, starting with the easily-achievable goal of one classic per quarter. I’m alternating between completely new-to-me books and books that I read in school but didn’t like and/or don’t remember. This book is one of the latter.

Apparently he's already finished writing the trilogy. We just have to wait for them to be published :)

1. Regarding Ducks and Universes by Neve Maslakovic. This one had a cool premise, or at least one that appeals to me personally, but I didn’t feel..."
That's next on my "to listen" list, after I finish The Curse of the Pharaohs.
Coming into the final chapters of How the White Trash Zombie Got Her Groove Back. What a fun series!

I’ll be interested to learn what you think of it once you read it. I guess it’s one of the more obscure books on our group shelf; I’ve never seen it mentioned anywhere else.



Another group here on GR is going to be reading Brave New World, I think I will join in .
Other than that, I've fallen into a re-read of Laurie R. King's Holmes/Russell series. Currently on the fourth one, The Moor.




I am currently reading The Wise Man's Fear.



My third time for Dune, for the bookshelf group. Everything else is for the first time.

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I'm also about to start Contact for an offline book club, which I'm going to have to rush through.