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

In June I read The Wise Man's Fear (★★★★★), The Left Hand of Darkness (★★★), MaddAddam (★★★★★), Trapped (★★★★), and Too Like the Lightning (★★½)."
Ooh, Chris, good stuff!!!

The Black Lung Captain
The Iron Jackal
The Ace of Skulls
Now I'm reading [book:..."
I need to finish that I have the last 2 books, but haven't gotten around to it.

Last night I finished Al Franken, Giant of the Senate by Al Franken, which I thoroughly loved. I laughed out loud often and cried a little, too."
I listened to Invisible Man narrated by Joe Morton as well this year. I loved Joe Morton! The Invisible Man is an uncomfortable book. It is a searing critique on society and humanity. I'm not convinced it is meant to be enjoyed, just experienced. I was really amazed by how current/applicable this novel written over 60 years ago was.
Love Al Franken!

I think he did a good job of closing it out. The last book was pretty full though.

The Black Lung Captain
The Iron Jackal
The Ace of Skulls
Now I'm reading [book:..."
I started reading BLC and was enjoying it until I set it down and it disappeared. House gremlins, prolly.

The Handmaids Tale by Margaret Atwood- I'm not too far in, but I always love her books. Also it's free on KU.

Reading too The Collapsing Empire. I should finish it fast though the two first chapters were boring.

It's hard to say. I guess it depends on what you dislike about it. I didn't love that book while I was reading it. The characters and world weren't really properly developed... or more specifically, the author had developed them in his mind but didn't really deliver that to the reader.
I read the rest of the trilogy anyways though, and it grew on me. I think the series ended up being more than the sum of its parts.



The Quantum Thief (Jean le Flambeur, #1)
Hieroglyph: Stories and Visions for a Better Future
River of Gods (India 2047, #1)
Down on the Farm (Laundry Files, #2.5)
The Fuller Memorandum (Laundry Files, #3)
Walkaway
might also reread panodra's star.

its going pretty well so far. i think i am 3 hours in... we'll see. the author put in some hours researching the subject matter though. now pandora's star is calling me.

That or Slag, the Ketty Jay's cantankerous cat, dragged it off to his lair.

I'm currently reading American War by Omar El Akkad.

MadProfessah wrote: "I just read THE COLLAPSING EMPIRE by John Scalzi. It was fine, nothing to get excited about IMHO. I probably will read the sequels but I won't feel bad if I don't catch up the story as soon as it g..."
MadProfessah, did you like it more or less than Old Man's War, enjoyment-wise? I read Collapsing Empire first and it swept me up, but OMW was a harder thing for me to fall in love with, personally.
MadProfessah, did you like it more or less than Old Man's War, enjoyment-wise? I read Collapsing Empire first and it swept me up, but OMW was a harder thing for me to fall in love with, personally.
Whilst on vacation, I read The Gunslinger, Midnight Riot, Sandman Slim, Old Man's War and Deathless!
I found Gunslinger to be brilliantly crafted but the story and characters didn't really grab me. I'll keep reading as I still enjoyed it and have heard it picks up in the next book.
Midnight Riot was hilarious! A light but well researched popcorn UF.
Sandman Slim was another UF and I think this one would likely be less universally enjoyed but was almost perfectly suited to me sense of humor and perversity.
Old Man's War did that thing I see not infrequently in sci fi where it has a lot of great ideas and strong writing ...with no plot. I called it "Elder's Game by Nicholas Sparks" because it felt like a septuagenarian version of Ender's Game with a "The Notebook" style love story appended.
And Deathless was basically what I want all retellings to be like. I hope the next one is as good! If so, she's going up there with Robin McKinley and Juliet Marillier as masters of the folk story retellings.
Now I'm trying to make Written in Red download (anyone else having issues converting .ascm files with Digital Editions??) and the library should have both the group's books for the month in soon!
I found Gunslinger to be brilliantly crafted but the story and characters didn't really grab me. I'll keep reading as I still enjoyed it and have heard it picks up in the next book.
Midnight Riot was hilarious! A light but well researched popcorn UF.
Sandman Slim was another UF and I think this one would likely be less universally enjoyed but was almost perfectly suited to me sense of humor and perversity.
Old Man's War did that thing I see not infrequently in sci fi where it has a lot of great ideas and strong writing ...with no plot. I called it "Elder's Game by Nicholas Sparks" because it felt like a septuagenarian version of Ender's Game with a "The Notebook" style love story appended.
And Deathless was basically what I want all retellings to be like. I hope the next one is as good! If so, she's going up there with Robin McKinley and Juliet Marillier as masters of the folk story retellings.
Now I'm trying to make Written in Red download (anyone else having issues converting .ascm files with Digital Editions??) and the library should have both the group's books for the month in soon!

Soo wrote: "The .ascm is epub that is DRM protected. You should be able to open that in Digital Editions or ebook reader (like Adliko). You just need to sign into DE."
Thanks, Soo! Yeah, DE is just not connecting. I'll try again now that I'm on a better wifi (and back in my home country, maybe that was an issue?)
Thanks, Soo! Yeah, DE is just not connecting. I'll try again now that I'm on a better wifi (and back in my home country, maybe that was an issue?)

I don't care about the characters. Nothing to cheer on them at the beginning since we don't really see them do anything heroic or good, on the contrary, they killed sleeping men. They aren't described well. Some fights are skipped while we are given lengthy descriptions of the boring things they do like card games.
Well I read through the three first chapters, and it is a big improvement after since the writer now takes the time to develop the scenes.
I finished The Collapsing Empire, interesting reading but made weaker by the stupidity of the bad guys, I thought at first it was interesting to see their plans were still a big nuisance but overall it was a letdown.


I read about 53% of Stormlord Rising It's a middle eastern fantasy novel. I shouldn't have wasted my time.
Right now I'm reading Every Dead Thing About 21% through and about 98 pages in. NOW THIS is what I'm talking about! It's about this ex cop whose wife and kid were killed. When someone else is killed in a similar fashion, Charile Parker seeks them out. Plus, his families ghosts are hanging around.
Oh, and I typed this and forgot to hit post, I'm now 33% through the book and I've read about another 56 pages, for a total of 154/467 pages. The words are just flying off the pages I tell ya!





I can't fault you for that. He insists on dumping us in a pile of jargon from his weird space fantasy worldbuilding without explaining anything, which I find more than a little annoying myself. It does start to come together in good time though, and I thought it was worth the effort.

Everyone else seems underwhelmed by the former, but it's probably one of my favorite Scalzi books, and I've read most of his at this point.


Rob wrote: "I guess I'm strange. I really enjoyed The Collapsing Empire and Ninefox Gambit.
Everyone else seems underwhelmed by the former, but it's probably one of my favorite..."
I must not have done a good job in my previous post (I blame jet lag) because I meant to say I really liked Collapsing Empire. It was very much my style humor and I L-O-V-E-D the lady characters. I am pretty sure these are people I know IRL suddenly punted to space, and while I'm not sure we should have let them do that, I'm delighted with the job they're doing so far.
Everyone else seems underwhelmed by the former, but it's probably one of my favorite..."
I must not have done a good job in my previous post (I blame jet lag) because I meant to say I really liked Collapsing Empire. It was very much my style humor and I L-O-V-E-D the lady characters. I am pretty sure these are people I know IRL suddenly punted to space, and while I'm not sure we should have let them do that, I'm delighted with the job they're doing so far.


Same Rob only I'm also going through a pile of webnovels and actually reading a few manga's again. As for Audio did you see the David Gemmell books are now on audio, I kept hearing good things about them but never got around to them until now, working through Legend now.

Like Trike said, I'm not expecting it to be very deep plot, or say Expanse-level Space Opera. It's just a fun-light read.
Rob wrote: "Personally I think Collapsing Empire is a decent space opera story that is made into a really enjoyable book (for me) because of the characters and Scalzi Snark.
Like Trike said, I'm not expecting..."
Yeah, Collapsing Empire is the popcorn read of space operas but I'd say the politics and world building are still quite sophisticated. It's just told through the viewpoints of characters who happen to have different types of humor that work well together. It's got a couple holes, but not more than Old Man's War, I think. It meshed better for me than OMW as a cohesive tale with a strong narrative. Definitely more character-driven than Old Man's War, and less about the science of it.
Like Trike said, I'm not expecting..."
Yeah, Collapsing Empire is the popcorn read of space operas but I'd say the politics and world building are still quite sophisticated. It's just told through the viewpoints of characters who happen to have different types of humor that work well together. It's got a couple holes, but not more than Old Man's War, I think. It meshed better for me than OMW as a cohesive tale with a strong narrative. Definitely more character-driven than Old Man's War, and less about the science of it.
Michele wrote: "Allison, I was going to re-read The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever but Spouse is re-reading Stephen King's Dark Tower series and talked me into joining him. So now I'm ..."
\m/ wicked!
Can't wait to hear your thoughts :-)
\m/ wicked!
Can't wait to hear your thoughts :-)

I tried switching to audio halfway through Ninefox Gambit, heard Jedao's voice sound like a 12-year-old boy, and shut it off after about 30 seconds and returned it :)
It seems to me that would be a hard book to follow on audio.

I thought the narrator was fine (based on my review). I guess the fact that I had to look it up means it wasn't particularly memorable (positive or negative) narration though.

If it's what the genre is, why is it weird? Or just weird that I noted it that way? Don't take me too seriously, I am not very well-versed in science fiction yet :-) I am, however, pretty sure about books that you can just shut down and enjoy, and this was one of them, for me. Scalzi has enough of a bibliography though that I can understand people having different favorites, and I would suspect witchcraft if everyone loved him universally, so I'm sure some people bounce off him entirely.
Or they better, otherwise I'm gonna see if he weighs as much as a duck.
Or they better, otherwise I'm gonna see if he weighs as much as a duck.
Mike wrote: "Why a duck? (Not to mix comedy movie metaphors)."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrzMh...
I guess he might also weigh as much as a very small rock or an apple, but that hasn't been conclusively proven yet.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrzMh...
I guess he might also weigh as much as a very small rock or an apple, but that hasn't been conclusively proven yet.

"Yeah, Collapsing Empire is the popcorn read of space operas"
It was just the use of the word the, like it's the exception to the rule, when it's probably very much in style with it.
I generally like Scalzi, but I'm in no rush to get to the first book which is going to be a series when book 2 even isn't out yet. Book 1 always seems like the easiest book it's how you handle the next few books which I feel make or break a series.
I felt like Old Man's War series went downhill starting in book 3, but both book 1 and 2 were completely fine as stand-alones while I heard that this doesn't seem to be the case with collapsing empire yet.
Aaron wrote: "Allison wrote: "If it's what the genre is, why is it weird? Or just weird that I noted it that way? Don't take me too seriously, I am not very well-versed in science fiction yet :-) I am, however, ..."
Ah, I see. I likely should have said "the popcorn-read side of space opera." I'll get it in editing, though. ;-)
I dunno, having read both TCE and OMW I think I have about the same number of questions from each at the finale, and I found the narrative structure to be more linear in TCE, personally. TCE just took itself less seriously, and was (even) less focused on the science of it being plausible. But I'm just going to keep saying the same things. I look forward to your thoughts if/when you get to it!
Ah, I see. I likely should have said "the popcorn-read side of space opera." I'll get it in editing, though. ;-)
I dunno, having read both TCE and OMW I think I have about the same number of questions from each at the finale, and I found the narrative structure to be more linear in TCE, personally. TCE just took itself less seriously, and was (even) less focused on the science of it being plausible. But I'm just going to keep saying the same things. I look forward to your thoughts if/when you get to it!
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The Black Lung Captain
The Iron Jackal
The Ace of Skulls
Now I'm reading Kings of the Wyld.