SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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What Else Are You Reading?
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What Else Are You Reading in 2020?

I read it and didn't get it, either, but then I'm apparently impervious to P. G. Wodehouse, as well. In both cases I tend to think it's a me, American, thing. On the other hand, I enjoyed Edmund Crispin's goofy mysteries, Monty Python was frequently hilarious and so was The Goon Show, so I'm not entirely biased against British humor.
For what it's worth, a Brit I know on another website is immune to Christopher Moore, so maybe it goes both ways.


please know that no animals, not expressly designated as livestock, were ever injured in the making of this message or likely in the "Cats eating Ice Cream" videos.

Ahh, I can't wait to have time to get to Relentless Moon, Sue! Tell us how it goes when you're done!


Book Name:- Thirteen Treasures
Author:- Michelle Harrison
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6...
Great Book,Great Plot

That sounds great - I have to get to the pirate book ASAP. Unfortunately eye-reading was nearly non-existent for me in August. Hope September looks better in this.
I finished another new release (gosh, I'm really taking this nomination stuff seriously ... LOL!)
Road Out of Winter by Alison Stine has a rather conventional climate-change-dystopian-folks-fall-back-to-primitive-behaviour plot, but really good characters and two women interacting a lot without bitching or having to get romantically involved, which was just great!

But I've added Road Out of Winter to my Storytel shelf, so thanks! ^_^

So being an American, and enjoying Hitchhikers, I can say that from my perspective it is not really meant to be read but listened to. Many of the things that were sliding past me while I was reading it were laugh out loud funny was i listened to it.

Okay, but do they laugh at Tiger's getting into boxes?
Really I thought everyone laughed at crazy cat things.


Makes sense since it began, as I recall, as a radio show then morphed to other media.




Recent reads: I'm trying to finish the novellas for the Ignyte Awards, so I just read The Murders of Molly Southbourne and The Survival of Molly Southbourne. Interesting premise, but I didn't find either of them as compelling as the Rosewater books. I also listened to Necahual, from Xenowealth: A Collection. The story was just okay, but I'm very intrigued by the universe that was introduced.
I'm currently reading The Gurkha and the Lord of Tuesday, which is a very funny blend of fantasy and sci-fi, and listening (finally!) to After Atlas. It's very different than Planetfall, but Emma Newman's writing is still wonderful. Was there a series BR for this? The GR search function hasn't been working for me recently.



Glad to know that this is also good, I put it on my TBR when I finished Cinrak. Don't know when I'll get to it though.

There are a number of books that are like that for me. Although admittedly not all of them are funny. The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis is pretty amusing. A Night in the Lonesome October is also pretty amusing, but I have never read Watership Down only listened to it and because of that am unlike to read it. There are some books that just seem meant to be heard.

Recent reads: I'm trying to finish the novellas for the Ignyte Awards, so I just read ..."
A story with a Gurkha? Now those guys can be amusing and hell without even trying. I might have to look that one over.

And I'm about 40% through [book:Toll the Hounds|938544]
Plus I'm really liking this collection of short stories: Stable Strategies and Others by Eileen Gunn. Thought provoking to say the least.

It's a good series which will keep you on the edge of the seat.
There is no relation between books of the series so you can read any book.
But if you read it in order you will understand more about the characters in the series.
In the Woods https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...
Total 6 books in the series.

The Stainless Steel Rat

Sometimes you just have to take a step back and read something that you remember being a good book and see if it still fits that mold now that you have changed and time has passed. That was the case with this book. I remember it being pretty good the first time I read it some thirty-odd years ago.
I am happy to say that it was as good as I recalled. It a future where most aberrant behavior is controlled and weeded out of mankind (a thought that I find frightening in and of itself. The Main Character stands out as a Criminal Master Mind. Of course to be a Criminal in that society you kind of have to be a Master Mind or you get caught far too quickly.
One of the most outstanding things in this book is the antagonist in the book is a Woman. A Woman that is as capable and intelligent as the Main Character. A fact that in a book of today would be of no real notice, but this book was first published in 1961, not a time that was known for its overly strong female characters. So it is all the more remarkable for that.
An enjoyable romp through the illegal side of a Galaxy, light on world-building and also on character development, but fun for all that.



Frustrated that the showrunners for 3BP are who they are, but hoping they've learned lessons and most of the writers and actors will be Chinese or of Chinese descent!
Tana French is hugely popular with some of our group, Anees! What's your favorite so far?
I keep seeing Stainless Steel Rat, DJ, but just haven't had time to get to it. Great review.
How's the Spellslinger series holding up, Eric?
Tana French is hugely popular with some of our group, Anees! What's your favorite so far?
I keep seeing Stainless Steel Rat, DJ, but just haven't had time to get to it. Great review.
How's the Spellslinger series holding up, Eric?


One could easily end this series after book three. De Castell brings enough closure in each book of his series. I am finishing the series as interludes in between finding something to really catch my attention. So far, four stars for the first three books. Three stars for #4.

Road Out of Winter by Alison Stine, is one of your rather typical dystopian novels where it's getting colder, resources get scarce, people have to leave their cities and encounter all kinds of fallen-back-to-primitive-ways communities on their way. It is well written and for me it stood out of the usual mold, because of its layered characters and their well done interaction. We even have two females that interact and work together without a) bitching or b) getting romantically involved with each other - I thought this extra mention-worthy.
A Beginning at the End by Mike Chen: I have to admit that I have a soft spot for the way Mike Chen writes characters, that feel so realistically flawed and behaving so stupidly at times - just like probably a lot of us would. So I enjoyed his band of 4 main characters (a father, his daughter, a sarcastic wedding planer and a run-away popstar) a lot. But I know from the group discussion of another book of his here I'm in the minority with my liking of his work.
The story itself isn't exactly gripping. It is a past pandemic world on the verge of the second wave, the surviving people live in metros and try to get their lives from before back. The pandemic is more or less background for the personal stories of those 4 characters. In parts too sugar coated.
I liked reading it, but it is nothing special.
The Stone Wētā by Octavia Cade is definitely worthy of a novella nomination for the Hugos. The best novella I've read so far this year. A mosaic story/report of scientists all over the world who are only mentioned by their code names of species that are specially adapted to their respective environment. Each POV starts with a biological information about the particular species, and the chapter reveals how approbriate each name is.
Not really a story, more snapshots of how the scientists feel as they try to rescue climate data that is about to be edited by industries and governments.
I adored this narration about the brave, secretive science heroes.

I am currently re-reading Stormlight Archive getting ready for RoW. It has been fun re-reading the scenes I forgot happened.
I also introduced my nephew to the Chronicles of Narnia. He in turn introduced me to The Stonekeeper.
Some of my favorites from the year so far that I would recommend:
Never Die
Lost Boy: The True Story of Captain Hook
Interdependency Trilogy
Red Rising 4 & 5

I loved The Gurkha and the Lord of Tuesday - the humor was joined by some darker themes and more serious notes as the book went on, but it was beautifully blended together and all around a creative and engrossing read. I'm looking forward to trying the author's novels and other short fiction.
Now I'm on to Space Opera September, with The Undefeated up first. From first impressions, it's going to be a quiet, meditative sort of book. So far I am intrigued but not completely won over.
cute, Mason! Lost Boy is one we've been considering for a poll, but it just hasn't made it yet. your praise makes me more determined to find room for it

It's a good series which will keep you on the edge of the seat.
There is no relation between books of the series so you can read ..."
I love all of these books.

I also just finished The Luminous Dead which is a survival/horror story about a woman in a cave with only her topside handler to get her through everything alive.

It really is a great book. Made me rethink all of my childhood in regards to Peter Pan lol!

My first thought after finishing The Eye of Zoltar was "how is he going to write his way out of that?" This was six years ago. Sigh... I love this series. I hope that he finds a way soon.

I als..."
He is such a talented writer but finishing series within reasonable lengths of time is not one of his best skills!

It wasn't bad! But I wish I could have gotten into the heart of its characters as much as I did the heart of its setting. There was just something missing there for me. (review)
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Books mentioned in this topic
The New Moon's Arms (other topics)Artificial Condition (other topics)
Kuunpäivän kirjeet (other topics)
Memory of Water (other topics)
The Gurkha and the Lord of Tuesday (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Emmi Itäranta (other topics)Drew Hayes (other topics)
Genevieve Cogman (other topics)
Naomi Novik (other topics)
V.E. Schwab (other topics)
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Same here, Jacqueline! I even tried stuff like Simpsons in vain, while I totally loved Hitchhiker's back in the days.