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?



Yep I 'read' all of those.
I had podiobooks going non-stop when I worked from home. bookkeeping and audiobooks are a good match.
Now I have to write a lot of emails so listening to books is less feasible.

Got some books gifted to me for the holidays, including a book 3 of a series I haven't read any other installments of. Wondering if I should read/get the first two? It's Woken Furies by Richard K. Morgan. I'm pretty sure book 1 is on our bookshelf.



I finished a reread of Tamora Pierce's Protector of the Small quartet. Love some winter comfort reads :)
I just started Foundation for the last book of my read all the books challenge.


Interesting science fiction, thriller, dystopia; with the feel of traditional fantasy set askew. Dark and thoughtful.
About halfway through.

Eifelheim by Michael Flynn is a first contact story set in medieval Black Forest (where I grew up - place wise, not time wise that is - ... it was soooo great to read about those places). We follow a village pastor who tries to come to terms with the concept of aliens and demons and has to fight against the fear of the other.
This story is framed by a contemporary plotline where a historian tries to figure out why the village of Eifelheim (the one where the pastor lived) was never repopulated, while his partner, a theoretical physicist, is searching for a new way of space travel.
The New Moon's Arms by Nalo Hopkinson is a story about a middle aged women who has to come to terms with profound changes in her life, menopause and her own prejudices (CW: homophobia) while the rural mysticism of her island invade her life. Written in the wonderful authentic down-to-earth style of this fav author.


Technically... pretty sure, as long as you finish it on 2021 it should count in the system ;)
On top of the ongoing things I'm eye-reading, I needed an audiobook, so I started The Palace Job, thinking it'd just be a fun thing to listen to that is different from anything else I'm reading.
It's so unmemorable so far that I keep forgetting the name of the main characters and what they're trying to do XD
But it's also sort of amusing to me to see how long I can follow what's happening without remembering how we got here. Right now I think I'm at 20%
It's so unmemorable so far that I keep forgetting the name of the main characters and what they're trying to do XD
But it's also sort of amusing to me to see how long I can follow what's happening without remembering how we got here. Right now I think I'm at 20%


HeyT, I think you will like it better! It is fun, it's just not new and I'm hungering for new things right now. I don't often get moods, but right now I want spice and comfort reads bore me
Phrynne wrote: "I am so struggling with Rhythm of War. As a total fan of the series I can't understand why I am not engaging with the book at all. I started it back in November, realised there was ..."
You weren't alone, Phrynne...feel free to check out the BR thread for it!
You weren't alone, Phrynne...feel free to check out the BR thread for it!


Struggle away. Most of us did. The flashbacks were a killer. The thread Allison mentioned.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

I had a similar issue, though some of that has been 2020 for me I think. Not sure when it started clicking for me but I'm really into it now.


Ohh I have that one waiting on my shelf - I hope it picks up for you soon! For both our sakes haha

After a sample I was eager to read it and decided I would deal with the concentration issues I have with audio books.
It is read by Chiwetel Ejiofor whose voice is delicious though that still doesn’t completely stop my mind wandering.
So far it is intriguing but after the 1,000 pages of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell I am wondering how she will wrap this one up in less than 300.

I read Carl Hiaasen's latest, Squeeze Me. Hilarious.
I am curently powering through A Darker Shade of Magic by V.E. Schwab, on audio. It's.. uneven, but definitely has some stuff going for it. I'll probably finish it up tomorrow (well really today, but I haven't gone to bed yet).
I absolutely devoured A Deadly Education, by Naomi Novik. It's basically hogwarts + gideon the ninth (without being daring regarding sexual preference inclusivity).
I may get a jump on the club read after this one finishes.


My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


A late reply! I'm not a fan of Terry Pratchett's Discworld style, either - the covers generally put me off, for starters, and slapstick/crude/silly/obvious humour isn't my thing. I did like Reaper Man, though. His Death character is really interesting - honourable, intelligent, and likeable. The book, at least what I remember, comments perfectly on mammoth shopping centres (US 'malls'), in a very funny way. And is poignant and insightful regarding mortality, joy, and death. I found it more insightful and meaningful than the other Discworld books, and actually quite different. Still the silly humour, but it's not overbearing because of the content. It's part of the Death Trilogy: Mort / Reaper Man / Soul Music series (there are several within the Discworld 'universe', and they each have a different flavour), and while I haven't read the others in that series, it might be a good one to try, for the sake of the on-point social commentary and poignant insight.







It is good! I've begun reading this one, and am reminded of the beautiful, lyrical language he writes it in - very reminiscent of contemporary Irish speakers - the way they phrase things - and with a wonderful sense of ancient Celtic things. He weaves in the historical details seamlessly in his tellings. There's also a story told in the first few chapters, and you feel like you've been listening to an ancient bard tell the tale, with its wonder and particular style.
It's also reminded me of the excellent representation of real, deep friendship the series gives, the very insightful treatment of human nature (which is one of the things I really like about the author) and a clear sense of right and wrong, light and dark. You really feel the honour and the difficulty of choices, character, and life... in a beautiful setting, but also like any time. (Have I said enough? ; ) )

LoL, I just started the first one and am enjoying it so far.

My review
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

@Monica - Murderbot and ART is a perfect note to finish on!
@DJ - Like Anna said, never too late to hop on that train.
@Phrynne - Nice review. That one is at the top of my TBR, but I keep getting distracted and sidetracked!
@Tamara - You're really selling Eirlandia to us. I do love Celtic-inspired fantasy. I see that his books are listed as "Christian" though. Did you consider them at all preachy? And is that the series of his you'd recommend starting with?
Myself, not SFF, but I finished Murder on the Orient Express. Engaging to read and puzzle through, but then broke me at the end. >_<


I enjoyed the book immensely but still haven't really figured out how to do a review without putting spoiler alerts every second sentence. So all I can really say is give it a read and see what you think about it yourself.

Now I've hauled my ass out of bed, I have an hour left of 2020 to do all my stats and post them, and then I'll never think of 2020 again!

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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)
More...
I think I listened to the podcast of Quatershare but it got lost on one of my hard drives.