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?
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Mary
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Feb 01, 2020 12:13PM

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


I read that Genghis Khan series several years ago. Excellent!

Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo

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



Fun stuff, though Hamilton does like his acronyms.



You're welcome!! Love Pooh Bear too. Didn't know he got out to Minnesota.




It's an android that asks you questions in order to recommend the perfect SFF novel written by a black author for you. So creative, funny and amazing, I guarantee that you'll love this video.
It was made by The Artisan Geek for the Black Lit Challenge she's organizing and I'm just floored by her creativity and by how much fun she made this challenge.
The android recommended The Fifth Season for me (and lots of others because of course curiosity made me follow every possible option), so that's what I'll start with.

It'..."
I’m assuming something is missing, because all I see is her asking the question and then... nothing. She just stands there, looking vacant.

You should see two links in the video itself after she asks a question. For the first video, the links appear at 0:34.


Google just revamped YouTube, as I discovered last week when I uploaded a video, so they probably broke something.

I read the Phantom Tollbooth as a kid. One of only about a dozen kids books I actually read as a kid. I loved it. I am always amazed at the things I recall from the book even now, a few years later.

There aren’t any links. That’s been happening on other videos, too. Worked in December, didn’t work in January. That’s on Google.


That’s not it. Pretty sure it’s a mobile/Mac issue.

It works on Chrome, Firefox, and Safari under Mojave for me. It doesn't work on Safari using the most recent version of iOS.


It works on Chrome, Firefox, and Safari under Mojave for me. It doesn't work on Safari using the most recent version of iOS."
Yeah, I’m using an iPad now and at work I use a Mac. (https://www.instagram.com/p/B7J--koBj...) Borked on both.

I'm still very willing to try something else by Kage Baker, who was quite prolific and had 20 novels in two major series published between the late '90s and through the '00s. (She passed away in 2010 at age 57.)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4...

I enjoyed that one, and maybe more so "The Empress of Mars" which reads like an Edgar Rice Burroughs story filtered through a 1940/50s John Ford directed movie like The Quiet Man. I'm hoping to get to some more of her short stories this year.

That’s not it. Pretty sure it’s a mobile/Mac issue."
Well then you hold it out in front of you and do a figure eight three times...oh wait that is the GPS feature, never mind. Went past my tech support boundaries. LOL.
Theory of Bastards was super interesting. I am quite unsure how to feel about it, but I think it's worth a read if you like award winning scifi.
Lords and Ladies was still good in and of itself, but was not my favorite of the Discworld so far. It was scary! And kind of mean!
The Martian though was AH-MAZING!! It deserves all the praise it got if you ask me.
Picking up another downer with Never Let Me Go, and I have The Rook on standby in case I need a break.
Lords and Ladies was still good in and of itself, but was not my favorite of the Discworld so far. It was scary! And kind of mean!
The Martian though was AH-MAZING!! It deserves all the praise it got if you ask me.
Picking up another downer with Never Let Me Go, and I have The Rook on standby in case I need a break.

Glad you loved Martain! =D

If you want a different vibe, stories with humor woven in, I recommend SEAL Team 13 and The Case of the Damaged Detective.
I was also very pleased with The Vanishing by Jayne Ann Krentz. I've read lots of her romance novels but haven't tried out her mystery/urban fantasy books. This was a fun UF. After reading several UF series where the concepts were cool but with uneven developments, it was really nice to read a well written & plotted UF story.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...



Now I'm on to book 8, The Path of Daggers, and The Collapsing Empire.

Spin turned out to be a surprisingly good end-of-the-world SF novel. I've gotten a bit cautious where award winning books are concerned cause I often have the feeling I am missing the point why the respective novel was chosen. But here I could see the appeal. It has a successful mix of character-story and crazy SF-idea.
My classics reads were The Turn of the Screw, which is a famous horror-story ancestor, but didn't really work for the nowadays reader me.
Way sooner than I had planned I finished listening to my 58 hours of Les Misérables. Of course this also has some flaws due to its age (the frequent musings about women are ridiculous), but the writing is so powerful and Hugo's idealistic visions are so strong that I couldn't help but be completely drawn into the story (including several chapters of description of the Parisian sewer tunnels). He really was a force and this book deservedly is on the have-to-read lists.

I never thought I'd bother reading this one, but your comments have me second guessing that decision.

Sold. I am really looking forward to the Sudden Appearance BR, too! I think she's definitely my vote for one of the best SFF authors of the new millennium.

Counterpoint: THIS NOVELLA IS AMAZING! :)

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