Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What have you been reading this August?
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Aug 01, 2020 05:01AM
So, what august works have you read this month?
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Authors:
Agustina Bazterrica, Robert Jackson Bennett, M.R. Carey, S.A. Chakraborty, Cherie Dimaline, Linda Holmes, Angie Kim, Laura Lam, Linden A. Lewis, Sarah Moses, Cherie Priest, Veronica Roth, Adrian Tchaikovsky, Brent Weeks

I maybe need to take a long break from any long books!

Now as part of my "Finish series I started" I'm reading Dark Tracks by Philippa Gregory. It's not really fantasy, since most of the magic gets debunked along the way, but I wouldn't entirely call them historical. It also probably isn't the end of the series but it's been a few years since Gregory wrote this one and no idea when the next will come out, if ever. So it will be finished as much as I am capable of finishing it :)
I've also made it through another ten Bleach mangas, so I'm starting the month off at volume 60. Whether or not I finish this series will depend if I'm brave enough to borrow a book from the library that might have been in someone's covid infected house. The ones I did nab just now were on the shelves the past four months so were as clean as is possible to be, but around 68 or something like that they were in circulation. It's supposed to be safe, but hey, why risk it...



Starting on People of the Book: A Decade of Jewish Science Fiction & Fantasy edited by Rachel Swirsky for my Anthology BINGO slot. Got a few names I recognized like Yolen, Beagle and Gaiman.
It's a bit odd but been reading a fair amount of Jewish content...there's an major Jewish character in The Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Claire, and Dark Tracks looked at how Christians in medieval times treated Jews. None of this was intentional, just one of those coincidences that come up when you think you are reading completely unrelated books :)





(view spoiler)
And now that I'm almost done reading it, I think this book, though placed before Wolves of Calla, it should be read after since there is a small hint regarding Wolves that is dropped in this book (it was weird too, like why didn't any of the characters remember the warning, when they are usually very good at remembering stuff like prophecies, poems and random statements all throughout the rest of the books)

Today I finished Rage of Ares, the last book in Christian Cameron's Long War series. An extremely epic conclusion and I was a bit sad to say goodbye to Arimnestos. Rated it 5/5, one of the top three books in the series.
I'm now currently reading Surrender None by Elizabeth Moon as part of the Legend of Gird omnibus. So far so good. This book is where we get to see the beginnings of Gird in his life time before he becomes the deity of the original Paksenarrion trilogy.



I found a good number of them on various online 'zines and I own other anthologies that have a couple other stories, of course I didn't necessarily find all my favorites but I think I won't keep the book itself, and make some room on my shelves (I'm already way into negative space anyway so every bit helps!)


A strange malady called Dragonscale causes people to spontaneously combust, leading to a pandemic and all sorts of trouble.
Very good story. 4 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

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


Before I begin the Galactic Empire books, I am changing tack a bit and have started A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court

Due to an administrative issue with the credit card account that I use to purchase my e-books, I have to wait until next month to order the next opus in the saga. As a result, I am restarting The Warrior's Apprentice, in part to see whether I missed some important aspects of Miles' early career.

How did you rate Robots and Empire?

I was going to take a break but since it was a 3 book omnibus I'll just keep going with the next book in that series - Retribution by Megg Jensen. For a freebie, it's not bad. I haven't decided yet if I'll pay to read the rest of the series, there's only two more after all but at this point I'm tempted, we'll see where book 3 leaves me.

I gave it 3 stars (out of 5). It could have been at least a third shorter I thought.
Tony wrote: "Luffy wrote: "How did you rate Robots and Empire?"
I gave it 3 stars (out of 5). It could have been at least a third shorter I thought."
Somewhere in his later life Asimov felt an urge to tie all his universes (Robot, Empire, Foundation) into one unified timeline. The result is a lot of written duct tape.
I gave it 3 stars (out of 5). It could have been at least a third shorter I thought."
Somewhere in his later life Asimov felt an urge to tie all his universes (Robot, Empire, Foundation) into one unified timeline. The result is a lot of written duct tape.

That's a shame, but not unexpected. I quit watching it a few seasons back. I was thinking of catching up, but I think I'll skip it.


Well, that's definitely how the framing story around and between the short stories in I, Robot felt. I would have preferred the (often wildly different) stories as simple standalone pieces than, for instance, having the ending of the first story immediately contradicted by the interstitial between that and the next one, with a line saying, "Of course, that didn't last, because things changed rapidly." Forcing them all to fit into a single timeline didn't seem to add anything good to the stories.

BTW if anyone is still seeking something to fill in the spot and Star Trek catches their interest, OpenLibrary has a HUGE number of the books, not all of course, but way more than I ever would have expected. I've also been finding some for only 0.99$ on Kindle/Kobo, since it brought back the nostalgia of the used book store hunts I used to go on (and they don't take up any space) I grabbed a bunch of those for my eReader, been a looong time since I've read one of these :)
The Joy of Erudition wrote: "G33z3r wrote: "Somewhere in his later life Asimov felt an urge to tie all his universes (Robot, Empire, Foundation) into one unified timeline. The result is a lot of written duct tape."
Well, that's definitely how the framing story around and between the short stories in I, Robot felt. I would have preferred the (often wildly different) stories as simple standalone pieces than, for instance..."
I'd forgotten about those. At least they were only a couple of paragraphs. All the stories were originally published stand-alone (all in John W Campbell's Astounding Magazine (now called Analog), except for "Robbie" which was a re-write of "Strange Playfellow" that appeared in Fredrick Pohl's Super Science Stories.
My preferred collection of Asimov's Robot stories these days is Robot Dreams and Robot Visions, which together are the most complete (because they were the last repackaging.) They also skip the connecting duct tape (I suppose one could argue that makes them incomplete :)
Well, that's definitely how the framing story around and between the short stories in I, Robot felt. I would have preferred the (often wildly different) stories as simple standalone pieces than, for instance..."
I'd forgotten about those. At least they were only a couple of paragraphs. All the stories were originally published stand-alone (all in John W Campbell's Astounding Magazine (now called Analog), except for "Robbie" which was a re-write of "Strange Playfellow" that appeared in Fredrick Pohl's Super Science Stories.
My preferred collection of Asimov's Robot stories these days is Robot Dreams and Robot Visions, which together are the most complete (because they were the last repackaging.) They also skip the connecting duct tape (I suppose one could argue that makes them incomplete :)

I'd say that cutting bad content, which wasn't in the originals anyway, doesn't make it incomplete. 🙂 Now I wish I'd read the Robot Visions version instead, but I didn't know about it before.

Tony wrote: "The thing about both Robot Dreams and Robot Visions is that while they are both collections of Asimov's short stories, neither focuses solely on robot stories, the way that..."
Well, perhaps. They contain a couple of Asimov's "Multivac" stories, and probably more significantly a number of non-fiction essays about robots & his robot stories. I enjoyed the essays, covering a half-century of his writing; the sort of material an author would put in a blog these days. They have the advantage of having the robot stories written after The Rest of the Robots, such as The Bicentennial Man, and together have more robot stories than The Complete Robot (only because they were published a decade after the Complete Robot, not because Complete Robot was intentionally holding out, but it should have been called "The Complete Robot (so far)" :)
OTOH, there's definitely something to be said for reading in publication order rather than the re-jiggered collections, in that it's easier to see the evolution of Asimov's thoughts.
Asimov was adept at re-releasing old material in new packages with a bit of new material to constantly incite his fans to buy another book (its part of how he published over 200 books in his career. :) I think I have 4 copies of "Robbie" in paperback and another 3 in eBook.
Well, perhaps. They contain a couple of Asimov's "Multivac" stories, and probably more significantly a number of non-fiction essays about robots & his robot stories. I enjoyed the essays, covering a half-century of his writing; the sort of material an author would put in a blog these days. They have the advantage of having the robot stories written after The Rest of the Robots, such as The Bicentennial Man, and together have more robot stories than The Complete Robot (only because they were published a decade after the Complete Robot, not because Complete Robot was intentionally holding out, but it should have been called "The Complete Robot (so far)" :)
OTOH, there's definitely something to be said for reading in publication order rather than the re-jiggered collections, in that it's easier to see the evolution of Asimov's thoughts.
Asimov was adept at re-releasing old material in new packages with a bit of new material to constantly incite his fans to buy another book (its part of how he published over 200 books in his career. :) I think I have 4 copies of "Robbie" in paperback and another 3 in eBook.

The Eye of the World

The Great Hunt

The Dragon Reborn

Janus and the Prince

The Burning Land

IN PROGRESS
The Name of the Wind

The Shadow Rising

TBR:
Mistborn: Final Empire

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