SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

724 views
What Else Are You Reading? > What Else Are You Reading in 2025?

Comments Showing 651-685 of 685 (685 new)    post a comment »
1 2 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 14 next »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 651: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (michellehartline) | 3171 comments Happy birthday Economondos!


message 652: by Beth (last edited Aug 28, 2025 04:29PM) (new)

Beth (rosewoodpip) | 2005 comments All I can lay claim to for August is a 140-page novella I read with one of my "bad book" podcasts. I'm not finishing anything else this month, and would be surprised if the next couple months are any better.

Night of the Crabs by Guy N. Smith: a very silly book about a Welsh seaside resort attacked by giant crabs, and the marine biologist who discovers how to destroy them, and who also rather abruptly finds love. (review)


message 653: by Sherene (new)

Sherene Levert | 45 comments At a minimum in September I plan to read The Eyre Affairfor a book club, Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch and Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrellto finish the Magical City Prompt in the Scifi- Fantasy combat challenge.


message 654: by Economondos (new)

Economondos | 507 comments Thank you for the birthday wishes. It was a good day filled with wonderful food and playing Divinity: Original Sins 2 with my wife.


message 655: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (michellehartline) | 3171 comments Economondos wrote: "Thank you for the birthday wishes. It was a good day filled with wonderful food and playing Divinity: Original Sins 2 with my wife."

Excellent! I love quiet relaxing birthdays most of all.

I'm re-reading Diplomatic Immunity at the moment. I never grow tired of this series.


message 656: by Economondos (new)

Economondos | 507 comments The Vorkosigan series is one of the best ever!


message 657: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (michellehartline) | 3171 comments Economondos wrote: "The Vorkosigan series is one of the best ever!"

It really is. I usually reread it every 3-4 years and it is always absorbing. I could probably recite it by heart if I tried 😂


message 658: by Colin (new)

Colin (colinalexander) | 367 comments Read The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. This author genre hops; this book is a horror story focused on mysterious deaths and disappearances. It is rooted in Mexican lore of witches and witchcraft, although much of the book is set at a private college outside of Boston. The events and characters are connected across three time periods: 1908; 1934; and 1998. (And 1998 seems so far in the past when a character slams down the phone receiver!) The mystery is a bit on the light side, but the main characters are well-drawn, the tale hums with dread, and the prose is, well, bewitching. Definitely recommended if you like horror.
The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia


message 659: by Randy (new)

Randy Money | 107 comments Colin wrote: "Read The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. This author genre hops; this book is a horror story focused on mysterious deaths and disappearances. It is rooted in Mexican lore of wi..."

I'm looking forward to that. I enjoyed her Certain Dark Things, Mexican Gothic and Silver Nitrate, too.


message 660: by Colin (new)

Colin (colinalexander) | 367 comments Randy wrote: "I'm looking forward to that. I enjoyed her Certain Dark Things, Mexican Gothic and Silver Nitrate, too."

I liked all three of those as well. Hope you enjoy this one!


message 661: by Layney (new)

Layney | 3 comments I just started Neuromancer yesterday, and I have to admit that I'm somewhat disappointed. I've heard such great things about it and I liked the first 50 pages or so but it's starting to lag right at what's supposed to be the rising action of the narrative. I felt like I had a good understanding of the world up to this point, but they're introducing several new concepts all at once and they've lost me. Maybe it's just me but there's nothing really driving me to want to understand lol


message 663: by Peter (new)

Peter (peter_tcga) | 68 comments Layney wrote: "I just started Neuromancer yesterday, and I have to admit that I'm somewhat disappointed. I've heard such great things about it and I liked the first 50 pages or so but it's starting to lag right a..."

I don't think you're alone in this sentiment. I think we readers of today have the benefit of time; we've seen so much of this technology played out, while many alternatives imagined in all forms of media. I ultimately appreciated this novel from the lens of history. I can only imagine how excited someone might have felt reading about cyberspace for the first time in the 80s and letting their imagination run with it.


message 664: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3676 comments I just finished reading a really great Star Trek novel: Uhura's Song.

It follows our friends from the original series and is a completely new story (not a novelization of an episode). If you like those types of books, this is a very good one. Well written with plenty of interesting things to dig your claws into. If you like cats, you might get a kick out of the sapient species they meet, who are feline. Trigger warning (view spoiler). Other topics include exile, shame, maturity, responsibility, independence, autonomy, collaboration and the inevitable logic vs. emotionality.


message 665: by Tracie (new)

Tracie (tracieayn) | 12 comments I just started Will of the Many. Excited to read this book.


message 666: by Peony (new)

Peony | 31 comments Finished The Fifth Season, and posted my review.

^The Will of The Many is on my to-read. Tell us how you like it!


message 667: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus (expendablemudge) | 36 comments I never really understood why Cuban SF biggie Yoss never really caught on in the US. He's angry and bitter, but funny with it. I finally reviewed two (both translated by David Frye) set in the same Xenoid universe: Red Dust Red Dust (Cuban Science Fiction) by Yoss , under 200pp so perfect for Shortie September:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
–and–
A Planet for Rent by Yoss A Planet for Rent, a bit longer but really worth catching up to:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 668: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3676 comments Richard wrote: "I never really understood why Cuban SF biggie Yoss never really caught on in the US. He's angry and bitter, but funny with it. I finally reviewed two (both translated by David Frye..."

Thanks for the recommendations. Those sound right up my alley.


message 669: by Beth (last edited Sep 04, 2025 03:57PM) (new)

Beth (rosewoodpip) | 2005 comments in re: The Waking of Angantyr

Colin wrote: "Peony wrote: "One, with the cover in Peony's post, is from Titan Books with a release of October 2023, paperback only and 488 pages. Then there is one with a different cover from Book View Cafe with a release of November 2023, paperback, kindle, and audiobook, and a page count of 324. Anyone know, or have any thoughts, about what may be going on here?"

Book View Cafe is a writer's collective that was started by Ursula Le Guin, and a number of other authors. They primarily deal in ebooks. Some are digital versions of older print titles, and some are new, exclusive publications. In this case, while I don't know the details, I assume that Brennan retained the ebook publishing rights and published it through BVC.


message 670: by Beth (new)

Beth (rosewoodpip) | 2005 comments DivaDiane wrote: "I’m reading a StarTrek novel, Uhura’s Song. Obvs, it’s a TOS cast and is really fun. There are big sapient cats!"

My partner has a paperback edition of that one, along with a number of other ST and SW novels from the 70s and 80s. :)


message 671: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3676 comments Beth, mine was a paperback (horrible drawings of Spock and Uhura on the cover!) from the 80’s! Yellow paper and small print make reading paperbacks difficult these days!


message 672: by Beth (new)

Beth (rosewoodpip) | 2005 comments I think the cover design of our copy is slightly different, but this is almost certainly the cover illustration you're talking about. (Including the cat!)

Uhura's Song (Star Trek The Original Series #21) by Janet Kagan


message 673: by Ozsaur (new)

Ozsaur | 106 comments The Scrivener's Apprentice - I'm enjoying it, but the magic isn't very prominent so far.


message 674: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3676 comments Beth wrote: "I think the cover design of our copy is slightly different, but this is almost certainly the cover illustration you're talking about. (Including the cat!)

Uhura's Song (Star Trek The Original Series #21) by Janet Kagan"


That’s the one! Ugh.


message 675: by Economondos (new)

Economondos | 507 comments Finished up Servant of the Empire by Raymond E. Feist last night at the dinner table (which my wife hates). But I couldn't put it down, the ending is that good.

My rating: 4.75 of 5 stars

Strongly recommended for anyone wanting a great high-fantasy read that doesn't get bogged down in magic or swordplay.


My review here

Moving on to the last in the trilogy, Mistress of the Empire.


message 676: by Economondos (new)

Economondos | 507 comments Also finished up the audiobook of Maskerade by Terry Pratchett while resealing all the grout around the house (ow, my back!).

My rating: 4.75 of 5 stars

Phantom of the Opera isn't really my thing; unless Terry Pratchett is telling it! Agnes Nitt, Granny Weatherwax and Nanny Ogg make this a good book, but the side characters make it great.

My review here

Another floor to go, and then sealing all the tile that was never maintained. So I will listen to Lords and Ladies for more witchy adventures in Lancre.


message 677: by Colin (new)

Colin (colinalexander) | 367 comments Read some history: Lawless Republic: The Rise of Cicero and the Decline of Rome by Josiah Osgood. The book uses the most famous cases and speeches of Cicero to chronicle the decline and corruption of Rome's legal system, and the fall of the Roman Republic, over the period from Sulla' dictatorship to the aftermath of the assassination of Julius Caesar. The Roman culture and legal system were very different from ours, but the tactic of using the court system for revenge and to bring down political rivals has disturbing parallels. The book also shows the path the system took from courtroom rhetoric to massive bribery to thuggish pressure to murder. The book does have a few issues. Although the writing is easy to read and light, it demands some familiarity with the history of the period. Also, there are a slew of people mentioned, many with similar names and many of minor historical importance so it is hard to keep the cast of characters straight. I do think this book is well worth the read. As Shakespeare said, "What is past is prologue."
Lawless Republic The Rise of Cicero and the Decline of Rome by Josiah Osgood


message 678: by 〰️Beth〰️ (new)

〰️Beth〰️ (x1f4a0bethx1f4a0) | 62 comments Currently flipping between The City and Its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami and Wild Reverence by Rebecca Ross. Enjoying both so far. The juxtaposition of Murakami’s contemplative style to the more action driven style of Ross’ fantasy is interesting to me. Right now I am just following were the writers are taking me and loving the experience.

The City and Its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami Wild Reverence by Rebecca Ross


message 679: by Tracie (new)

Tracie (tracieayn) | 12 comments 〰️Beth〰️ wrote: "Currently flipping between The City and Its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami and Wild Reverence by Rebecca Ross. Enjoying both so..."

I'm excited to hear how Wild Reverence comes out for you. I'm looking forward to reading that one.


message 680: by Jabotikaba (new)

Jabotikaba | 107 comments Colin wrote: "Read some history: Lawless Republic: The Rise of Cicero and the Decline of Rome by Josiah Osgood. The book uses the most famous cases and speeches of Cicero to chronicle the declin..."

Sounds like a great book!


message 681: by Charlton (new)

Charlton (cw-z) | 782 comments Will start tonight Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher.


message 682: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus (expendablemudge) | 36 comments Shorty September and #NationalTranslationMonth on your reading card? Trying to add more woman-authored work to your rotation? Do you follow literary prizes like this Akutagawa-winner: Sympathy Tower Tokyo Sympathy Tower Tokyo by Rie Qudan by Rie Qudan and translated by Jesse Kirkwood - translator is the right read for alternate-history SFF readers, too.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 683: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus (expendablemudge) | 36 comments DivaDiane wrote: "Richard wrote: "I never really understood why Cuban SF biggie Yoss never really caught on in the US. He's angry and bitter, but funny with it. I finally reviewed two (both translat..."

I hope you enjoy them when you get a chance to read them!


message 684: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10435 comments Richard wrote: "Sympathy Tower Tokyo"

Sounds like my kinda thing, wasn't on my radar, thanks!


message 685: by Kaia (new)

Kaia | 664 comments I am currently reading Lessons in Magic and Disaster by Charlier Jane Anders and listening to Boneshaker by Cherie Priest. I'm enjoying both books, but they have both reached a point where there is a certain kind of situation happening that I find really stressful to read. I've also decided to start re-reading Becky Chambers' The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet, so I have something more comforting to read right before bed. :-)


1 2 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 14 next »
back to top