I've made a start on The Lies of Locke Lamora! It's been fun so far, with some really great worldbuilding. The last few days I haven't had much time to read unfortunately - but hopefully come the weekend I'll get more of a chance.
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I finally wrapped up all 7 books in Asimov's Foundation series and shew, what a chilling ending. highly recommend.
picked up a copy of The Mercy of Gods by James S. A. Corey (the writers of The Expanse series) and finished it in absolute record time. I'm hooked. now on to book 2, The Faith of Beasts!
I started The Pastel City by M. John Harrison last night; it's been on my list for so long I don't remember why it's there. Kind of a Dying Earth setup, where it's thousands of years after the fall of civilization, and a medieval-style society has blossomed in a world full of rusting. ancient tech. I'm barely out of the prologue, so no real impressions yet.
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Finished Extremity by Nicholas Binge, which is about a police investigation into a billionaire's death that goes sideways in very scifi ways. It sounded really good, but it wasn't really a mystery, wasn't long enough to lean into the tension it tried to do, and swerved into a subgenre I'm not fond of. It's not bad, just not for me.
The Pastel City sounds pretty cool, I'll add it to my list!
If you like that genre (post-apocalyptic future) you may want to give Davy by Edgar Pangborn a shot too.
I'll give it a look, thanks!
Just started House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski yesterday.
Finding it a little difficult to get into at the moment but will stick at it based on the book’s great reputation.
Finished “A canticle for Lebowiz”, the ending was tough, and for some reason i decided to listen Endless Nights by Agatha Christie, and wow, talks about double whammy, both were very bleak…
About 70% through Chaos Vector by Meghan E. O’Keefe
This series is great! It’s really scratching the Expanse itch I’ve had since I finished the last book 4 years ago.
I'm reading Warren Ellis's Transmetropolitan. An old favorite of mine, this comic book, heavily inspired by Hunter S. Thompson, has many themes that are all too relevant even today.
Man, I have it, read the first chapter, but it failed to grab me :/ will retry though, it’s a trip!
I mean, I love the series, but it's brand of chaos, insanity, humor and obscenity is definitely not for everyone. If you can accept it and go with its flow, there's some really good bits in there.
Just got the brand new Murderbot book by Martha Wells (Platform Decay) and I’m excited to tear into it.
Me too!
I’m currently reading This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El- Mohtar & Max Gladstone.
I really love it and it feels like I’m reading poetry.
It took me 2 tries to read it, I knew there was something beautiful there the first time but I wasn’t in the right place mentally.
That’s understandable. I’m glad you gave it a second try.
Started Starship Troopers and couldn’t get through the first chapter. Not for me, as warned by others in this sub it was quite dry and a mere inspiration for the movie.
Now I’m on to Neuromancer, which is already much better. First time read for me so no spoilers please if you choose to comment!
Hey! I'm one of the people who commented about Troopers. I don't fault you for stopping it, there's a whole chapter in the middle of it where they flashback to gradeschool and all of the kids agree with the teacher that corporal punishment for adults is really the only way to ensure a society doesn't fall apart
Neuromancer is great though! If you ever feel like you don't really understand what's going on that's pretty normal. It takes a couple of reads and even then a lot of the concepts are abstract rather than concrete
Thanks for your comment! It was just too military heavy and dry. I’m a very visual thinker and the writing was quite dry and didn’t grab me at all.
So far I actually like the ‘dropped in the middle’ effect of Neuromancer, as it can be a bit tiring to read through a ton of explanations early on in a story with so much world building. I’d rather discover concepts through context and ‘living’ in the story a bit first. At this time I’m simply blown away by the fact the story was written over 40 years ago, however it’s still early on so that might change.
Love Neuromancer have the audiobook.
Was that Robert Heinlein? I read almost all his books back in the 70s as a teen. We loved them at the time but in retrospect he seems like kind of as ass.
It was. Interestingly enough, from many of the reviews I read a lot of people love the author but don’t like this book. It made the use of the word ‘controversial’ on the cover description of the copy I have much funnier to me.
I have started a reread of This Inevitable Ruin, Dungeon Crawler Carl #7, just to refresh myself before the new book releases in a ~~few weeks.~~ week!
Path of Daggers (WoT 8) is on a bit of a hiatus, stuck at about 30% done with it, by chapter count anyway. Not that I don’t want to finish it, but have put it off for DCC. WoT will be there, but I don’t want to accidentally get spoiled on the new DCC book haha.
I just finished book 1!
DCC or Wheel of Time? Thoughts on either? Haha
DCC. I was expecting it to be a little more traditional in terms of 'fighting through a dungeon' but things immediately got more interesting when Carl started engineering exploits and has the added wrinkle that it's also being livestreamed. As someone with far too much time spent in MMOs, this was actually a remarkably realistic take on how someone would approach challenges in the dungeon. Though, it's not as laugh-out-loud funny as I'd hoped, it is amusing.
I started doing the same thing with the inevitable ruin, then realized I do not remember nearly as much as I should, and started rereading the entire series.
I have just found out there is a recap chapter in my books! Might just have to read all of those haha.
I must have skipped them all on my first read cause it’s before the prologue. And I think my e-reader jumps to the prologue by default.
Yeah…. I should have started a proper re-read a few months back haha.
Stormlight archive. Again. No, I don't care. Yes, I will reread it many times after.
Journey before Destination.
I finished listening to Neuromancer today. Not once did I want to DNF, but I still don't know what the fuck was happening. Just enjoyed the vibes I guess. I'll have to reread, maybe in print next time, to get some more out of it.
Started Reaper Man as well, I've found Discworld to be so comforting.
I’ve read through the entire Discworld series at least twice over.
I think I’m due another re-read very soon.
- Tolkien, 'The Hobbit'. A re-read, started last night.
- If I can get my hands on an English edition at a reasonable price, next I would like to read Narnia (the full cycle). As a non-believer myself, I have a lot of respect for CS Lewis as an essayist (pieces like 'The Abolition of Man' is an almost perfect description of why/how most Western educative systems are indeed failing and, well, most of what I've read even when he focuses on spirituality was quite... rich and stimulating), and I would like to see how =I will appreciate his work as a novelist :)
- Just finished the first volume of the French edition of Cordwainer Smith 'Instrumentality of Mankind' which I started almost by accident and ended-up liking so much I ordered the next 3 volumes of that translation (I was not able to find an English edition). Fascinating work.
I'm reading "don quijote part 2" from Miguel de Cervantes, I'm going on the chapter 30, I really like the don quijote stuff, it's just get better in every chapter, I think is better than any other anime
Had started foundation by Isaac Asimov, thought it's been a while since I last read it. I am still a newbie reader, but loved it so far. I am pretty amazed by science fiction as a whole in how well politics is written, my last read was first dune book.
Just finished:
All You Need is Kill - Of the 2 movies and this, this has by far the most compelling ending. I don't really like how the time loop thing is handled but the mechanics aren't the most important to the story
Will Destroy the Galaxy for Cash - I love this series. If you're looking for a modern day Douglas Adams this is pretty close
In progress:
Diaspora by Greg Eden - Woof, this starts dense and I don't have the impression it's going to get easier. I'm curious how challenging it will get. Still, it's a fun start for the story
With reference to Will Destroy The Galaxy For Cash, all of Yahtzee Croshaw’s books are excellent.
Have you read any of his non Jacques McKeown books? Jam is particularly weird, you’d love it.
Incidentally, I literally just finished the last Jacques McKeown book, Will Leave The Galaxy For Good, yesterday.
It’s a very nice end to the trilogy and based on the subject matter, very prescient for these days.
I have, I like Mogworld so I'll have to add Jam to the list
I was excited for good was finally available as an ebook because I don't really like audio books but it looks like I'll have to borrow a friend's kindle to read it because I can't figure out how to load it onto my kobo
It's good to know he keeps the quality up!
I finished Real Tigers by Mick Herron (Slough House book 3). It was enjoyable and gripping for most of the book. I had a hard time following the final action sequence, but that's a common problem I have in action-heavy books/movies, so doesn't really reflect on the book.
Now I'm reading Dragonsinger by Anne McCaffrey (Harper Hall of Pern book 2). I've been really enjoying the Pern books so far, especially this trilogy. I find the main character very likeable, the story is simple but compelling, and the creatures are super fun. A great read all around.
I’ve read the first two of the Slough House series of books, but because I’m really enjoying the tv adaptation I’ve decided to watch through the tv show first until they complete before restarting the book series.
After not reading really at all in April, back at it this week. Finishing up The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley.
The Everlasting by Alix E Harrow. I'm about halfway through and it is a very interesting mix of fantasy, time travel, and exploration of PTSD. So far I would recommend if you enjoy folk lore and fantasy.
Music, the brain, and ecstasy - how music captures our imagination by Robert Jourdain.
It's extremely well written and starts from a scientific perspective of how our ears evolved over hundreds of millions of years to appreciate music.
Finished Cult Following: The Extreme Sects That Capture Our Imaginations—and Take Over Our Lives by JW Ocker. Was interesting but at the felt a bit shallow? Maybe i was expecting more of a deep dive on how cults form/beliefs. Not sure was short so maybe that was it. As an aside fuck the guy that ran the ant hill kids cult. That was probably the worst thing I have heard.
This week i started The Enemy Within by Christie Golden its a D&D book set in Ravenloft. Its next one the series I have. Its ok so far.
Also started audiobook of Queens of the Conquest by Allison Weir. Found myself wanting to do more historical/academic books lately at least for audiobooks. Not far into it but it is informative so far.
Still reading Esrahaddon. I'm glad Sullivan only strayed from his style for one book (Farilane) and I'm quite enjoying this one. Now that I have more time I should finish it and his latest book Drumindor in a few days.
The hard part will be choosing what to read next!
My list so far looks like:
Eisenhorn / Gotrek & Felix / The Hainish Cycle / His Dark Materials
The Inheritance Trilogy / a random James Herbert book I haven't read yet
I skipped the last book I had for The Remaining after I got maybe 4 hours in. It was a prologue to the main story and I just didn't really care for the american army man crap.
So went back to do some Outlanders for a bit before trying out the Lee Harden series of books (which is more "The Remaining").
Outlanders is good although it is getting a bit wild with many different dimensions going on at the moment.
the dog stars
Warriors: A Dangerous Path by Erin Hunter
Audiobook Infiniti Gate by M.R. Carey