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What Else Are You Reading?
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What Else Are You Reading? July 2014



Jeff wrote: "Starting the month off with listening to Blood Song"
Haha. You too? I just finished and loved it. A few of us are discussing it over in my side reads group if you're interested.
/topic/group...
Haha. You too? I just finished and loved it. A few of us are discussing it over in my side reads group if you're interested.
/topic/group...




Images of the Past, Experiencing the World's Religions, Lord of Chaos and Clash of Kings. All fantastic. The first two highly informative, Clash of Kings I'm 650 pages into after re-starting it two days ago and a quarter through Lord of Chaos.

Avengers, Vol. 1: Avengers World - Jonathan Hickman
Avengers, Vol. 2: The last white event - Jonathan Hickman
Avengers, Vol. 3: Prelude to Infinity - Jonathan Hickman
Avengers, Vol. 4: Infinity - Jonathan Hickman
Wolverine by Jason Aaron: The Complete Collection Volume 1 - Jason Aaron
Wolverine by Jason Aaron: The Complete Collection Volume 2 - Jason Aaron
Guardians of the Galaxy/All-New X-Men: The Trial of Jean Grey - Brian Michael Bendis
As well as these books-
Marvel Comics: The Untold Story - Sean Howe
The Long Mars: A Novel (Long Earth, #3) - Terry Pratchett, Stephen Baxter
No Slam Dancing, No Stage Diving, No Spikes - Amy Yates Wuelfing
*I got all of this from my library

Rogues and Cibola Burn both came in at the same time at the library, so I've jumped head first into Rogues yesterday since that has holds on it (and sadly/glady Cibola Burn does not so I can take my time on that).
Going to read those two before I get to this month's S&L though I know I have The Silkworm lurking out there on hold which if it comes in may get moved up in the reading order.
Finished Perdido Street Station! Interesting read. Here's my review
I didn't realize Tower Lord was coming out so early in July, that pretty much threw my reading plans out the window! No complaints. Starting it now.
I didn't realize Tower Lord was coming out so early in July, that pretty much threw my reading plans out the window! No complaints. Starting it now.



Just started Help Fund my Robot Army!!! & Other Improbable Crowdfunding Projects last night, with Sword & Laser Anthology likely to follow.


I'm hoping to finish listening to On the Steel Breeze tomorrow before we head off to San Diego for the holiday weekend.

She has an excellent SF series under the name Rachel Bach starting with Fortune's Pawn. I'm more of an SF reader than Fantasy and while I did enjoy Eli Monpress, I thought the Paradox series was better.

Also read Cibola Burn which was good, but I think after four books we've all worked out that Corporate Psychopaths Are Bad (tm). With at least five more books to come the writers need a new schtick.
After I finish the rest of the Xenogenesis books I have The Enceladus Crisis: Book Two of the Daedalus Series by Michael J. Martinez queued up, because the first book was a great read.

No holidays allowed before you finish this.

This was a really great recommendation that I didn't have on my wishlist. Thanks for that! My wishlist is now three books longer. ^_^;

Starting Bitter Seeds by Ian Tregillis; trying to catch up with club picks that I missed.

She has an excellent SF series under the name [author:Rachel Bach|6572..."
oh thanks! I will definately check that out.
edit: turns out it was already on my list, but now that I know it's the same author I'm bumping it way up!
Not reading much, I've been using my free time playin a video game. However, I did finish How Music Works by David Byrne. Some interesting ideas on the influence of outside forces on music. I'm still reading Kai Lung's Golden Hours. It's not compelling but interesting enough that I will finish it. The setting in classical China is very foreign to me and the names take some getting used to. I find them harder than the created names in The Silmarillion or real ones in Russian novels. There are several other books about Kai Lung, but I think one is enough for me.

So I'm finally reading Metro 2033, which my teenage son adores.


I'm also reading Rogues - I skipped to the end and read the Rothfuss and Martin stories first. Now I'm going back through from the beginning.

I'm new to the forum, and my next post will be to the welcome thread. After 5-6 years where I read only sparingly, I decided to pick it up again, and in the past month I read The Thirteenth Tale, The Dante Club, before getting the June pick, Promise of Blood. After hearing the S&L interview with Michael R. Underwood I picked up Geekomancy, which was brilliant. Since I finished June's pick only after the podcast wrap up, I started reading Dawn on the last few days of June, not realizing that I wouldn't be able to set it down, so that I actually finished it already.
Wanting to read some F/SF with a gay protagonist, I picked up Luck in the Shadows, but it was just so bad (in my opinion), that I just lemmed it. Having whet my appetite for fantasy, I picked up the first book of the Iron Druid chronicles, Hounded.
I'm gonna get my dead-tree version of Ancillary Justice in the next few days (I hope). I'd also really like to read Iain M Banks's Consider Phlebas, first of the Culture series. But I'll probably intersperse those two space sagas with a few non-sci-fi choices.


I'm hearing good things about The Waking Engine by David Edison.


So I'm finally reading Metro 2033, which my teenage son adores."
I'm currently listening to the audiobook.
I'm impressed with the writing.

So I'm finally reading Metro 2033, which my teenage son adores."
I'm currently listening to the audio..."
How's the reading?

Rupert Degas is the narrator. His reading is damn good! The audiobook is like hearing angels singing the joys and grief of man. Okay, maybe I'm overdoing it, but his reading is pretty near perfect.
I've been kicking myself, trying to remember where I'd heard Degas before, and finally remembered. He read Haruki Murakami's A Wild Sheep Chase, and turned in a hell of a good reading..

Rupert Degas is the narrator. His reading is damn good! The audiobook is like hearing angels singing the joys and grief of man. Okay, maybe I'm overdoing it, bu..."
That sounds great. Thanks for the recc!

Rupert Degas is the narrator. His reading is damn good! The audiobook is like hearing angels singing the joys and grief of man. Okay, maybe I'm overdoing it, bu..."
I love Rupert Degas voice, he was the narrator for the first three books of the Skulduggery Pleasant series by Derek Landy.

Rupert Degas is the narrator. His reading is damn good! The audiobook is like hearing angels singing the joys and grief of man. Okay, maybe I'm ov..."
He also did Skulduggery Pleasant? I like his taste.
(My daughter and I are huge fans of that series. Criminally underappreciated here in the US.)


Almost done and it is fantastic!
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