Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What are you Reading this January, 2019?
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Andrea
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Jan 01, 2019 08:21AM

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Authors:
Robert Jackson Bennett, Jiang Bo, Pierce Brown, Octavia Cade, Tracy Canfield, S.A. Chakraborty, Becky Chambers, Liu Cixin, S.B. Divya, P. Djèlà Clark, Andy Dudak, Eugie Foster, Tana French, Sarah Gailey, José Pablo Iriarte, Hao Jingfang, Mary Robinette Kowal, Rich Larson, Victor LaValle, Yoon Ha Lee, Ken Liu, H.P. Lovecraft, Ramez Naam, Naomi Novik, Suzanne Palmer, Brenda Peynado, Lettie Prell, John Scalzi, Veronica Schanoes, Karin Tidbeck, Peter Watts
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Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There by Lewis Carroll
Rating: 3 stars
Review: /review/show...
I started reading:

The Last Unicorn by Peter S. Beagle


Now reading The Obelisk Gate by N.K. Jemisin before I start forgetting the details of the first book because this seems like the kind of series where a random statement from one character might explain everything two books later :) Fortunately G33z3r gave chapter by chapter summaries in the group discussion I can reference!

Currently reading: The Tiger Flu. Gender plagues, parthenogenic starfish women, crazy cyberpunk moons (none of these are spoilers, this is the first chapter), sign me up.

Started Null States by Malka Older, second book of the Centennial Cycle and enjoying so far. Read the first book in December 2017 so thinking of doing a quick Infomocracy flip through tomorrow to remind me of a couple things.

Andrea wrote: "Now reading The Obelisk Gate by N.K. Jemisin before I start forgetting the details of the first book..."
I'm (re-)reading that too right now. If you'd like to do a discussion thread/buddy read, I'm game.
I'm (re-)reading that too right now. If you'd like to do a discussion thread/buddy read, I'm game.

I'm (re-)reading that too right now. If you..."
Seeing as I'm finding it hard not to post about the second book on the first book's discussion thread, I think this would be a good idea :)

Awesome! Traitor Son Cycle is great and underrated imo! Now knowing the series' conclusion I would definitely love to re-read it one day.



On my eReader I finally finished The Final Prophecy, it wasn't delayed because it was bad (actually for a free trilogy is was actually very good) but because I was on vacation and not commuting to work so I didn't even use my eReader :) Starting on another book I downloaded free (think it was even here on GR) - Blue Hearts of Mars by Nicole Grotepas

I'm also trying to develop a new habit for the new year. Instead of mindlessly scrolling through the internet, I will read ebooks instead! For my first ebook of the year, I'm reading Fear Itself in preparation for Star Trek Discovery Season 2.

Not sure where I'll go after that -- Yoon Ha Lee's Machineries of Empire trilogy are near the top of my TBR; so are Semiosis by Sue Burke (though I just read there's a sequel coming out in the fall, so I might wait on that one) and Katherine Arden's Winterlight trilogy.

Also keeping track or have read the rest of the books you mention - good choices! 😊
I'm not sure how to describe Scalzi's The Consuming Fire, book 2 of the Interdepency series (trilogy?)
The previous book revealed Interdependency is apparently doomed to dissolution by shifts in the "Flow", the FTL paths between its star systems. As the name Interdependency suggests, the individual systems aren't self-sufficient, so once they're cut off, they're going to wither away.
Instead of concentration on how to prepare for this coming disaster, this book concentrates on a bunch of political machinations against the Emperox.
It's a thin story, but Scalzi tells it with his usual snappy dialog and quirky characters, which sort of disguises that there's not much plot under the snark. Tasty enough, but not very filling.
It's got enough space travel that I'm filling in the space opera box on my BINGO card.
The previous book revealed Interdependency is apparently doomed to dissolution by shifts in the "Flow", the FTL paths between its star systems. As the name Interdependency suggests, the individual systems aren't self-sufficient, so once they're cut off, they're going to wither away.
Instead of concentration on how to prepare for this coming disaster, this book concentrates on a bunch of political machinations against the Emperox.
It's a thin story, but Scalzi tells it with his usual snappy dialog and quirky characters, which sort of disguises that there's not much plot under the snark. Tasty enough, but not very filling.
It's got enough space travel that I'm filling in the space opera box on my BINGO card.

Next in line is Dream Cat by Kat Lowe. One of my friends won it on GR, passed it to me a couple years ago and it's just been sitting there. Figured I'd squeeze it in now at the start of the year than leave it for the end when I'm usually cramming in other books to meet some sort of goal.


Mike wrote: "Finished Countdown City today and jumped right into book 3, World of Trouble."
I really liked that series.
I really liked that series.

Now started I, Robot and read the first story Robbie. Enjoying so far

Reading Two Hearts by Peter S. Beagle. A short story that is free to read online.



I'm curious, have you read Lord of the Rings?


It's about what happens when people with extraordinary abilities are born into an otherwise 'average' population. Of course the normal people don't react well.
This is my review of book one:
Brilliance

/review/show...

Now onto our contemporary group read Soon I Will Be Invincible by Austin Grossman. About 50 pages in and so far its fun. It's kind of funny because at dinner I watched The Minions and then started this book so I was really in the mood to make fun of superheroes and villains it seems!
Also, whenever I need a break from novel reading I'll read a few pages here and there from Phoebe and Her Unicorn by Dana Simpson. When someone described it as "Calvin and Hobbes with a girl and a unicorn" I knew I had to at least try it. I'm enjoying it, the unicorn is appropriately snarky.



Really excellent. This is more action-oriented than Bennett's Divine Cities trilogy (City of Stairs), creates an interesting new fantasy world with unique magic, and blends the political in more slowly.
Start of a new trilogy. I'm already eagerly awaiting the next installment..



In this 2nd book in the 'Brilliance' trilogy, the hostility between regular people and people with extraordinary abilities (called brilliants) heats up. Good story with interesting characters. 3.5 stars
My review: /review/show...
(Note: Another thread discusses the definition of hard and soft sci-fi. I'd call this trilogy soft sci-fi.)

Fair enough. I think any story that has people with superpowers is definitely not hard sci-fi.

Should finish Blackfish City today.
After that it'll be Medusa Uploaded.

My library has about 7 of the books so I'll work my way through them. #2 wasn't there last time so I'm on #3 now. This is very much a comic strip so the sequence you read them doesn't matter much.





I'm nearly done with Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, and I have started The Collapsing Empire.

Working through the Wrinkle in Time books with A Swiftly Tilting Planet by Madeleine L'Engle. I've had to shift the series from my SF shelf to the Fantasy one, while it started off more or less using SF concepts (tesseracts, aliens, etc), and while it still continues to bring up more scientific ideas, the religious aspects are becoming more and more prominent, like every time you ask Heaven for help you get sent a unicorn or a convenient snowstorm and battles are won through telling your enemies that you love them.
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