Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
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What have you been reading this March?




It'll be okay, Robin 😆


I had forgotten about J. R. Rain! I had read his Jim Knighthorse stories and enjoyed them. I guess I need to add them to my GR shelf.

I had forgotten about J. R. Rain! I had read his Jim Knig..."
Hope you enjoy it!

Us Colonials do get British humour as well. Monty Python was very popular here 😀

Agreed, it seems fraught with danger 😛

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Authors:
Daniel Abraham, Orson Scott Card, Max Gladstone, Marlon James, Vanessa Len, Greer Macallister, Aimee Ogden, Gareth L. Powell, Taylor Jenkins Reid, Peng Shepherd, Nicholas Sparks, E. Catherine Tobler

I am now starting The Steel Tsar, which is the final book in The Nomad of Time - the Oswald Bastable trilogy.



Katie Mack, a theoretical astrophysicist and cosmologist, speculates about five scenarios for the end of the universe. Luckily Mack has a wonderful sense of humor, which makes the physics a bit more fun.
Good book. 4 stars
My review: /review/show...

I think once you get to the reveal behind the three POV's then suddenly things get really interesting. It's one of those books where a second read will be a very different experience from the first time around.

Just started Mark of the Thief.
Still on Future Tense: Tales of Apocalyptic Vision and The Duke Who Didn't.


I'm not very far, but it is very good so far! More YA, I think. I have enjoyed Nielsen's other books a lot.


I've heard some really good things about Hyperion so that's probably next for me.

That stinks, Nathan.


Now bouncing back to Asimov with my first robot novel - The Caves of Steel by Isaac Asimov, this one will fill my detective/cop BINGO slot.
On my eReader, I finished The White Invaders, an unfortunate name given the story starts off in Bermuda. Though it was meant to refer to the fact the invaders were inter-dimensional and when they were half here/half there they looked ghostly and could walk through our walls. Plus they had white hair and wore white clothing. This one at least made a bit more sense than The Fire People did. The omnibus has another one in it, The World Beyond by Ray Cummings so continuing with that.

I felt the same about the start... really wanted to be absorbed by it. But I wasn't and didn't manage to finish the book. I always feel guilty when I give up on a book....

I found bits of "To Sleep ..." over heavy on the "tributes" to other sci-fi authors/fantasy authors... for me this meant I could pick out Iain M. Banks and Tolkein!... And in this context I did balk at one of the final scenes.
BUT overall I was absorbed in the action of what I would call a space opera, absorbed by the central concept of the main character's dilemma vis a vis her relationship with an alien life form and enjoyed this audioversion - all 30+ hours of it.


Eragon was not good -- super cliched -- so it's killed any interest in this new book for me.

Those look interesting -- will have to check them out!

I like To Sleep in a Sea of Stars; I thought it was a pretty good blend of sci-fi/fantasy. (Very long, as you say.)

Phew! Glad to have some company on this one :)

For a moment I thought my friend had given me To Sleep in a Sea of Stars but in fact it was The Starless Sea :) Haven't gotten around to it yet.


I had hoped to keep rereading a few more of Bernard Cornwell's Saxon Stories books before diving into this one, but I've hit a snag since I can no longer find my copies of Sword Song and Burning Land. I'm thinking my mother may have borrowed them at some point, so I'll try to search at her place before rebuying those two. I really dislike losing/misplacing books though, so hoping I can find them.


It's good, but slow. The start was particularly slow since it's the first book of a series with an entirely new world. He's also gotten wordier as he's aged. For instance, he's taken to describing food & clothing a lot more than I like.
My wife is reading the hardback while I'm listening to the audiobook. She's not as happy with it as I am since she prefers straight fantasy. I'm about 3/4 of the way through & I'm ready for it to wrap up, but I am enjoying it. I own at least one copy of all his books, often both a HB & a PB with the audiobook, if it is available. I have quite a few as ebooks, too. I read his first book back in the late 70s or early 80s, so some formats aren't readily available.
This one is kind of steam punk (not as much as his Ghosts trilogy) with empaths making up a small, but significant portion of the population. He's exploring political issues, censorship by state security, corruption, & such. There's some action by the hero who is a body guard & assistant to a political leader who is targeted for assassination several times. The political systems are different enough from ours that it never feels like he is preaching any of our particular brands, but he certainly favors the hero's over the others, so spends some time looking at why.
There are certainly plenty of parallels with our system. For instance, the congress is elected, but there is no record of individual votes, just votes by the parties of which there are 3: commerce, guild/artisan, & landowners. There is a resistance movement they're battling which wants individual votes & accountability reported with arguments as to why not doing so works best. Considering our current partisanship, it's an interesting thought experiment.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Last Flight (other topics)Folktales of Chile (other topics)
The Technologists (other topics)
The Massacre of Mankind (other topics)
The Einstein Prophecy (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Yolando Pino-Saavedra (other topics)Aimee Ogden (other topics)
Peng Shepherd (other topics)
Matthew Pearl (other topics)
Max Gladstone (other topics)
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I've got the last two Frank Herbert written Dune books planned for this month, starting with Heretics of Dune