Goodjer Recommends discussion
What are you reading RIGHT NOW?



- The Goblin Emperor for the sword and laser podcast. I'm not far into this yet but I am loving it so far. Quite an interesting and intelligent take on a fantasy novel.
- Beautiful Lego from one of the recent humble book bundles. I have been getting back into Lego recently so this came about at the right time
- The Wicked + The Devine also from a humble bundle. I'm not totally sold on this one yet. I love the premise, and the writing style and art are both great but I'm not really getting drawn into the actual story.

Part of my problem with it was me, though. I don't read a lot of nonfiction, and several times I found myself wishing that the book would act more like historical fiction, and give me more of the emotion and interior life of the characters... and then I had to remind myself that the people weren't just characters.
Next books up are three I've checked out of the library: Furies of Calderon (that's the, hey, write a book that's "lost Roman legion" + Pokemon challenge []), Orfeo, which caught my eye on the new books shelf, and Hexed, since I've been reading the Illona Andrews series, and the book has a short story in the universe in it.

- The Goblin Emperor for the sword and laser podcast. I'm not far into this yet but I am loving it so far. Quite an interesting and intelligent take on a fantasy novel."
The Goblin Emperor is about ten books down my to-read list...

Kameron Hurley's The Mirror Empire. Started slow, I had a hard time keeping up w/ the multiple perspectives, but it's really hitting its stride and I'm enjoying it more with each chapter.

It's quite entertaining to read that some 20+ years later. Supposedly Google Earth was inspired by the Metaverse.


A *lot* of things were inspired by the Metaverse. Google Earth and Second Life are the more obvious ones.

I am also just coming off several of Bernard Cornwell's books in both the Saxon Tales and Grail Quest series. I love his stuff. It's historical fiction that stays very close to the accepted historical events. He outlines any embellishments he's made at the end of the books. He also writes ridiculously good battle scenes.

A *lot* of things were inspired by the Metaverse. Google Earth and ..."
It's pretty hard when reading this to remember that this was the first time a publicly available Internet of this size was really put into a book... unless Neuromancer was written before Snow Crash? Either way, I keep telling myself "this isn't more than just an avatar-based chatroom", then have to remind myself "wait, this was fresh ground... it's not yet another cyberpunk World Wide Web".

Edit: Originally camelCased Metaverse because I hate myself.

"Cyberspace. A consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators, in every nation, by children being taught mathematical concepts... A graphic representation of data abstracted from banks of every computer in the human system. Unthinkable complexity. Lines of light ranged in the nonspace of the mind, clusters and constellations of data. Like city lights, receding..."
"Case jacked in, he opened his eyes to the familiar configuration of the Eastern Seaboard Fission Authority's Aztec pyramid of data."

I should probably participate in the actual intention of the thread. Right now I'm knee deep in book 13 of the Dresden Files, "Ghost Story". Man I really love this series. Every book seems to flesh out the world in a way that is just so goddamn interesting.


I should probably participate in the actual intention of the thread. Right now I'm knee deep in book 13 of the Dresden Files, "Ghost Story". Man I..."
I'm glad someone could make it through that series. I got through the first two books and gave up. Jim Butcher is not a good writer in my opinion, and I made my view clear in the main GWJ thread but he feels like a gamer writing fan fic on the back of his notepad in History class that somehow got published. I know he was self published, and I like how he has made a name of himself and is doing well, but... I don't know if it's warranted.
I hear Dresden Files gets better, but it was too pulpy and generic for me to stomach it when I have so many other books that I could be reading.

On Kindle, I'm slowly picking my way through Braineater Jones - I think Trichy recommended this on his podcast, and it was gifted to me during Secret Santa. It's really fun, pulpy zombie/Film Noir mashup, but I'm not great at finding time to read ye-olde style, with my eyes, these days.
Also on Audible, I'm listening to the Dresden Files for the third time through, since I'm sharing the experience with my wife, for her first read of the series. It's really wonderful watching her reactions to moments that I know are coming up. We've just started book 14.

We listen to them on Audible for long car rides, though.
Speaking of Audible, I have Gone Girl on Audible and I find myself unable to handle much of it at at time. I gather from movie marketing that it plays a lot with the idea/trope/cliche of (spoiler in hover text), but that's not what bugs me. What bugs me is watching a young marriage go off the rails because they won't address their issues with each other, and keep judging each other by the expectations they had for marriage back when they first met and were all crushing on each other. On good days, that just upsets me. On bad days I start to sympathize, and then I start feeling less sympathetic toward my own spouse, and that's not something I'm looking for in a novel.
But anyway, I guess I'm slowly plodding through it. The Audible version has different readers/voices for each spouse, though, and they both do a good job.


I'd recommend Consider Phlebas as a good starting point. It is not his best book but it does a pretty good job of introducing the Culture and is a pretty fun read.

I am currently re-reading The Pacific War: 1941-1945 a one volume treatment of WWII in the Pacific.
I am also reading The Three-Body Problem on my phone. It is a sci-fi book set in China during and after the Cultural Revolution. There are many interesting ideas in it.
I am trying to also read Best Served Cold but I am really struggling getting into it. Also, I am struggling getting into The Peripheral. In both cases I am having a hard time with the characterizations. I am just having a hard time buying into why the characters are doing what they are doing.


I mean, I get why Monza is doing what she is doing. Well, in the big picture at least, although I don't always get her scene-by-scene motivation. The other characters in the crew though? No idea why they do anything. If that is a major theme, it is over my head (certainly a possibility!) it just makes reading more of a task.
I kind of felt like this when I read The Blade Itself, which I ended up really liking as well as the other two books. So I should trust Abercrombie and push past this sense. Of course my other currently reading books are monopolizing my time at the moment.

Very lyrical, and reminiscent of Cloud Atlas.
Next up, I think I'm going to finish my run-through of the Lemony Snicket books. After that, I'm not sure, but possibly last year's Year's Best Science Fiction collection.

Starting Capital in the Twenty-First Century on Audible now. It's dense enough that I find I can't speed up the playback as much as usual. Maybe I'm less familiar with the material, though. I like that it comes at all the usual politically charged arguments about wealth distribution and insists on tackling the topic from data. That means a less sensational thesis, but a thesis I'm more interested in, ultimately.



One of the best documentaries I've ever read. Incredibly fascinating.

Turns out it's Fool Moon. Technically a re-read... but I never got past book three the first time I read the series, so I'm taking another go. I read through Storm Front for a second time last fall, and I don't want to lose the thread completely.
I've been trying to read at least one nonfiction book a month, but I've missed that goal this month, unless I find some sort of lightweight memoir which will be a fast read, which wasn't quite the spirit of my goal. (But if anyone wants to recommend a fluffy memoir likely to be available as an ebook from or the , I'm all ears.)

Response too slow. Reduced to reading about kitchen utensils, e.g. Consider the Fork.
So far, so good, however. In the introduction alone, I've learned about a fairly recent kitchen item I've never encountered, the , and the author has called out unusual food only found in Futurama.
Very readable, and available on Kindle Unlimited, though I checked it out of the library, myself.


Good idea to read Mary Roach, though it's more likely to be Packing for Mars, since we own a copy I haven't read. Or maybe What If?, which is also sitting on the TBR pile.


Now to finish Ancillary Justice and my other lagging books. Although I am sure to start some other books because I am an insane person evidently.

I'm also starting the Fables comic series - on #1 right now.

The first book in the series is The Thief.

I'm a little unsure about reading order (I like to have a plan going in), but I'm pretty sure this is the start of the Repairman Jack series.




What to Expect When You're Expecting
Smart Love
All Joy and No Fun: The Paradox of Modern Parenthood

I thought it was an interesting premise for a mystery. Multiple points of view, unreliable protagonists, and a clever, though not too surprising, twist. Seasoned mystery readers won't be caught off guard, but it's a fun summer read.
3.75/5.00

Can I presume that congratulations are in order? My only advice is not to pay too much attention to pronouncements of The One True Way to Parent, and do what fits the personalities of everyone involved.
As far as books go, I just finished Unnatural Death. Not particularly recommended unless you're being a completist about reading Sayers. It's too much a product of its time, and showcases all its prejudices against everyone who isn't a cis white male Catholic.
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Little Brother (other topics)
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Robear in the forums said it best with "most cyber punk are now period pieces".