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What Else Are You Reading?
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What else are you reading - July 2023
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Rob, Roberator
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Jul 01, 2023 12:35PM

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It’s on YouTube for free:


After I finish one of those, I’ll start Planetfall.

Next up: The doorstopper A Day of Fallen Night, prequel to The Priory of the Orange Tree.

I like CoT but I think my fave Tchaikovsky is the time travel novella One Day All This Will Be Yours. It’s dark and snarky and perfectly misanthropic.


/review/show...
"A man should stand when he shakes hands or when a woman comes into the room or leaves the table. Even more important, a man should stand up for someone who can’t stand up for themselves."
“Ends need to meet,� he’d often say. “They don’t need to overlap.�


Brand of Light by Ronie Kendig
I almost wished I hadn't read it so quickly after Hunt the Stars by Jessie Mihalik, which I almost awarded five stars (4.8-4.9).
These are similar to last month's Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros, but definitely not YA/New Adult and from my subjective POV, better for it.
I'm listening to The Valkyrie by Kate Heartfield but it's not been keeping my attention. In fact, I'm nodding off to it as my bedtime story and having to rewind quite a bit in the mornings.
I'll snag a copy of this month's book this week and get started on Planetfall soon.

I need to catch up on my MJS reading. I own all of his ebooks (through Kickstarters) and then promptly forget I have them in my library. Thanks for this reminder!

After I finish ..."
Thanks for the reminder from yet another Kickstarter. I need to download that ebook.

I added this to my TBR. Sounds good.

no longer available :(


I have now started Unraveller by Frances Hardinge, one of my favourite authors. I think we should read one of her books with the club at some point- her writing has a similar vibe to Nettle & Bone.

The romance was okay by today's standards. I've long since given up on any actual tension. It's all "He's totally sexy, but we can't be together because reasons." My first exposure to the genre was the gothic romances, and those had worldbuilding and intricate plots that could not be beat. I did appreciate we didn't have to do the whole "sexual tension but no actual sex" for the majority of the book like others; here it was more about commitment while the sex was happening on the regular.
Anyhoo, this book is probably intended more for straight up romance readers, with a scifi flavor. I'm looking for SF adventure with a side of romance. It was an okay insomnia read but didn't inspire me to read more. I'll probably skip the rest. Of which there appear to be at least two more set up.

Just started reading Yellowface by RF Kuang. Chapter 1 has made me hungry for pancakes, though it probably shouldn't have. Hating the protagonist right away, but I think we are meant to.

Can anyone tell me if the streaming series of The Rook is the same or close to the book? Trying to figure out if I go find it and pay for a month's subscription to watch it and just stick to the books.


The three books in the Rook Files are all in the same universe, but don't feature the same characters. I like O'Malley's storytelling, but I read ebooks, not the audio versions. The TV adaptation of the Rook is visually fascinating and suspenseful. I think it's worth a watch if you get the opportunity. However, it's not quite the same story as the novel.


Decided to switch to some fun listening with A Blink of the Screen: Collected Shorter Fiction by Terry Pratchett. I'll alternate listening to humor with Aberration by Cathy McCrumb (which will probably not funny).
I'm slogging through Planetfall. I'm not a fan of organic or biological SF ... too icky or sticky or gooey. :)

No xenomorphs serving up melty grilled cheese for you, eh?


Silvana wrote: "Currently reading Daniel Abraham's second Kithamar novel Blade of Dream. So far I am loving this more than the first one."
That's good to hear. I liked the first book alright, but it's not as good as his Dagger & Coin series.
I need to pick that one up at some point this year
That's good to hear. I liked the first book alright, but it's not as good as his Dagger & Coin series.
I need to pick that one up at some point this year

It's short and kind of experimental which I like. Has lots of wild ideas and challenges it's readers to keep up.
It started well but it is very bare bones in how it goes about telling it's story. Some of that is thematically deliberate but some of it is just about skipping to the action.
If you liked the way Mind MGMT kept laying a trail of breadcrumbs give it a go.

I like to know the next read/watch is not the same set of characters upfront. Cuts down on the confusion trying to catch up.

My next audiobook is The Odyssey, translated by Emily Wilson.

Paused on The Blood Trials because it’s too similar to that other dragon book.
Paused on The Archive Undying because it’s a hot mess, like spaghetti spilled on the floor.
Started Age of Iron because it was highly recommended and the preview was good. Grimdark, and so far no Fantasy elements.



Kull: Exile of Atlantis by Robert E. Howard
Rating: 4 stars
Review: /review/show...
and I started reading the next installment in my Publication-Order reading of the Discworld books

Wyrd Sisters by Terry Pratchett

..."
I have that in print - excellent translation. I'll be interested to hear about the audio.
Old Man's War was quite a fun book but remember that it came out in 2005 and really is a pretty impressive debut novel. It's not Great Literature but how much SFF is? I did like that (view spoiler) That felt more realistic, if I can use that word about a book with green skinned soldiers.


Uh-oh. 😳 Guess I should be reading all of that next.





Actually John Buchan. He also wrote The 39 Steps, which inspired the Hitchcock film.

It is definitely in the Crime genre but has a Time-Travel edge.
After her son commits a crime, a woman finds herself living days in her past (travelling further and further back in time) while she tries to discover why he did it.

Does Jasper Fforde ever get to the point? I read to the end of book 3 and he still left (view spoiler) I'd move on to book 4 if he finally got to that but at this point I'm so exasperated with the author that I'm not sure I want to continue. I'm also sick of him showing off how clever he is with things like (view spoiler) and the idea of lesser characters filling in for major ones either well or poorly. A little of that went a long way and two full books was enough.
Anyway, I'd put up with some silliness if he'd finally resolve that plot point. But if it's all ego all the time, then I'll move on. Anyone want to chime in?

I've read 5 of the Thursday Nexts and it safe to say that plot points do get reesolved but there are always new complications.
Sometmes the complcations feel like sequel fodder.

Starting Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah. Female gladiators in prison. Cool prologue!

I quite liked his short story collection Friday Black, which does a similar thing of taking real-world stuff and giving it a one-quarter twist into SFF to highlight its absurdity and/or wrongness. I do hope he avoids the plot of Rollerball for this one.
My review of Friday Black: /review/show...
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Books mentioned in this topic
The Spare Man (other topics)DC: Mech (other topics)
The Archive Undying (other topics)
The Blood Trials (other topics)
The White Dragon (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Brandon Sanderson (other topics)Stephen King (other topics)
Ann Leckie (other topics)
Ada Palmer (other topics)
H.G. Wells (other topics)
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