SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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What Are You Reading in May 2010

After this, may start Journey to the Centre of the Earth by Jules Verne, I need a "V" author for my ABC challenge.

If Verne turns out not to your taste, you might try Jack Vance to fulfill your V requirement :-)










And I'm still working my way through


Book club reads for May (and a couple left over from April) include:




Check out my current-month book shelf to see what else I decide to peruse as the month marches on.

Good so far. Maybe a bit better than the first book. Some unexpected moments.

If Verne turns out not to your taste, you might try J..."</i>
Double down with [author:Vernor Vinge

I'm setting aside May as British Invasion month, since I'm taking a long-overdue trip to the UK, so I will finally start Wolf Hall.



I haven't made it out of the preface yet and I am laughing and shouting out loud, "This is my job!!"
See, I commit people.
No, really.
And this book is by a shrink in a psych ER.
Busman's Holiday of a book, but it's nice to know that on the other side of the country, someone else is bitching about exactly the same things.

I've been doing a lot of re-reading, and new reads are frequently either non-fiction or from outside the SF/F genres. But if I come across anything that's awesome, I'll be sure to come and post it here. :)
And stormhawk, thanks for the rec. I'll have to check that one out too.


Jackie - those books are very excellent as they stand - and Jennifer provided a decent pause point. This is a wonderful work - it was on my "best of the year" list when book 2 came out. Enjoy!


It is.
If you are having a bit of trouble to get into the first book, please don't give up. The first book is famous for its "difficulty". You are thrown into the middle of something and for the first 100 pages it might be a bit confusing but in a long run it is worth it.

It is.
If you are having a bit of trouble to get into the first book, please don't give up. The first book..."
Actually on the contrary, I'm really enjoying the book. After about 30 pages I got into it. I have to force my self to stop. I want to make it last.


A Game of Thrones was one of the greatest books I've read. Have fun!

Next up: Dead to the Family.

A Game of Thrones was one of the greatest books I've read...."
its a pretty BIG book lol. Im going to read Leo Tolstoy soon (doesnt really matter which one they are all huge) so I guess I should get used to long books lol.


Finished three novels: 1) Diplomatic Immunity (my review); 2) Black Easter (my review); and, 3) Breath and Bone (my review)
I started A Canticle for Leibowitz this morning. I thought I had read this novel back in the 80s, but nothing I'm reading seems familiar at all. I'm still listening (on my lunch and evening walks) to I Am Legend: And Other Stories but I have no idea how far or how close I am to the finish.
After I finish Canticle I'll probably start one of my two library books:



I'm interested in how you think Dead in the Family stacks up with the rest of her books. I haven't reread tham all recently, but I wasn't thrilled by Dead in the Family.

Next up:


Canticle is one of my favorite sci-fi books. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.



A Game of Thrones was one of the greatest b..."
Haha, they are long books, but good ones.



"Lavondyss", "The hollowing" and "Avilion" by Robert Holdstock
Waiting for the babies to arrive in the mail:)
If I get trough them quickly I may start on





Good, solid sequence to The Way of Shadows
Immediately started the third and the last book in the Night Angel trilogy, Beyond the Shadows

I also got through two anthologies/collections: Warriors edited by George R.R. Martin and Scenting the Dark by Mary Robinette Kowal, both of which were quite good.



Then I read

Now I'm reading All Unquiet Things and liking it.


Today I read To Engineer Is Human. I thought it was all right, but I think my reading of it suffered by comparison to Lois McMaster Bujold's Falling Free, which made engineering failure analysis much more gripping. (Though one of Michael Flynn's Firestar books and one of David Weber's Honor Harrington books also touched on this, IIRC.)


I usually change genres but I have The Desert Spear by Peter Brett, Dream of Perpetual Motion, Under Heaven and Directive 51 out of the library and due w/i 10 days so I may just stick in fantasy and sf.

Mr. Burton is a GoodReads author who placed a recommendation for his book in one of the Kindle groups. It's a Fantasy novel set on a post-apocalyptic earth, but it's not your usual sort of apocalypse.
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Tomorrow, I'm picking up Glass Empires Star Trek Mirror Universe and The Romulan War Beneath the Raptor's Wing Star Trek Enterprise from the library. And I should be getting a used copy of Harbinger Star Trek Vanguard 1 by mid-month.
I'm also rewriting my alternate Trek timeline (i.e., how I would have done things if I owned the franchise). Might post it to the blog site one of these days.
In more serious literature, I continue to move through the 13-volume collection of Chekhov's short stories - I'm up to volume 4. And I'm planning to read something by Sylvia Townsend Warner and T. F. Powys, I just have to decide what.
In the nonfiction realm, I hope to finish my religion-themed reading by finishing Bart Ehrman's Jesus Interrupted Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible Why We Don't Know About Them and getting to The Evolution of God.