SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Born in '70. Raised in southern California, I currently live in the Bay Area working for CNet. My dad reads SF, is very interested in history, and was in the wargaming industry when I was little, so I come by my hobbies honestly.
BA, majored in History, split minor anthropology and creative writing. Currently, my spare time is mostly sunk in WoW, where I'm in a guild that consists of good friends.
By Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ, I've read this year:
Covenants: A Borderlands Novel - Freeman, Lorna
Panzer Commander: The Memoirs of Colonel Hans Von Luck
The Price of the Phoenix - Marshak, Sondra
The Fate of the Phoenix - Marshak, Sondra
History of the Goths - Wolfram, Herwig
Before France and Germany: The Creation and Transformation of the Merovingian World - Geary, Patrick J. (reread)
To Rule the Waves: How the British Navy Shaped the Modern World - Herman, Arthur
Army of the Potomac Trilogy - Catton, Bruce
The October Horse: A Novel of Caesar and Cleopatra - McCullough, Colleen
Dog Wizard - Hambly, Barbara
Harry Potter series (reread 1-6) Rowling, J. K.
Eragon - Paolini, Christopher
Stuka Pilot - Rudel, Hans Ulrich
Mutiny on the Enterprise - Vardeman, Robert E.
Watching Anime, Reading Manga: 25 Years of Essays and Reviews - Patten, Fred
Alanna: The First Adventure - Pierce, Tamora
In the Hand of the Goddess - Pierce, Tamora
Demons - Dillard, J. M.
Vulcan! - Sky, Kathleen
The Entropy Effect - McIntyre, Vonda N.
The Prometheus Design - Marshak, Sondra
Prehistoric Mesoamerica (reread) - Adams, Richard E. W.
The Dragonbone Chair - Williams, Tad

I am married with two kids...one in kindergarten and one in first grade (this is why I had to make myself quit WoW). I am mostly interested in sci-fi, but I've been reading a lot of classics and a few fantasy. If I had to pick, I would say my favorite author would be Kurt Vonnegut. I am also an Asimov fan.

When I was in fifth grade, my teacher recommended that I read The Hobbit, and that was what got me started on fantasy. Finding out that there was a whole trilogy after The Hobbit was one of the best things ever. But it took finding Robert Jordan to realize that fantasy was a current genre, so I'll always be indebted to The Wheel of Time. After that, I focused a lot of my time on reading fantasy and eventually some science fiction.
This past year I put a lot of effort into reading more because I'd really been slacking off. The result is that I have a fairly long list, but I've decided that it's too much trouble for me to be scrolling past my whole list, so I'll just tell you some recent highlights for me.
Lois McMaster Bujold's Vorkosigan series (I'm almost completely caught up)
Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising Sequence
The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch
Those are definitely the three things I'm happiest I've read this year.
Nice to meet you all!

I can't even begin to list off the books I've read this year, as I can't recall all of them. But I will say that I read the entire Crown of Stars series and adored them. Highly recommended to anyone that likes good, rich plot and a lot of intrigue with their fantasy.

I am not going to list all the books I've read this year. If you really want to know, you can check my reading blog at jspages.blogspot.com. ;-)

I majored in English and minored in American history for undergrad and got my masters in reading and certified as a k-12 reading specialist. But, I have taught English to teenagers for the last 7 years (I thrive on the drama!). In August, I packed up my CRV and moved across the country again to pursue my PhD in literacy. Most of my adult life has centered around school and books (and I actually love it!)
My passion is young adult literature, but when I stray into adult reads it is usually in sci-fi and fantasy. I am excited to start reading for this group and hope to have some great debates!

Here is the quick summary: I started reading on my own in 8th grade with Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover series, which completely suck me in. At one point over my summer breaks, I was reading 2 novels a day from the nearly 1000 books in my parents' basement ... all of it pure escapist trash according to my English Teacher :)~ I soon started my own collection with weekly trips to the book store and through various monthly book clubs. While I was in the Coast Guard, I moved around a lot, so I have most of my library still in boxes, and I am only now starting to go through them for ideas for my oldest daughter. This year I think I have managed to read about 6 books total as my time has been extremely limited (I just have too much to do these days) and for a long while, I just did not see much in the stores that interested me (so I am re-reading what I have).
For a non-literature based bio, you can go [formating on IE7 is good, but anything before that isn't ... so use firefox or somethin']

I read a mix of fantasy, general lit and classics, Young Adult and paranormal romance - a new addition to my reading list. My favourite author is still Isobelle Carmody, who writes very unique fantasy. I'm trying to read more non-fiction - it's not that I don't enjoy them and learn a lot from them, they're just much harder for me to get into (my mind wanders a bit...).
I've been waiting till 2007 finished, but it turns out I managed to read 96 books last year and if I post the list here it'll be a complete waste of space. So, you can check out the list (and reviews, if you want) on my .
Oh, and Arian, I completely agree about Kate Elliott's Crown of Stars series, which I finished last year when the final book came out. I also recommend her Jaran series (4 books in total), which are I guess more sci-fi than fantasy but really terrrific!

Perhaps I'm the geezer - born in '59. I started out reading sci-fi when I was 8 years old, reading collections of Asimov, Heinlein, Clarke, never seeming to get enough. Not much into fantasy, but have run across some that have piqued my interest. I do like to try an eclectic mix of fiction - one now I', reading "Chanelling Mark Twain" is really good.
I work at the University of Maryland and have access to libraries that can go beyond your wildest dreams of lending - wish I had more time!
I have three boys, two in college and one in middle school - our love for reading has really inspired them. A list of books - have to think about that one and come out such a thing one day.

I'm from Ohio, circa '76, but have lived in Tahoe and Chicago too. There's no place like a home with lots of bookshelves. My favorite housemates include Tad Williams, Neal Stephenson, Connie Willis, Ursula LeGuin, Lois Bujold, Joan Vinge, Judith Reily, Mary Doria Russell, Terry Pratchet, Guy Gavriel Kay, Ken Wilber, Kurt Vonnegut, Susan Cooper, Alfred Bester.... It's a long list.
I work as a transportation and land use planner, which I love, I'm one of those messy desk people, and I encourage everyone to use public transit because it gives you so much more time to read. On the downside, you end up bringing your book to work with you, and even if you never pick it up, you know its there... waiting.

Its great to see such a variety of sci-fi and fantasy tastes by the above members. I think that shows that SciFi/Fantasy clearly have much wider appeals than critics give the genres credit for.


One of the reasons I thought it would be good to join this group is it will give me an idea what other people think. After all, what is the point of subjecting a publisher to my drivel if I don't think it is worth printing?
Also, I see that the current book is already started. When will the discussion be, so I know if I have time to read it with everyone else.

I love all books but especially fantasy and sci-fi. The Hobbit by Tolkien got me started as a child as well aa a Heinlein addiction in my teens. The rest, as they say, is history.
I also love finding new authors, especially one's who have a completed series so I can read the books in order and not have to wait a couple of years for the next one (I have trust issues after starting the Wheel of Time eons ago!). Anyways, that's me so please feel free to recommend new authors and it's great to meet you all.

I'm an engineer and currently live in ohio.
I think I joined this club because I have a tendency to plow through books just to see what happens next. I'm really looking forward to the much richer experience of discussing and and dissecting a book.

I'm 31, living in RI, teaching English. I'm a once-and-future music teacher as well--my fiancee and I are moving to western PA for the next school year. Originally from Ohio, I started reading fantasy in 4th or 5th grade with Tolkien and Lewis, and gradually branched out from there. I was a voracious reader of fantasy and sci-fi up through high school and nursed dreams of writing in those genres. I went to college, majored in English (and music) and put aside sf and fantasy as somehow inferior to "real" literature.
Thankfully, while doing graduate work in music, I happened to pick up some of my old fantasy novels (I think it was Zelazny's Amber chronicles, but perhaps not) and realized that just because I enjoyed it as a kid didn't mean the genre was a bunch of fluff. I've been voraciously reading and re-reading sf and fantasy ever since.
On the whole, I lean more toward fantasy, and that more on the "epic" side of things, though I'm not tied down to that and appreciate other kinds of fantasy and sci-fi as well.
I read 32 books last year, but rather than list them all, I'll just share some of the series that have stood out for me. In no particular order: R. Scott Bakker's Prince of Nothing, Steven Erikson's Malazan Book of the Fallen, Sherwood Smith's Inda series, and George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire. Only the first of those has actually been completed, and even that one *really* has a whole follow-up series that hasn't even started. I'm just hoping none of them go the route of Robert Jordan.

It wasn't until I went to college (at 23, I waited) that I really started to read books. I started off easy with some R.A. Salvatore (whom I still love), then went to some more series stuff with Starship Troopers and Armor.
I joined this group to try and broaden my horizons. I seem to be stuck in DnD reads (FR novels and eberron mostly) and a couple recommended by friends. So here I am to listen to other's opinions and get some books read.
I have a moderate goal of 35 books this year. I would set a higher goal, but my wife and I just started playing WoW again, so some of you know how that absorbs time.

I love fantasy novels but haven't read any Sci-Fi novels so I hope to find some good ones from this group. The monthly book discussions look fun so I can't wait to start! I love that we can vote for our books using that hyperlink. I think that makes it easy!

it wouldnt let me post a new comment so i will update this one for you .... the title of my book (and thanks for asking by the way xx) is HIM and my full name is diane martin ..its on amazon.co.uk ........ thanks again for requesting this information

My favorite genre is fantasy, closely followed by horror and sci-fi. However, I read other genres too (right now I'm reading some of the books from the 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die group.
Diane, what is the title of your book?

I'm a '69er - so geezerish.
I taught myself to read aged 4 and a half. My mother claims this was as a defence against the boredom of being an only child in a family with a penchant for the siesta.
I was weaned on Star Trek and Dr Who and as a preteen devoured Nicholas Fisk, John Christopher and John Wyndham and believed Madeiline L'Engle knew the secret of Life.
Then school began to dictate my reading choices ....
Much later I discovered the internet and virtual bookclubs and it occurred to me that I should try and combine my love of books and scifi.

I was born in '78 and so I think I am about to turn 29 again....I haven't decided if I want to turn thirty, hee hee :)
I'm married with 2 darling/devilish daughters, and I design/sew children's clothing. I do most of my reading during ballet lessons and basketball practice and on Saturday mornings when the girls only want to cuddle with Daddy :)
I cannot remember a time that I could not read. My mom says I learned when I was 4...I don't actually remember learning to read. It's as if it's something I've just always been able to do.
I've always been a huge scifi fan, though in the form of TV and movies...I've only recently started reading scifi/fantasy and there are so many books that I missed out on and I have to catch up!

I'm 33. I'm a big fat guy. I play guitar and bass. I have a 3-year-old daughter who is very silly. I used to be a journalist and a high school teacher, now I'm neither. I'm currently unemployed and I hate it. I'm moving to the Madison, Wis. area soon, so if anyone is from that area can hook a brother up with a job, let me know.
I wrote a novel, published last year. I'm working on its sequel, plus three other books--one fantasy, one sci-fi, and one that's sort of a comic book in novel form. I play too much World of Warcraft. I probably read too much, as well...well, that's what my wife says.
I'm a big Gaiman fan. I love Pratchett. Douglass Adams is the man. If your book has a sword-fight in it, I'll probably read it.

Had nine hours of driving to do and I spent it listening to From Here to Infinity on science fiction; it revived my old interests. My brother has also been updating his list of books on Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ, and I go and check on those.
In the 60s I was surrounded with books by Asimov, Norton, Bradbury, Heinlein, Clarke, Burroughs, Fantasy & Science Fiction magazine, Analog. We had the Twilight Zone and Outer Limits to watch, and Star Trek. LeGuin's book was the basis of my college entry essay. My college roommate is an editor of one of the magazines today.
Frankly, I thought Star Wars made a mess of things. The movie was OK; I saw it in Farmington with a bunch of Navajo kids at 400 in the afternoon. Maybe actually landing on the moon and Mars hurt, too. Now Pluto isn't even a planet. Everything got to be a big production. I did like Blade Runner, and mostly liked Babylon, and the Patrick Stewart Star Trek revival, but not the other.
When I was younger, I liked Narnia, but it doesn't stand up for me on rereading. Nor do I care for Harry Potter, or all the arcana of Tolkien. Not British enough, I guess.
Am going to try Neil Stephenson and some other things I haven't read. Maybe go back to Philip K. Rucker is too weird. I like Kim Stanley Robinson, Robert Wilson.
I used to write, but I never thought about writing in sci-fi, and still don't think I'd have any aptitude for it.

I seem to be on the young end of the group, because I'm a sixteen year old high school student. I'm actually taking a class called "Fantasy Lit" right now (I know, can you believe that class actually exists?), which is a lot of fun and has put me on a fantasy book kick lately. I've never been into sci-fi as much, but Ender's Game is one of my favorite books.
Right now I'm reading The Mists of Avalon, The Color of Magic, and Lord of the Flies. Unfortunately, the books I read for school come before everything else. :/ My "to-read" list has gotten very long.
That's all, I guess - I'm excited to be a part of this group!

Avid reader my whole life. Just recently became a fan of Fantasy after reading "The Mists of Avalon", and then stumbling on James Clemens' "Banned and the Banished" series. Looking for more along those lines, hopefully with female protagonists, and I hope to find some good recommendations here.


Within one week, I had read all four of the original Dune Series, and was enthralled by the sci-fi/fantasy genre. Since then, I have made a point to go back and re-read the Dune Saga, for as a young child, I know I did not really catch all the subtleties to the series, and I'm glad I did!
Now, I read four or five books a month. I still have the original Dune series my father gave me as one of my favorite pieces, right along side Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time. My wife gets exasperated with me at how much I read sometimes, mainly when I'm so lost I don't hear her calling for me, but I enjoy it too much to let up. I look forward to discussing some interesting books with you all!

Our first book was The Fellowship of the Ring. We read it outside of class and then spent the class time either discussing or doing some sort of related activity, followed by watching the corresponding scenes from the film. The rest of the books on our syllabus are A Wizard of Earthsea, The Once and Future King, various "legends and folklore from around the world," The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, and Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. Basically, we read the first book of a few different series and there's always the option of continuing them on our own if they really spark our interest.
We also have an "outside reading" which is another fantasy book that we read within a smaller group of people in the class. My group is reading The Mists of Avalon, another is reading The Golden Compass, another is reading The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, and so on.

I'm new to goodreads and looking for more book ideas! I was born in 78 in MI. My 30th birthday is coming up in MAY and I'm getting my first tattoo for my birhtday! Excited!
I love horror, sci-fi fantasy, drama/lit. classics, non-fic, biography, comics - tons of stuff!
I have two kids, a three year old and a one year old! So I don't read as fast as I used to!
I'd love more goodreads friends so I can see what everyone is reading so I might be adding some of you and feel free to add me, thanks!
-lola

I've lived all over the US and in three countries. I love to travel almost as much as I love to write.
I recently published my first book, The Incredible Origins of the Onyx Sun, which can find more information about by searching "Onyx Sun". I have plenty of advance review paperbacks for anyone interested in reading and reviewing my book.
I'm glad to be part of the group and look forward to more of our discussions around great books!
- Christopher

i was raised on star trek - first old, then the newer stuff. read a lot of it, too, and then stopped reading for about 10 year or so, probably due to all the required reading at school. i started back up in the last few years though, and though i've read very little scifi since, it still has a very soft, warm fuzzy place inside.
it's probably because of this soft spot that i'm starting a book, SF in nature and no i didn't expect that to happen. so if you have any tips about alien thought patterns, feel free to send them my way.

I am loving this group because I am new to sci-fi and wanted to branch out a little bit. I'm enjoying the discussions and recommendations of books from everyone!

- read 3 books a week or so, on average, for most of my life.
- kept most of the books I have read, both for re-reading and 'respect to the authors'.
- this ever-increasing pile of books has followed me around, accumulating in a home library that is in my photo.
- approximately 2100 of these books are SF.
Most recently, have read:
_Generation Loss_ by Elizabeth Hand
_The Merchant Wars_ by Charles Stross
Currently reading:
_The Dark River_ by John Twelve Hawks
Have a deep knowledge of SF, having read it for 30+ years now. Hoping to have serious conversations with other readers on the genre.
P.S. Started at Shelfari. Still there, but hoping there is more activity on this site...testing the waters.

I'm a confirmed geek, which includes roleplaying on the sly and computer gaming. I've got a queue of books as long as my arm, so I'm looking forward to breaking out and adding EVEN MORE BOOKS to my reading list. YAY GOODREADS!

I would like to join in on your monthly reading, I see Ender's Game is coming up in May, I've read and enjoyed that book many times and would love to read it along with many others again.
Anyways, hope to have a great time reading, and hope to have a great time.

Some of the best new Sci-Fi in my book is
By Peter F Hamilton
“Pandora’s Star & Judas Unchained�
“Reality Dysfunction� (Series)
And a new one I have not bought yet
Robert C Wilson:
â€Âٱ辱²Ôâ€�
Charles Stross:
“A³¦³¦±ð±ô±ð°ù²¹²Ô»å´Çâ€�
Some new Sci-Fi to avoid
David Marusek:
“Counting Heads�
Oldies but goldies
1984: George Orwell
The Illuminatus Trilogy:Robert Shea
Cryptonomicon: Neal Stephenson

(it's ironic because thats the author of the read-a-long book for this month in this group... just in case you're reading this days, months, or years later and feel my claim to irony holds no water.)
Anyways, guess I just wanted to pop in and say hello!

I love fantasy novels and thought that this club would be a great place to find new books to read and discuss.
I look forward to reading the next book!


I absolutely love fantasy, and I thought this group sounded cool,so I joined.And it's pretty cool.

I've been writing off and on since I was 10, and have enjoyed reading since I was 5. Had a short story published through my high school creative writing class back in 1992. Have some poetry, articles, and some short stories posted on Helium.com. Recently decided to self-publish a novella called Out of Time through Iunivere.com, which I probably should've done a little more research on what self-publisher to use. Anyway, it's a time travel/alternate history story that I nitpicked to death for more than 5 years and then decided last year I needed to get into the outside world. You can find info on it at my website, , or you can buy it at:
I've read most of the alternate history novels of Harry Turtledove, some by Eric Flint, and S.M. Stirling. I'm a Trek fan and have read lots of those novels. Have read H.G. Wells, Jules Verne, and Isaac Asimov.

I'm a 40 something computer security professional living in Austin, Texas with my fiancee. I have over the years loved many different subgenres of sci-fi/fantasy/horror-- everything from cyberpunk and hard sci-fi, through swords and sorcery, steampunk, and tolkien to nihilistic existential horror and the new weird.
I have just finished 'The Trial of Flowers' by Jay Lake. I liked it, but it was mostly just full of great, imaginative ideas but not a reason to care about what was going on. But the ideas are very cool indeed.
I am currently reading my first Thomas Ligotti collection and I love it-- that boy can write! So far my impression is that this guy is perhaps the best horror writer I have ever read.

Relevant details: I'm male, married, with kids, dogs, a cat, too many cars, so much to do, so little time. I'm about to turn 53 (next Saturday). I learned to read at age 5, read my first "adult" book at age 7 (The Saint in Europe), and read pretty much a book a day, on average, from 7 or 8 until I was 32 and my first son was born -- an event that dropped me back to a book or two a week. I have literally thousands of books upstairs, and still more in storage. I read a bit of everything, but my overwhelming genre(s) of preference are SF&F. I can't abide rambling, anecdotal stories of banal existence -- I like romance, plot and purpose (although depth and allegory and meaning and so on are welcome as well).
Reading SF as I did from the mid-60's on, I've devoured pretty much all of Heinlein, a lot of Asimov (although the man was so prolific I don't dare say "all" where he is concerned), most of Clarke and Bradbury, pretty much all of Niven, of Zelazny, of Farmer, etc. Most of what I've read I've read many times, some of it several tens of times.
Professionally I'm a geek. A serious geek, an ubernerd as it were. I'm a Ph.D. physicist, was a physics and philosophy major as an undergrad (did I mention my Ayn Rand phase?:-), completed enough math for something more than a BS and less than a masters along the way (I'm a theorist, not an experimentalist), learned to code, and at this point am a professional computer geek and semipro statistics and modeling nerd on top of teaching physics and writing and premajor advising at Duke. I do beowulf computing, use pretty much only linux by choice for an OS, have been a Unix sysadmin and high-end computer consultant for 22 years as a true secondary profession, and write open source software. My current tech interests are: random numbers (I'm working on "dieharder", a random number generator tester that I intend to make the best rng tester in the world, the last rng testing suite you'll ever wear, the swiss-army knife of rng testers, etc.); neural networks and predictive modeling (I'm starting a company to do that any week now); Monte Carlo simulation in physics; and genetic optimization algorithms.
I'm quite prolific. If you google rgb with "beowulf" or "poetry" or "duke" or "lilith" (the name of my personal laptop for roughly a decade now) or "physics" -- yup, those are all me. Or a lot of them, anyway. I get well over half a million hits a year on my personal website, mostly on free textbooks and related resources I make available to students of physics all over the world.
My current non-tech interests are working on Axioms (a book on metaphysical philosophy, plausible inference, and the theory of knowledge) and writing novels and poetry. I have two books of poetry online, one published novel ( The Book of Lilith) that is difficult to characterize by genre -- call it fantasy, magical realism, literature, religious fiction, or humor as you like -- am working off and on on a second novel (this one straight up "Sword and SF"), and wish I had the time and money to be able to "just write" whenever I'm not reading or fishing for the rest of my life.
I've actually been a member of Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ for 6+ months at this point, making me something of an "old timer". I've only been in this group, however, for a week or two, following Rindis here from various discussions we've had in other groups. This seems like home to me, as y'all read what I read, like what I like, more than any other single group I've yet encountered on GR.
People who want to learn more about me (or my books) are encouraged to visit either my personal website (and follow links as you wish) or directly visit the Book of Lilith website. My own website is:
and TBOL's website is:
On the latter, there are links to previews, online resources to much of the mythology of Lilith, and some other cool stuff. Note well that Lilith in my book is the original feminist (well, the original human being, actually, but the original feminist/humanist as well), and is not a vampiric demonic succubus or the like, so if you're a looking for yet another vampire maiden story, sorry...;-)
I cherish reader feedback, and generally answer non-automated email from friends or strangers alike.
I look forward to participating in many a discussion with you all on the joys and lessons of high-grade SF&F.
rgb

"What are we gonna do today Daxter?"
"Same thing we do every day Chip; TRY TO ESCAPE FROM THE LIVING ROOM!!"
Chip's just a big,18 month old, playful lug. He's a labradoodle, with a really short attention span, and ADHD. Daxter's 4 months old, a Longhair doxen, who lives to sleep and cuddle, and be warm.
With all this talk of dogs, you'd think they'd be all of my life.. Not quite. I've got my boyfriend, my parents, and attempting to pass all my graduation requirements to keep my busy as well, not to mention all the reading I do. (3 books currently, and not a single one of them's Sci-Fi. They're all fantesy/fiction.)
I don't read as much Sci-Fi as most here do, as I read more into the fantasy side. I didn't really like Ender's Game when I read it, but I'll read it again when the group does. Eric and I were discussing today about buying Neverwhere to read it in April. I think I might surprise him and get two copies, so we both can. Haha.. I tend to babble on and on some times.
One of my all time favorite fantasy books is "The Last Unicorn". I think I'll re-read it soon. My grandpa gave me his copy on my twelfth birthday, and I haven't gotten rid of it since. When I'm sick, thats one of my favorite books (and movies) to watch. They make me feel so much better! (There I go again, just babbling on and on.)
Anyways, I hope to get the chance to read some exceptional books that I can discuss with the group later on.
~Alex (AkA AlleyKat)

My name is Rowena Cherry, I am an author, and I write Romance which is variously categorized as science fiction romance, fantasy romance, futuristic romance. My titles are all chess positions/moves.
My favorite Asimov book is THE GODS THEMSELVES, because it combines an impossible puzzle (equation), space travel (colony on the Moon), and three sexes.
I love Harry Harrison's Stainless Steel Rat; Terry Pratchett's Discworld; Vivian Vande Valde's Dragon's Bait also The Rumpelstitskin Problem; Lisa Shearin's Magic Lost, Trouble Found; Harry Potter; Lord of The Rings... and many more.
I thought The Weirdstone of Brisingamen was LOTR for kids.
Best wishes,

I'm a writer for the working day, so just call me Inky. When I'm not working as a journalist, I'm often browsing at the bookstore for new releases or ducking into used bookshops to look for things I've missed. I'm heavier on the fantasy than I am on the sci fi, a likely outgrowth of too much time spent with Bullfinch's Mythology as a child.
My first all-nighter with a book was a collected edition of the Dragonriders of Pern. That's occasionally still a bad habit, most recently with "The Lies of Lock Lamora," by Scott Lynch.
I have much love for Tolkien and yes, I was entirely sucked into the Harry Potter phenomenon. I have a soft spot for Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next and I can't seem to stop reading Kim Harrison's novels about the Hollows.
I'm also a total victim of fantasy series -- Harry Dresden, Thomas Covenant, Mercy Thompson, Dragonlance, Song of Ice and Fire, Sookie Stackhouse, and the list goes on.
I pretty much love anything by Connie Willis and I was total snob about graphic novels until Neil Gaiman's Sandman series put me in my place.
That said, I can't wait to see what everyone else is reading -- to many books, not enough time:)
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This year I've read these books, in no particular order:
The Stand
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
A Wizard of Earthsea
The Eyre Affair
Moby Dick
Scarlet Letter
Namesake
The Awakening
Their Eyes Were Watching God
The Samurai's Garden
Desert Flower
The Bluest Eye
The Kite Runner
Drawing of the Three
The Wastelands
Wizards and Glass
On Writing (second time)
Gateway
The Tomb
Legacies
Conspiracies
All the Rage
Native Son
The Bean Trees
Unquiet Earth
as well as some more that I can't remember. I'd love to discuss them if you'd like!