Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy discussion
What We've Been Reading
>
What Have You been Reading this October?
message 1:
by
Andrea
(new)
Oct 01, 2019 10:12AM

reply
|
flag

Be a nice change after two years of reading Varney the Vampire; or, The Feast of Blood which was over 1000 pages long, makes a book in ASoIaF look short :)



Depends on where you are. Even in Sydney (which is far from the warmest part of Australia), the temperature is getting up to 30 Celsius (high 80s for those using Fahrenheit) at the moment.












=============
Authors: Margaret Atwood, Moïra Fowley-Doyle, A.J. Hackwith, Lisa Jewell, Stephen King, William Kent Krueger, Jenn Lyons, Kassandra Montag, Tamsyn Muir, Catherine Steadman, Michael Swanwick

Of if you're in Georgia...we've broken temp records for 7 straight days! 97 in October....feels like fall....NOT!

Currently reading Dark Forge, the next book in Miles Cameron's new series.
On the not SF front, I'm rereading The American Plague: The Untold Story of Yellow Fever, the Epidemic That Shaped Our History.

No kidding, just this week in Canada, out West they were digging themselves out of half a meter of snow, while Toronto was getting humid 30 degree celsius temperatures :)
Finished Unicorn War...not sure what I feel about this series, on the whole I enjoyed it but there are some big things that were not followed up as well as they could have been, tantalizing hints to a bigger worldbuilding and no learning more about the very unique enemy they had in the first three books. Frustrating as a reader but then the characters don't know more than what we got told so one couldn't just info dump it either. *shrugs*
But that said, time to start my October fun. Going to read NOS4A2 by Joe Hill just because they've made a TV show about it. It's a lot longer than I expected though...just found out he's the son of Stephen King so if he writes the same way it will be long winded...

I'm now 53 pages into The Winter People which I tried to read last year but was sadly thwarted. So far it's been creepy (by my standards anyway) right from the get-go. I expect this to be a "don't want to get out of bed at night" read 😄
Andrea wrote: "Though I still need tonight to finish my dead-tree book before switching to my Halloween themed reads, I did finish my ebook today. I wanted to start on Carmilla but the epub from Project Gutenberg..."
Carmilla's also on my reading list for this month but bought a copy (one of the cheap paperbacks) from the Indigo website. It'll probably be my next read.

I didn't have a plan what to read next so grabbed the first Algernon Blackwood story that was in the list - The Wave: An Egyptian Aftermath

Stratos wrote: "Just finished Station Eleven. Gave it two stars. Sadly it was the corniest post apocalyptic book I 've ever read."
I shelved it under "litcrap". :) We had a discussion of Station Eleven in which I outlined my many objections. It seems some people think it's the best thing Shakespeare, but as SciFi it's garbage. More like Scienceless Fiction. It was so unaware of reality I felt offended by the author. It's my "Niagara Falls;" I can't let any mention of it go by without screaming at it!
I shelved it under "litcrap". :) We had a discussion of Station Eleven in which I outlined my many objections. It seems some people think it's the best thing Shakespeare, but as SciFi it's garbage. More like Scienceless Fiction. It was so unaware of reality I felt offended by the author. It's my "Niagara Falls;" I can't let any mention of it go by without screaming at it!


The adventure, the sense of danger, the responsibility of the chosen one. The Thrill and the fear. All mixed together, in complete harmony.
I think I'm getting nostalgic, to a time, when a good book, makes you re-read it again, no matter how many times you turn the last page.
I hope you don't mind me, sharing my own opinion about this "ebook", I just wanted to mention, how it made me feel and I guess, I wanted to share theses thoughts, with the group.
Now? I'm thinking of reading "Rise Again Below Zero"
Will see, how the story goes.
Take care everyone.

I liked Station Eleven all right, but I don’t consider it sci fi. The lack of music knowledge drove me crazy, though.


The Rage of Dragons is a YA revenge fantasy with some interesting worldbuilding but simple revenge-driven plot.

Starting on Evelyn's Journal by M.J. Gardner to read about some actual vampires (neither Manx nor the car was a bloodsucker in NOS4A2).

Anyway, I gave this one a 4 star review here:
/review/show...

I've since moved on to some early gothic fiction since I find it suits October/fall weather for me. I'm almost 100 pages into The Mysteries of Udolpho and really enjoying the writing and atmosphere.


After the moon explodes, the Earth is doomed and a tiny percentage of humans have to escape to Earth orbit for 5,000 years....until people (and other life) can return.
Very well researched book but a bit overly technical.
Still, it's a good story. 3.5 stars
My review: /review/show...

I also finished Evelyn's Journal, so picked up the third Midnight, Texas book - Night Shift by Charlaine Harris
I'm not abandoning unicorns completely this month though, since Zombies Vs. Unicorns edited by Holly Black, is an anthology I'll be able to read a story here and there till the end of the month. I don't know yet if they are stories that contain both unicorns and zombies or if just has a mix of the two in separate stories. Guess I'll find out soon enough.


A couple wanting to escape London buy a property called 'The Well.' During a subsequent water crisis, The Well is the only place that has water. This drives the plot.
Interesting premise but this dystopian novel doesn't quite hit the mark (for me). 2 stars
My review: /review/show...



In this dystopian novel, objects on an island are disappearing, one at a time.....and the population then forgets about them. The few people who remember are hunted down by the Memory Police.
Plenty to ponder about in this book. 3.5 stars
My review: /review/show...


This is the start of a new series by Cornwell, who's well known for her long-running Kay Scarpetta (medical examiner) series.
This new series features Captain Calli Chase, a NASA employee and would-be astronaut. Shenanigans involving the deployment of a new device on the International Space Station lead to murder and more in this book.
Cornwell needs to work out the kinks, but it's an okay start to a new series. 3 stars
My review: /review/show...


In this first book in the 'Divergent ' series, we learn about a dystopian society where the population is divided into five distinct groups, called factions.
3 stars
My review: /review/show...

In this 2nd book in the 'Divergent' series the war between the factions is well under way, and people show more of their true colors.
3.5 stars
My review: /review/show...
*
Allegiant

This 3rd book in the 'Divergent' series completes the trilogy. It emphasizes the importance of love and family above all the other things that might divide people.
3 stars
My review: /review/show...

Reading the sequel to Evelyn's Journal - Joe Vampire by M.J. Gardner

So started on a vampire anthology - The Vampire Stories of Nancy Kilpatrick by Nancy Kilpatrick

I will continue with my reading of all 10 Covenant books, but I feel it is time for some palate cleansing, and I will read something lighter for a while.

Starting on my last Halloween read. For the past few (many actually) years I've been reading a Vampire Chronicles book, and even when I thought I would run out I would find a graphic novel, or Rice would write a new one. But this year I officially ran out so will be reading Servant of the Bones by Anne Rice instead.
Books mentioned in this topic
Blood of Cayn (other topics)The Raven Tower (other topics)
The Reckoning (other topics)
Falling Free (other topics)
The Sandman: The Dream Hunters (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Lois McMaster Bujold (other topics)Ann Leckie (other topics)
Jason McDonald (other topics)
John Grisham (other topics)
Neil Gaiman (other topics)
More...