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What are you reading in February 2023?
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Chris, Moderator
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Feb 01, 2023 11:13AM

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I finished Tales from Earthsea yesterday and am about to start Sorcery & Cecelia: or The Enchanted Chocolate Pot!

And then I'm finally going to try what was so widely enjoyed a few years ago, The Bear and the Nightingale.

Still I gave it three stars as the characters were, for the most part, likable enough and I'll continue to the next to see if we eventually get a plot.
While I was visiting my niece and her family in Australia, I read The Upside-down History of Down Under by Alison Lloyd and then started Moving Mars by Greg Bear for our SF BotM.

The others are not sequels. The second does have more of a plot though. However, conflict etc. are not actually the point... these are are a very different kind of experience. Though I'd argue w/ you about character growth anyway.

I won't get into it here because, well I could go off for a while, but I did do something almost unheard of and wrote a full review if anyone is interested.
/review/show...
I also lowered my rating. As I've been thinking about it today, I realize the three stars was more out of me wanting to like it other than me actually feeling it was worth it.

I have a few books I havent finished but I am still reading
Decent Interval by Frank Snepp
Fatal Revenant by Stephen R. Donaldson
I started and havent finished
The Bronze Lie: Shattering the Myth of Spartan Warrior Supremacy
So I have been banging back and forth between these.
I have finished
The Apollo Murders
It was ok, but nothing to write home about. I liked the technical
stuff behind the scenes but in reality if Chris Hadfields name was
not on this I would of written this off as a bad book
I finished a discworld book
Lords and Ladies
This was good, Pratchett is a pretty great writer
Starting another Jack Reacher
Apparently this is the basis for Season Two of the Amazon Series
Bad Luck and Trouble


After a hiatus, I am now also continuing Atlas of the Heart: Mapping Meaningful Connection and the Language of Human Experience by Brené Brown. Its encyclopedic nature does not lend itself to being read in a single sitting, but the information is quite interesting. I am happy I also purchased the audiobook, as the author adds material beyond the text.
There are a few titles currently on my list to read next; I have not yet decided which; however, I created a a poll if anyone is interested/willing to help me decide (thanks in advance).

I'm just starting Into the West by Mercedes Lackey, her latest installment in the Valdemar series. I wouldn't recommend it as a starting point for those new to Valdemar, but having been a Valdemar fangirl since I was a tween I'm very happy about it :)
I just finished reading Harriet the Invincible by Ursula Vernon to my second grader, and if you have a small person in your life to read stories to, I HIGHLY recommend it. It's an early reader chapter book with more graphic novel-type page spreads from time to time. Utterly delightful take on fairy-tale tropes.
I just finished reading Harriet the Invincible by Ursula Vernon to my second grader, and if you have a small person in your life to read stories to, I HIGHLY recommend it. It's an early reader chapter book with more graphic novel-type page spreads from time to time. Utterly delightful take on fairy-tale tropes.

712 pp! I assume it's a reference work? Or is there a narrative? I'd be interested in reading a book a third the size maybe....

Starting The Other Wind tonight.


712 pp! I assume it's a reference work? Or is there a narrative..."
Parts of it are reference, parts of it narrative. Obviously in places it's lists. It's on Gutenberg.
Moving Mars by Greg Bear for our BotM discussion, 6.5/10, a few comments in our discussion thread.
Call of the Bone Ships by R.J. Barker, 8.5/10. I read this for a different Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ group. I got exhausted just reading this book—Whew! The author has created a unique world, complex characters, and an inventive plot. Can’t wait to read the final book in the trilogy!
Atlantis by David Gibbins, 5.5/10. A very slow start and a whiz-bang final half/third of the book.
The Codex by Douglas Preston, 7/10, a bit far-fetched but certainly action-packed. I ran out of things to read on our trip and borrowed this from my husband who had finished it.
Now reading The Grand Tour (book 2 in Cecelia & Kate series). Then I’ll read Songs of Earth and Power by Greg Bear for our BotM discussion and The Other Wind by Ursula K. Le Guin to wrap up our Earthsea series discussion.
Call of the Bone Ships by R.J. Barker, 8.5/10. I read this for a different Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ group. I got exhausted just reading this book—Whew! The author has created a unique world, complex characters, and an inventive plot. Can’t wait to read the final book in the trilogy!
Atlantis by David Gibbins, 5.5/10. A very slow start and a whiz-bang final half/third of the book.
The Codex by Douglas Preston, 7/10, a bit far-fetched but certainly action-packed. I ran out of things to read on our trip and borrowed this from my husband who had finished it.
Now reading The Grand Tour (book 2 in Cecelia & Kate series). Then I’ll read Songs of Earth and Power by Greg Bear for our BotM discussion and The Other Wind by Ursula K. Le Guin to wrap up our Earthsea series discussion.

Standard Jack Reacher fare.
Finally finished Fatal Revenant, Covenant book 2
It was a slog. Hopefully book 3 will be a step up
Was humming and hawing about what to read next and I think this will be it
Iron Council

I just finished The Other Wind and posted some thoughts to the series discussion. Next up is Rogue Protocol...I just love Murderbot :D

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Books mentioned in this topic
The Maid (other topics)The Escape Artist: The Man Who Broke Out of Auschwitz to Warn the World (other topics)
The Other Wind (other topics)
Terminal Alliance (other topics)
The Other Wind (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
R.J. Barker (other topics)Greg Bear (other topics)
David Gibbins (other topics)
Douglas Preston (other topics)
Ursula K. Le Guin (other topics)
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