The Sword and Laser discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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What Else Are You Reading - March 2011 Edition

Mindstar Rising
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
But I need to now reread Good Omens as I was away for a while and missed the read along :)


Probably read through the entire Nightside series by Simon R. Green.
And, since I'm an idiot and never pay attention to release dates, I'll be hitting the store tonight to grab a copy of The Wise Man's Fear
And, since I'm an idiot and never pay attention to release dates, I'll be hitting the store tonight to grab a copy of The Wise Man's Fear


im currently reading Lord of Light, Earth Strike: Star Carrier: Book One
and rereading The Cage









After that, probably Heartfire by Orson Scott Card, followed by either The Horse and His Boy by CS Lewis or Dismissed With Prejudice by JA Jance (non-sword non-laser).
-David

Obviously The Wise Man's Fear is on the to-do, but since I splurged and order a signed first edition, I'm not comfortable with the Kindle price ($9.99 or less, and I'd have bought both), so it'll have to wait until the book arrives.
Deathless is out this month too, so I'll be reading that. Otherwise, I have 20 unread books on my Kindle to choose from.
I'm also taking part in this: and so will be reading War and Peace all year. At 16%, I'm quite enjoying it.

After that, probably Heartfire by Orson Scott Card, foll..."
Eon, a really twisted and surprising ending, that smack right into you.


Written by a Russian scientist, it is basically Tolkien's Lord of the Rings from the Mordor point of view. Very interesting take - and reminds us that those who win the wars write the history books, and not always in a totally truthful way.
I'm only about 50 pages into it, but would recommend trying it to everyone.
It's free. From the link you can download a pdf. I'm reading it in iBooks on my iPad.

Next on the list is The Passage, and then I'll hope to be on for the next Sword and Laser book - whatever that will be as well as for a couple of free classics that I found for the Kindle.




Now I am reading Cat's Cradle for the second time. I first read it in high school and still to this day say it is my favorite Vonnegut book, but recently it has come to my attention that I remember very little of it, so I decided to give it another go and see if it lives up to my memories -- I feel like it will.


I have tried the High King of Montival, and I can't seem to get into it yet. And I just read the SF library's entire collection of Morrison comics.
If you live around here, and I know it is so uncool now to use it, but the Public Library has a great selection of new SF/F titles as well as the classics. why I am telling anyone,? Now the wait list will be longer!






In text, I'm reading Off Armageddon Reef by David Weber. I'm liking it so far, but it's driving me nuts with the names of the men on Safehold. They're all names that are common in English, but Weber seems to think it's clever to spell them oddly. So, Peter becomes "Paityr" or "Payter" (English accent). Harold becomes "Haarahld". Norman becomes "Nahrmahn". You can figure it out if you say it aloud, but it really slows down the reading.

I loved Pandora's Star. Judas Unchained is not as good, but definitely worth the read.


I think I would probably be enjoying Pandora's Star better in print. The story is too complex for audio and the narrator is way too monotone. I will probably read Judas Unchained on my Nook. I have The Dreaming Void in audio, so that will be a listen. I got the audiobooks during Audible's $4.95 sale, so I really shouldn't complain too much.

Gormenghast
The Wee Free Men (Tiffany Aching, #1)
A Hat Full of Sky (Tiffany Aching, #2)
The Last Hero: A Discworld Fable
Soldier of the Mist

Outliers starts out really well, but I'm about halfway through, and Gladwell has taken leave for Mars with some of his theories. Still fun, none the less.
Just barely started Grave Peril, but hopes are high, because I really dug the previous book, Fool Moon (gnarly werewolf scene in the police station, in that one).
Cautionary Tales was two bucks on Kindle. It's short, but so far it's had me near unconscious from laughing several times, and you can't put a price on that.


Ugh, when I click 'add book', it jumps to the top.

ROFL. I always thought that too

I'm also still working through A Short History of Nearly Everything in audio. I'm enjoying it though don't have as much time to listen these days.
The ADWD announcement has really changed my reading plans. Once I finish A Short History of Nearly Everything, I'm planning on getting TWMF on audio as well, to maximize "reading" time, and then re-read the Song of Ice and Fire books in Kindle and audio (I have both already as well as dead tree editions), as I hope to finish the re-read not too long after ADWD comes out.


Still reading The Fall of Hyperion on audio for the commute.

John Ringo's Gust Front in Audible format.
Juan Enriquez's Homo Evolutis in Kindle format.
The Elements of Internet Style in Kindle format.
Stieg Larsson's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo in Kindle format.
Vanessa Woods' Bonobo Handshake: A Memoir of Love and Adventure in the Congo in dead tree format.
I've fallen seriously behind on my 100 book challenge due to several of my selections being a lot longer than I expected.
Edit: Also reading

Books mentioned in this topic
The Fall (other topics)The Strain (other topics)
The Wise Man's Fear (other topics)
The Crippled God (other topics)
Tiassa (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Arthur C. Clarke (other topics)Arthur C. Clarke (other topics)
Richard K. Morgan (other topics)
Joe Abercrombie (other topics)
William Gibson (other topics)
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I wanted to get started on The Heroes, but I wanted to read the other standalone novel first to get all the references (ironic, no?).