I've just started Earthlings by Sayaka Murata yesterday after getting my ass kicked by Roadside Picnic. Loving it so far! By far one of the strangest stories I've read. Really interested to see how it goes
Not current, but "The Devil's Playground" by Craig Russell is a lot of fun. Combines 1920's Hollywood sex scandals with voo-doo and a serial killer. Also a haunted movie that kills anyone who watches it.
Currently listening to Dungeon Crawler Carl.
About 4 hours into the 12 hour book and it is good.
Happy New year Dresden!
Since the last thread I replied to I have finished the BuyMort book I was on and listened to another couple Deathlands (of course)
I also listen to NPC by Jeremy Robinson which is the next book in the Infinite series for me and was another great book that I thoroughly enjoyed.
Now I am a few hours into The Dice Man by Luke Rhinehart. It has been a little slow starting but it is just starting to pick up pace and will hopefully be a good read!
Happy New Year!
Synopsis of The Dice Man sounds interesting, wonder where he takes the story. Do share the review.
It was are recommendation by my gf and I thought it sounded interesting and not something I'd usually come across with what I usually listen to so I'll let you know my thoughts in the next thread :)
I started The Hands Of The Emperor by Victoria Goddard last week (so good!), and tore through all 900 pages of it in a few days. Found out there’s a sequel - At The Feet Of The Sun - and poured that one into my brain as well (even better than the first!). Now I’m reading my way through the novellas that are in between those two behemoths.
I loved the ending of Hero of Ages. There's a novella to read partway through the second age that does some beautiful stuff around it. The second age is a very different style, but it is a lot of fun. You never regret that extra shake...
I just finished the Earthsea series by Ursula K. Le Guin. The first book is from the sixties and the final short from 2018, so it is a fascinating trip through the maturation of Fantasy. The first three books are firmly young-adult, while the last three stick with the characters as adults. The whole series ends with a very short story the author wrote to be published after her death. It's a wonderful look at the mind of an old person at the end of their story.
Recent publications include afterwords written in 2012 which give a lot of context and interesting insights into how she wrote stories.
Yeah, second era feels interesting. And I did look at the novella, but it was published after the second book, so will read it in that order.
Just finished "the running man" and found out that I didn't finish "why we are polarized" by Ezra Klein, so I'm finishing that one now
I recently started I Want A Better Catastrophe by Andrew Boyd. It's good, but it's rough and I can only read so much at a time which caused me to look for a humorous non-fiction title as a mental palate cleanser. For that I landed on The Utterly Uninteresting & Unadventurous Tales of Fred, The Vampire Accountant by Drew Hayes; which, in contrast, has been a lot of fun.
I read a fair amount of Enid Blyton as a kid, and remember enjoying the Five series. Does it hold up well?
Still haven't been getting much reading done; I'm not even a third of the way through Between Two Fires yet! It has been enjoyable so far, though, with a lot of clever medieval flavor that reminds me of Arthurian legends, or monsters doodled in the corners of old manuscripts. I suspect there's probably some Canterbury Tales influence as well, but it's been a long time since I had to read them.
I wasn't able to read much, just first 40 pages or so, and it seems to be holding up pretty well.
Son finished first 3 books back to back, so he seems to be enjoying them as well. Though he did say he was able to guess what would happen in the book.
The Running Man
I saw it mentioned on here the other day and with the movie set to release later in the year I thought I'd give it a go.
I'm really enjoying it so far. It's fast paced and not long so will probably finish it today (I started yesterday).
Just finished the second book Shift and started the third, Dust, from Silo series. The first two were really good, long enough to dive deep into it and on that sweet level of being easy to read yet enough detail to keep it interesting.
My SO reads me stories in the evening and now we are going through LOTR, although I must say it's getting a bit cumbersome, being quite slow-paced book and all, so we'll probably give up and switch to something else soon.
I finished The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah. It's a historical fiction taking place in occupied France during World War II. It was a very well plotted story, but the writing felt so distant and some scenes felt very unrealistic. It felt like a story I should have liked more that I did.
Now I've started Words of Radiance by Brandon Sanderson (Stormlight book 2). Far too early to have opinions, but I'm excited for this one.
Thank you so much for the reminder/suggestion that the first annual Lemmy book bingo is happening! I've checked out the link posts and drawn up my bingo card/list to finish by May 1st.
The r/Fantasy subreddit is the only thing I was missing--glad to see this and excited to start participating!
Just finished Project Hail Mary, by Andy Weir. Nice sci-fi, well wrote, page turner, for sure not the best in its genre but it's quite a nice novel to spend a bit of time.
Next read will be The housemaid, by Freida McFadden and, if I enjoy, I'll read the two others of the serie.
What would you say is the best in its genre? I'm asking because I very much enjoyed the science, technical details and explainations in Project Hail Mary and The Martian. I've found not many Sci-Fi books with similar details in this regard so I would love suggestions :)
I agree with you on all points about the science in Hail Mary. However, what bothered me more was the strict, predictable alternation between past and present. This rigid structure detracted from my overall enjoyment of the novel, making the narrative feel somewhat monotonous and, at times, overly predictable.
On the other hand, The Remembrance of Earth's Past trilogy by Cixin Liu was a real favorite for me.
It's been a while since I read it but I know what you mean and I think I felt similarly.
I don't know that trilogy yet. Thank you for the recommendation :)
Freida McFadden is a practicing physician specializing in brain injury, interesting. Do share how you like The housemaid.
After only reading sci-fi for quite some time I started a Brandon Sanderson journey. Or more like a Cosmere journey. I started with Warbreaker, then Mistborn Era 1, then Stormlight Archives up to Rhythm Of War, then Mistborn Era 2 to bridge the gap to the Stormlight "Wind And Truth" release, which I'm still on currently, because I'm very slow lol.
Slow and steady wins the race!
I'm currently reading The Thirteen-Gun Salute by Patrick O'Brian. It had been 10 years since I had read the book before it. It's taking me some time to get into his language and writing style again :)
I have the first novel in the series, but I think it expects to know about ship / seafaring terminologies, cause I couldn't understand half of it. It was about a decade or so ago though.
There is a companion book that lists most of the terminology called "Sea of Words". If you really want to get invested, it's worth a shot :)
Thanks for the info, I'll take a look.
Reading Michael Parenti's The Assassination of Julius Caesar: A People's History of Ancient Rome. Some very dubious scholarship, even though I sympathize with the main thrust of it.
I finished the first trilogy of the Riftwar Saga by Raymond E. Feist. This was a series I had read as an early teenager so not my first time through it.
It was largely a disappointing read.. it felt very “surface level” for a fantasy book and I never felt very invested. It is hard to read when you compare to Sanderson or Rothfuss worlds and characters.
Next up, I’m going to check out Foundation and will read in chronological order rather than publication order.
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