What Are We Reading in August 2022?

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What Are We Reading in August 2022?

1daxxh
Aug. 2, 2022, 8:03 am

Dusty, where are you?

2daxxh
Bearbeitet: Aug. 2, 2022, 8:18 am

I have started reading Lady of Caladan - ok so far. I also plan on reading some Star Trek books for a Star Trek reading challenge on WWE.

3Shrike58
Aug. 2, 2022, 8:12 am

5RobertDay
Aug. 2, 2022, 10:41 am

Just finished The Lake of the Long Sun. I'm enjoying this series. Now taking a genre break with some political history before picking some old Clifford Simak out of the TBR pile - Cosmic Engineers.

6Stevil2001
Aug. 2, 2022, 11:12 am

I am about three hundred pages from the end of Perhaps the Stars and thus from the end of all Terra Ignota.

7paradoxosalpha
Aug. 2, 2022, 11:20 am

>5 RobertDay:
I thought the Long Sun was a more accessible and exciting read than the kaleidoscopic New Sun, on the whole. The Short Sun combines the virtues of both prior series.

8Neil_Luvs_Books
Aug. 2, 2022, 11:30 am

I’m about a third of the way through Stand on Zanzibar. I seem to be having trouble finding sustained periods of reading the last few weeks.

9dustydigger
Bearbeitet: Aug. 29, 2022, 5:20 am

Sorry people,not to be around. Bad back makes sitting at a computer a bit difficult at times. And could be a touch of brain fog,because how often do I not post a new monthly thread? :0)
Dusty's TBR for August
SF/Fantasy
V E Schwab - A Conjuring of Light
Adam Tchaikovsky - Children of Time
Arthur C Clarke - Against the Fall of Night
Roger Zelazny - Roadmarks
Paul Cornell - London Falling
Harry Bates - Farewell to the Master
William Sleator - House of Stairs
Jodi Taylor - Just One Damn Thing After Another
from other genres
C S Lewis - The Problem of Pain
Lyndon Stacey - No Going Back
Richard Hartmier - Yukon colour of the land

10clammer
Aug. 2, 2022, 5:13 pm

Octavia Butler.

Just finished _Kindred_. I didn't care much for _Fledgling_, not a vampire fan. So I skipped to the end of the volume for the short stories.

After that, I'll return to anthologies of the 50s, sixties, and / or seventies.

11Shrike58
Aug. 2, 2022, 6:25 pm

>9 dustydigger: Considering your recent medical misadventures there is concern.

13vwinsloe
Bearbeitet: Aug. 3, 2022, 8:55 am

>4 paradoxosalpha: is Utopia Avenue speculative fiction? I've had it sitting on my shelf for a while now and have not been motivated to read it, although I've read quite a few of his books.

14paradoxosalpha
Bearbeitet: Aug. 3, 2022, 9:12 am

>13 vwinsloe:

My Other Reader has read it and recommended it. Based on what she said, I think the speculative element is probably a little less than what is in Bone Clocks or Slade House. But it has character connections to the whole "psychosoteric" horologists/atemporals hyperwork.

15vwinsloe
Aug. 3, 2022, 10:08 am

>14 paradoxosalpha: Thanks. I'll move it up the pile, but look forward to your review.

16Karlstar
Aug. 3, 2022, 10:14 pm

>12 seitherin: Enjoy Into the Narrowdark! I'm 2/3 of the way done with The Library Book, which is quite good. Part history, part biography.

17dustydigger
Aug. 4, 2022, 4:35 am

>11 Shrike58: Oh there's always something wrong with me! :0)
Apart from arthritis I have thyroid issues and pernicious anaemia. The arthritis causes bone pain,the anaemia and PA cause lethargy and brain fog among a host of other things,and my diabetes accounts for anything else. So situation normal,all messed up.lol.But as long its not some lethal thing I'm pretty happySomedays are better than others.
I think today will be a fairly good one,should get a bit reading done. On the ''foggy'' days all I manage to read is fluff or comfort rereads.Today is at least a step up from that. I am rereading Roadmarks both for a challenge I am doing,and because its all confused and nonliear anyway,brain fog cant affect it much lol. I think this must be about my 5th read of this book,a really fun dazzling romp. Every time I read it I recognize more cultural references. If I survive another 10 years and another couple of rereads I might really grasp it all.
All the reviews moan about it being minor Zelazy,too experimental,too incoherent and so on. I just enjoy it as Zelazny high jinks and fun.
I am also reading William Sleator's House of Stairs . Its survived surprisingly well(pub 1974). It was probably an influence on the dystopian teenage fiction to come. Probably seems completely original to its teen audience too,with well delineated characters,based on real people Sleator knew(and including himself!) and is an amiable enough read. Of course adult readers will think of the Stanford Prison Experiment.
Wonder if the makers of Labyrinth had read this.Remember David Bowie's wonderful staircases?

18Shrike58
Aug. 4, 2022, 7:01 am

Finished The Daughter of Doctor Moreau, which I found to be a step up from the author's Mexican Gothic; while there's nothing that obligates a writer to give the reader a sympathetic character, it doesn't hurt!

19ChrisRiesbeck
Aug. 4, 2022, 4:56 pm

20igorken
Aug. 4, 2022, 5:19 pm

>13 vwinsloe: >14 paradoxosalpha: The speculative elements are there, first in the background where you can almost ignore them, but gradually they become more important as the story progresses. It's certainly also possible to interpret those events as delusions or mental illness.
To be honest I found it all felt a bit forced in this one, and I think the book may have been better without it. Nowhere near Mitchell's best, but it reads quickly, has good humour and interesting characters, so overall it's good fun.

21Karlstar
Aug. 4, 2022, 5:22 pm

>17 dustydigger: I read Roadmarks ages ago, unfortunately my copy was destroyed in a flood. Might have to get a new one.

22seitherin
Aug. 4, 2022, 7:26 pm

>16 Karlstar: I was enjoying Into the Narrowdark until Amazon messed up my Fire tablet with their latest update. I've spent the better part of this week trying to get Amazon support to do something about the crap they keep sending to my tablet that basically shuts it down. I keep asking if I should just do a factory reset and they keep telling me it isn't necessary. I just need to calm down and do the reset on my own. If that doesn't fix things, whoever answers the support line is going to get an ear full.

23vwinsloe
Aug. 5, 2022, 9:12 am

>20 igorken: Thanks. I found each book of his to be less interesting since Cloud Atlas and The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, but I'll read it, for sure.

24feralcatbob
Aug. 5, 2022, 9:47 am

I'm reading Mars Nation (Part 1) by Brandon Q. Morris

25SChant
Aug. 5, 2022, 11:44 am

I bounced hard off my book group read of The Left Handed Booksellers of London - found it self-conscious and charmless. Now into Stephenson's Termination Shock which is more to my liking.

26pgmcc
Aug. 5, 2022, 12:12 pm

>23 vwinsloe:
I found that too. I was quite disappointed in Slade House.

27Karlstar
Aug. 5, 2022, 11:37 pm

>22 seitherin: That stinks, any luck? So far my Kindle Fire is working fine.

28seitherin
Bearbeitet: Aug. 6, 2022, 11:07 am

>27 Karlstar: Not really. But I have calmed down and I've found a work around that lets me read so I'm going to finish Into the Narrowdark before I take the drastic step of setting my tablet back to factory default and starting over . . . again. I managed to read three whole pages yesterday.

29Karlstar
Aug. 6, 2022, 9:28 pm

>28 seitherin: Good luck, I hope you can finish it, it was very good.

Anyone watching The Sandman?

30paradoxosalpha
Aug. 6, 2022, 10:03 pm

>29 Karlstar:

Just watched the first episode today. It was pretty good.

31anglemark
Aug. 7, 2022, 3:47 am

>29 Karlstar: Judging by my Facebook feed, you mean "Anyone not watching The Sandman?".

32Maddz
Aug. 7, 2022, 6:36 am

>31 anglemark: Not watching until we get the box set…

We don’t have Netflix

33Neil_Luvs_Books
Aug. 7, 2022, 9:36 am

>29 Karlstar: The Sandman has been released on Netflix!? Where have I been? I thought it wasn’t being released until the fall. Guess I know what is playing on my tv tonight! 😀

34seitherin
Aug. 7, 2022, 6:33 pm

>29 Karlstar: I'm saving the show until all the episodes are out. Looking forward to it even tho I haven't read any of the graphic novels/comics.

35karenb
Aug. 7, 2022, 6:41 pm

>34 seitherin: All the episodes dropped on Friday in the US.

>31 anglemark: True. I rarely watch TV, and I've already watched a few episodes. I watched the first episode cautiously on Friday, then on Saturday I ended up watching one three more.

36Stevil2001
Bearbeitet: Aug. 7, 2022, 7:25 pm

I started my last Philip Dick Library of America collection, VALIS and Later Novels, with A Maze of Death.

37Karlstar
Aug. 7, 2022, 11:11 pm

>33 Neil_Luvs_Books: We've been pacing ourselves, 3 the first night, 3 the second, 2 tonight. Good stuff.

38justifiedsinner
Aug. 8, 2022, 10:42 am

>37 Karlstar: >35 karenb: >33 Neil_Luvs_Books: Good TV but I can't understand how it cost $15M per episode.

39seitherin
Aug. 8, 2022, 4:21 pm

>35 karenb: Thanks for the info.

40Karlstar
Aug. 8, 2022, 4:57 pm

>38 justifiedsinner: Oof, that's a lot.

41Neil_Luvs_Books
Aug. 9, 2022, 12:08 am

We watched up to the end of episode 3 of The Sandman tonight. We are greatly enjoying it so far.

42gypsysmom
Aug. 9, 2022, 3:51 pm

I haven't written in this group for a long time but I have a question that I'll bet some of you can answer. I just finished reading Arthur C. Clarke's Ghost from the Grand Banks which deals with two competing bids to raise the Titanic for the centenary of its sinking. I'm pretty sure I haven't read this book before although I did read lots of Clarke's ouevre when I was young. Since this book was written in 1990 I couldn't have read it then and for most of the 90s I didn't have the money or the time to read new books. My question involves one of the characters who developed a program to remove evidence of people smoking from old films and thus made his fortune. I know I've read something that involved this same technology but I have no idea if it was something else Clarke wrote or if it was in another sf writer's output.

As for the book itself it was mildly interesting for the oceanography aspects but there is a whole lot about the Mandelbrot Set that just seems really unnecessary. Although my science degree was in mathematics it was before the Mandelbrot equation was developed so I had never heard about it before and it was interesting to me but seemed out of place in the bigger story.

43karenb
Aug. 9, 2022, 5:08 pm

>42 gypsysmom: I wonder if the Mandelbrot stuff could be attributed to the publishing of Chaos: Making a new science by James Gleick (1987). I remember a lot of references to it showing up in fiction of the late 1980s and early 1990s.

44gypsysmom
Aug. 9, 2022, 5:30 pm

>43 karenb: That's certainly possible but Clarke doesn't refer to that book in his Sources and Acknowledgments.

45paradoxosalpha
Aug. 9, 2022, 5:45 pm

Mandelbrot's own book The Fractal Geometry of Nature came out in 1977, and is the sort of thing that would have caught Clarke's interest, I think. Gleick's work was a later popularization.

46ChrisRiesbeck
Aug. 10, 2022, 2:02 pm

Connie Willis' Remake had removing smoking as a job someone had to do, but as I recall there wasn't much technology support.

47gypsysmom
Aug. 10, 2022, 3:11 pm

>46 ChrisRiesbeck: I think that is probably it because I had an inkling it might have been Connie Willis. Thank you. I can rest easy now.

48gypsysmom
Aug. 10, 2022, 3:20 pm

>45 paradoxosalpha: That is the first book Clarke mentions in the Mandelmemo part of his Sources and Acknowledgments. He describes it as "highly technical, and much is inaccessible even to those with delusions of mathematical ability. Nevertheless, a good deal of the text is informative and witty, so it is well worth skimming." Incidentally Clarke said the book came out in 1982; Wikipedia says it is a revised and enlarged edition of his 1977 book Fractals: Form, Chance and Dimension which in turn was a revised, enlarged and translated version of his French book Les Objets Fractals: Forme, Hasard et Dimension.

Clarke mentioned two other books The Beauty of Fractals by H-O Peitgen and P. H. Richter and The Armchair Universe by A. K. Dewdney also with the latter being more accessible to the general reader.

49Maddz
Aug. 10, 2022, 3:33 pm

I've been busy with a convention last weekend, but have been catching up on LTER reading, finally finished Night Rain and Neon. Not bad.

Also reading Rachel Burge's The Twisted Tree. Finished the first book last month - Norse mythology meets modern day, and wasn't bad. But the second is dragging. The writing style is all first person and other characters only seem to exist as part of the lead's worldview. Very passive, and all the I, I, I is getting tedious.

I've also started The Jack Vance Treasury. Finished The Dragon Masters - which I hadn't read in years! Much better writing although the gender roles are very much of their time.

I also read ElizaBeth Gilligan's Silken Magic trilogy. The first 2 I've owned for many years and enjoyed reading, the third I cam across recently. I thought it a great read when I first read it, but I now see some issues - and I rather suspect if the trilogy were to be released now it may well get called out for cultural appropriation. Still, a nice historical fantasy where the Kingdom of the Two Sicilys remains an independent monarchy run under Neoplatonic principles rather than becoming part of the Spanish hegemony.

50Sakerfalcon
Aug. 11, 2022, 6:54 am

>49 Maddz: I enjoyed the first two Silken magic books when I read them. I need to reread them before I pick up the third book. It looked for a while as though the author wasn't going to finish the series, so I was glad to see Sovereign silk appear.

I'm currently reading The second rebel, sequel to The first sister. This is an interesting series, although quite dark.

51anglemark
Aug. 11, 2022, 7:02 am

I am reading Uprooted. I never enjoyed the Temeraire books, but I was persuaded to read Spinning silver, which I loved, so here I am now, backtracking to Uprooted.

52Stevil2001
Aug. 11, 2022, 9:36 am

I've started the first book in my Library of America Wrinkle in Time Quartet edition, A Wrinkle in Time. I have fond memories of these books from childhood but have not read them since.

53ScoLgo
Aug. 12, 2022, 2:48 pm

Last Call was every bit as good this second time around. No one does Urban Fantasy/Secret History quite like Tim Powers. Expiration Date and Earthquake Weather will both be up for re-read soon.

Began Sea of Tranquility last night. It's already making me want to re-read The Glass Hotel.

Also reading Signal Moon. A short story about naval wireless operators connecting through time. Very good so far.

54igorken
Aug. 13, 2022, 4:40 am

>26 pgmcc: Fully agree that he hasn't hit the highs of Cloud Atlas or The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet or even the excitement and promise of his earlier books. For me The Bone Clocks was his most disappointing work, though still enjoyable. It does seem his more recent novels have been influenced by his screenwriting career, whether deliberate or not. I certainly wouldn't be surprised to see Horologists tv or movie projects, though I'm not at all sure I'd watch them.

55vwinsloe
Aug. 13, 2022, 9:08 am

>53 ScoLgo:. Do you know if Signal Moon is available anywhere other than Kindle?

56ScoLgo
Aug. 13, 2022, 12:52 pm

>55 vwinsloe: I believe kindle format or audio are the only options. It's free for Prime members, ($1.99 to buy). I liked this short story a lot and plan to read more Kate Quinn in future.

57dustydigger
Aug. 13, 2022, 1:42 pm

Finished a reread of Zelazny's Roadmarks Such a fun romp. Am proceeding through V E Schwab's A Conjuring of Light.It started out as a very YA sort of thing,but became starker and darker than the two earlier books. Quite long though,i never feel I am getting near the end. 630 pages is a bit too long IMO STILL got 200 pages to go.......sigh.......

58Stevil2001
Bearbeitet: Aug. 13, 2022, 4:01 pm

Started in on VALIS.

59paradoxosalpha
Aug. 13, 2022, 5:02 pm

>58 Stevil2001:

My reflex is jealousy. I guess I'm due for a re-read after some thirty-odd years.

60vwinsloe
Aug. 14, 2022, 8:51 am

>56 ScoLgo:. Thanks. I haven't read any Kate Quinn yet, and I thought this might be a good starting point.

61Shrike58
Aug. 14, 2022, 1:19 pm

Knocked off A Prayer for the Crown-Shy; more of a charming road trip with a large dollop of philosophy on top. If you liked the first novella you'll certainly enjoy this one.

62RobertDay
Aug. 17, 2022, 4:47 pm

After wading through a history of GCHQ, back to genre with Cosmic Engineers. Three chapters in and it's showing its age badly.

63karenb
Aug. 17, 2022, 6:08 pm

>62 RobertDay: "it's showing its age badly." Alas.

Just getting into Invisible things by Mat Johnson. Near future, expedition to Jupiter, possible explanation for "alien abductions", funny bits. What's not to like?

64AnnieMod
Aug. 17, 2022, 6:11 pm

I am back to the Foreigner universe with Precursor (the 4th). It is different from the first 3 so we shall see how that works.

65RobertDay
Bearbeitet: Aug. 17, 2022, 6:57 pm

>63 karenb: Indeed. It was a toss-up between that or a re-read of Way Station. I plumped for Cosmic Engineers because it's the earliest Simak I've got and my copy is a rather nice, clean 1967 Paperback Library edition. So it goes.

66rshart3
Aug. 18, 2022, 12:29 am

>57 dustydigger: Schwab's "Shades of Magic" is suffering from a common series ailment: increasing gigantism syndrome. I suppose it could be because the plots thicken & thicken, but I always suspect that another factor is that editors are less able to rein the author in as a series becomes successful. The situation always reminds me of the dinosaurs or later mammals like ground sloths, evolving to be bigger & bigger. Two good examples of the literary equivalent are the Harry Potter books and the Song of Ice & Fire series.

67anglemark
Aug. 18, 2022, 2:49 am

>65 RobertDay: My copy is the Gnome Press original hardcover. Sounds like I should let it remain on the shelf to be admired for being a nice 1ed and not take it down to read.

68Shrike58
Aug. 18, 2022, 7:16 am

Knocked off Time Travelers Never Die, a so-so adventure story which I only read because my book group picked it. I've only read one book by McDevitt a long time ago and have never really been a fan.

69Neil_Luvs_Books
Aug. 18, 2022, 9:43 pm

>66 rshart3: I completely agree with you. As authors become successful, editors seem to have less influence, unfortunately.

70paradoxosalpha
Bearbeitet: Aug. 19, 2022, 2:34 am

I'm making good progress on The Bridge of Lost Desire, but I got detoured again and read The Sandman: Overture (review posted).

71Maddz
Aug. 19, 2022, 7:30 am

I finally finished The Crooked Mask. I find her writing style banal; it's all first person, it's short sentences which makes for an incredibly choppy read, and it took an entire book to cover 2 or 3 days of action... The story did not make up for the poor writing style.

Now onto Best of British Science Fiction 2021.

72Karlstar
Aug. 19, 2022, 10:16 am

>57 dustydigger: Thanks for the reminder, I recently came across a picture of my water damaged (ruined) copy of Roadmarks and was thinking I needed to find a new copy. I lost almost all my my Zelazny's in that incident.

Currently reading Beyond the Hallowed Sky by Ken MacLeod, it is probably a bad sign that I couldn't remember the title.

73Petroglyph
Aug. 19, 2022, 11:04 am

For the past two evenings my bed-time reading has been Vast, by Linda Nagata. Blurbs and descriptions promised me a standalone hard SF novel about nanotechnology and a light-speed chase, and so far it's been exactly that (well, 0.4 c, but I'll allow it).

74ScoLgo
Aug. 19, 2022, 12:56 pm

>73 Petroglyph: Going by publication order, Vast is actually book 4 in The Nanotech Succession, (series touchstones don't seem to be working properly so no link - sorry). It's been a long time since I read these but I seem to recall that each book does mostly stand on its own. If you end up liking Vast, you might want to check out The Bohr Maker as well.

75NerdyBookingham
Bearbeitet: Aug. 22, 2022, 5:55 am

Hi everybody! I'm about to embark on a re-reading of Dying of the Light by George R.R. Martin, the first novel of a writer who went on to achieve moderate success in a different (but related) genre.

I first read this over 40 years ago (I'm old!) and the only thing I remember about the story is...oh wait, that would be a spoiler! A little of it came back to me while reading Lisa Tuttle's rather gratuitous introduction.

The other thing I remember is that I thoroughly enjoyed the novel and felt I had discovered an exciting and important new writer!

76NerdyBookingham
Aug. 20, 2022, 7:05 am

>62 RobertDay: Really? I loved Cosmic Engineers. I'm probably showing my age too!

77Stevil2001
Aug. 20, 2022, 8:50 am

I am starting the second VALIS book, The Divine Invasion.

78Petroglyph
Aug. 20, 2022, 2:20 pm

>74 ScoLgo:

Yes, I was aware Vast is a later installment in the series, but picked it up regardless, precisely because the blurb claimed the book would serve as a self-contained read. I should have made that clearer.

I'll consider The Bohr Maker if I feel like spending more time in this universe!

79Maddz
Aug. 20, 2022, 4:12 pm

Read Nancy Baker's Kiss of the Vampire series. I used to own them in print some 30 years ago and recently picked up the ebooks. I have to say I think I prefer them now to back when I first read them in the 90s.

Although at first glance they read a bit like Interview with the Vampire, they are very different. Vampires in Baker's world are vanishingly rare - we meet only 3 vampires over the course of the 2 books, and another 2 are mentioned - both are dead. We don't see what the vampire origin myth is - they just are.

They come across as thoughtful, and delve into what it is to be a vampire. Much more to my taste nowadays.

80rshart3
Aug. 20, 2022, 10:03 pm

>75 NerdyBookingham:
Did you perhaps get the wrong touchstone for Dying of the Light? Unless George RR Martin is secretly also Derek Landy.....

81Maddz
Aug. 21, 2022, 12:42 pm

Another Nancy Baker - A Terrible Beauty. Another of NB's vampire stories, this one new to me. A deeply psychological story - a vampire seeks revenge on the man who stole her work. His son takes his place, and over the course of a winter, she ends up recovering her humanity - literally. Very good.

82RobertDay
Aug. 21, 2022, 5:54 pm

>76 NerdyBookingham: Ah, but have you read it recently? One character disappears for a whole chapter - he's there, but he says nothing - and another spends large portions of the novel clenching and unclenching his enormous fists. The chapter where our heroes stand up to and defeat the Hellhounds of Space feels to me like the inspiration for the look and feel of Star Trek's episode Arena (even though Fredrick Brown got the credit for it), and I really could not get my head around the way that the citizens of the distant year 6947 still played physical chess, smoked pipes and read newspapers, whilst said Hellhounds relied for much of their offensive power on atomic bombs. In my book, this came off worse than Doc Smith!

83RobertDay
Aug. 21, 2022, 5:56 pm

Anyway, now started on Caldé of the Long Sun.

84Karlstar
Aug. 21, 2022, 10:42 pm

>75 NerdyBookingham: You started me down a rabbit hole of assessing which Martin novels I've read, which led to discovering that several were missing from LT. Now that is fixed, I think the only novels I haven't read are Dying of the Light
and Fire and Blood, though that may be another one I read but hasn't made it into LT yet.

85NerdyBookingham
Aug. 22, 2022, 5:56 am

>80 rshart3: Thanks, fixed it!

86NerdyBookingham
Aug. 22, 2022, 5:59 am

>82 RobertDay: I read it about 7 years ago and quickly, so I only noticed the characters who were there, not the ones who were missing! And inspiring "Star Trek" is no bad thing!

But I'd be lying if I said I don't have a soft spot for old SF.

87MaureenRoy
Bearbeitet: Aug. 22, 2022, 8:26 pm

Next book to read is Penelopeiad by Margaret Atwood. Is this science fiction? Probably not. More on this later.

88Shrike58
Bearbeitet: Aug. 22, 2022, 8:02 pm

Knocked off Pirate Utopia, a curiosity for the Bruce Sterling fan. It's apparently a fragment of a longer work that Sterling didn't feel like finishing.

89Sakerfalcon
Aug. 23, 2022, 8:14 am

I just read Still forms on Foxfield, sociological SF by Joan Slonczewski. I really wish I could find my copy of A door into ocean as the book by her that I really want to read.

90SChant
Aug. 23, 2022, 8:29 am

>89 Sakerfalcon: I first read a Door Into Ocean in around 1987 - a Womens Press edition still on my bookshelves - and remember loving the intricate world-building but finding it to be a bit gender-essentialist (women=wise and caring, men=militaristic bullies). Perhaps time for a re-read.

91ScoLgo
Aug. 23, 2022, 9:33 am

>89 Sakerfalcon: >90 SChant: I really enjoyed A Door Into Ocean. Very reminiscent of the anthropological approach Le Guin often evinced in her writing. I picked up the rest of the books in the series but have not yet managed to make time to read them.

92Sakerfalcon
Aug. 23, 2022, 10:04 am

>90 SChant: That's the copy I have ... somewhere!

93SChant
Aug. 23, 2022, 11:09 am

>91 ScoLgo: I agree - reminiscent of LeGuin's style. I vaguely remember reading several other of her books but they didn't make as much of an impression on me at the time.

94Petroglyph
Aug. 23, 2022, 4:12 pm

>87 MaureenRoy:

I have fond memories of that book. It's a well-done meta-effort that re-interprets the original material without coming across as obnoxious.

95Neil_Luvs_Books
Aug. 23, 2022, 4:17 pm

>89 Sakerfalcon: A Door into Ocean has been on my TBR list for awhile.
>91 ScoLgo: I didn’t realize that it was part of a larger series. I’ll have to look for those others once I get around to reading Door.

96Shrike58
Aug. 24, 2022, 7:39 am

>89 Sakerfalcon: I know I read something at some point by Slonczewski, but it really didn't make an impact on my imagination.

97gypsysmom
Aug. 24, 2022, 4:12 pm

I am listening to Walkaway by Cory Doctorow and reading The Actual Star by Monica Byrne. While having many differences there is also a striking similarity in that both of them propose that in the future people will walk away from material possessions and develop a near Utopian community. I didn't plan my listening and my reading to synchronize this way; it just happened. Usually I like to listen to something that is a completely different genre from what I am reading but I'm enjoying both books and liking the thoughts the similarity engenders.

98ScoLgo
Aug. 24, 2022, 7:12 pm

>95 Neil_Luvs_Books: I have not yet read the other books so have no idea how they relate. I can tell you that A Door Into Ocean definitely stands on its own without any obvious loose ends. In fact, when I finished the book, I had no idea there were more entries in a series. Pretty sure it was the LT listing that showed me that it is the start of a series.

99Stevil2001
Bearbeitet: Aug. 25, 2022, 2:55 pm

And having finished The Divine Invasion, I'm onto the last VALIS novel, the last Dick Library of America novel, and Dick's last novel full stop, The Transmigration of Timothy Archer. It's going pretty quickly; this one is very well written.

100ChrisRiesbeck
Aug. 25, 2022, 4:05 pm

>98 ScoLgo: I've read Daughter of Elysium and Brain Plague. Daughter is clearly a sequel in setting and some characters, but in a very different style and structure, less intense, more debate-driven. Plague is less directly connected, and different yet again, begin as bad pulp befittin its title, but improving after the first few chapters. How you like one of her novels probably has no bearing on what you will think of another.

101SChant
Aug. 27, 2022, 9:38 am

Started Shards of Earth by Adrian Tchaikovsky for my reading group. 100 pages in and it seems like an undemanding space-opera - not bad, but nothing to get particularly excited about.

102Shrike58
Aug. 27, 2022, 1:27 pm

>101 SChant: Let's talk about group-mind in action! My group made that work our last read of the year.

103SChant
Aug. 28, 2022, 5:42 am

>102 Shrike58: Haha! My group skews heavily towards the "what's popular on Goodreads" side so despite my curmudgeonly old fart suggestions of various classics or things that I think might be a bit more thought-provoking we tend to read more lightweight stuff. I mostly just go to the meetings for the good beer, now!

104Shrike58
Aug. 28, 2022, 7:01 am

Finished up Locklands yesterday evening, Bennett's tale of singularity actuated by magical means. I liked the trilogy in the end, as opposed to how I loved the "Divine Cities" trilogy in the end.

105Karlstar
Aug. 28, 2022, 7:36 am

Working my way through The Shadow of What Was Lost.

106Neil_Luvs_Books
Aug. 28, 2022, 6:36 pm

I finally finished Stand on Zanzibar. Took me a month! It took me about a third of the book to understand what was going on with how John Brunner intersperses his plot narrative with colour chapters to give a sense of what the world and culture are like. Once I figured that it out it became a very interesting read. What impresses me is that this was written in the 1960s yet reads as if it could have been written by a modern day writer of current times. Reading the chapters that tried to recreate what he likely imagined future tv to be like seemed so similar to what my experience is of surfing the net or reading through FB. He got a lot of his future history right. Good story too.

107dustydigger
Aug. 29, 2022, 9:13 am

Just One Damned Thing After Another was a fun read,I flew through it. Now working on Paul Cornell's London Falling a quite tough urban fantasy/horror tale. Stark but gripping. Looks like I have two new series to follow.:0)

108rocketjk
Bearbeitet: Aug. 29, 2022, 12:45 pm

Greetings! I don't post here much but enjoy following along with everyone. Just popping in to say I've just finished The Constant Rabbit, Jasper Fforde's successfully humorous satire about anti-immigrant fear and prejudice. Fifty-five years after the unexplained Spontaneous Anthropomorphizing Event has turned England's rabbits and foxes into sentient, human-sized beings with the power of speech, the country's humans are no longer amused and fears of the rabbits breeding humans into irrelevance have soared. Well, humans do have a ridiculously small litter size, at least from the rabbits' point of view. My somewhat more in-depth review, for anyone who cares, is on my 50-Book Challenge thread.

109AnnieMod
Aug. 29, 2022, 12:53 pm

>107 dustydigger: Too bad that Cornell is not too interested in adding more to his series (or so it seems) - I'd love to see more of that one. And St Mary can get a bit silly now and then but the series is fun.

110ChrisRiesbeck
Aug. 29, 2022, 1:27 pm

Took a side road from F&SF to visit The Hunchback of Notre Dame, now reading Starfarers.

111Stevil2001
Aug. 29, 2022, 1:41 pm

>109 AnnieMod: My impression was that it's the publisher who wasn't interested.

112Sakerfalcon
Aug. 30, 2022, 9:25 am

>108 rocketjk: Great review! I need to read this one.

113paradoxosalpha
Bearbeitet: Aug. 30, 2022, 11:35 am

I've finished reading and posted a review for The Bridge of Lost Desire, thus completing a full series reading project over four volumes. Before going on to repeat that feat with Clarke's 3001, I'm going to detour into some pulp horror (under an sf imprint) in the form of The Adventures of Jules de Grandin.

114AnnieMod
Aug. 30, 2022, 3:15 pm

>111 Stevil2001: Huh? That's even more of a shame then :( Hopefully one day we will see more in the series though.

115Stevil2001
Aug. 30, 2022, 4:30 pm

>114 AnnieMod: Found the blog post where he announced it: https://www.paulcornell.com/2017/10/the-future-of-the-shadow-police/

I actually haven't read these yet, but I've never read a book by Cornell I haven't liked.

116AnnieMod
Aug. 30, 2022, 4:34 pm

>115 Stevil2001: Well, there is still hope (maybe?) :) I will patiently wait (and you should read them :) )

117karenb
Aug. 30, 2022, 5:34 pm

>108 rocketjk: I enjoyed The constant rabbit as well. I don't know anyone of very conservative political leanings who has read it; I wonder if they would enjoy it as much as I did.

118rocketjk
Aug. 30, 2022, 6:11 pm

>117 karenb: Interesting question.

119SChant
Aug. 31, 2022, 8:12 am

Finished Shards of Earth. A decent Space Opera. The characterisation and world-building are sketchy but acceptable, but the real problem is sheer bulk. If 150 – 200 pages of extraneous flab had been trimmed off it could have been a really tight and pacy novel. So, a reasonable read with judicious skimming, but I probably won’t be picking up the next doorstopper instalment (why is everything a trilogy these days?).
As a complete contrast I’m also reading Jorges Luis Borges: Collected Fictions. Not all strictly SF&F, but each one an absolute masterclass in choosing the exact words to convey a precise image or idea, and of course many stories contain elements of the surreal/magic-realism.

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