Reading at t'moment?
#28021
Posted 25 January 2022 - 09:29 PM
I am a sucker for a catchy book title and colorful book covers. About 60% of my interest in books is based on judging books by the cover.
#28022
Posted 25 January 2022 - 10:38 PM
My last two reads:
THE BEAUTIFUL ONES by Silvia Moreno-Garcia: This one turned out to be not much more than a cute little courtship drama. It sounds like I mean that in a bad way, but I don't! Hector is a performing psychokinetic who moves back to the city of Loisail to check up on his ex-fiancée Valerie (who married while he had gone off to make his fortune) and in order to get close to her again, decides to start courting Valerie's younger cousin Nina, who (developing her own psychokinetic abilities) takes a keen interest in Hector. What could possibly go wrong? I absolutely loved it.
WYLDING HALL by Elizabeth Hand: This one takes the form of an oral history, where the remaining members of the briefly-popular English folk band Windhollow Faire tell the story of the summer their producer took them to stay at a mysterious abandoned manor house in the countryside, and what befell them there. A relatively short read, I polished this one off over the weekend. Very hard to put down, and also quite creepy in places!
THE BEAUTIFUL ONES by Silvia Moreno-Garcia: This one turned out to be not much more than a cute little courtship drama. It sounds like I mean that in a bad way, but I don't! Hector is a performing psychokinetic who moves back to the city of Loisail to check up on his ex-fiancée Valerie (who married while he had gone off to make his fortune) and in order to get close to her again, decides to start courting Valerie's younger cousin Nina, who (developing her own psychokinetic abilities) takes a keen interest in Hector. What could possibly go wrong? I absolutely loved it.
WYLDING HALL by Elizabeth Hand: This one takes the form of an oral history, where the remaining members of the briefly-popular English folk band Windhollow Faire tell the story of the summer their producer took them to stay at a mysterious abandoned manor house in the countryside, and what befell them there. A relatively short read, I polished this one off over the weekend. Very hard to put down, and also quite creepy in places!
"Here is light. You will say that it is not a living entity, but you miss the point that it is more, not less. Without occupying space, it fills the universe. It nourishes everything, yet itself feeds upon destruction. We claim to control it, but does it not perhaps cultivate us as a source of food? May it not be that all wood grows so that it can be set ablaze, and that men and women are born to kindle fires?"
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
#28023
Posted 26 January 2022 - 10:07 AM
41% into KJ Parker's A Practical Guide to Conquering the World and there's a brief note about what happened just after the end of book 2 - How to Rule and Empire and get away with it. Oh dear.
KJ Parker doesn't really do happy endings, or even bittersweet does he? I do enjoy everything up to that point though.
I've noticed plenty of references to other works of his, in particular the Fencer trilogy. The part where he describes how to build a composite recurve bow brings back ... unsettling memories.
KJ Parker doesn't really do happy endings, or even bittersweet does he? I do enjoy everything up to that point though.
I've noticed plenty of references to other works of his, in particular the Fencer trilogy. The part where he describes how to build a composite recurve bow brings back ... unsettling memories.
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker
#28024
Posted 27 January 2022 - 02:39 PM
Reminds me I have belly of the bow on my trp
2012
"Imperial Gothos, Imperial"
"Imperial Gothos, Imperial"
#28025
Posted 28 January 2022 - 01:47 PM
#28026
Posted 28 January 2022 - 01:51 PM
Since The EXPANSE has now ended with the final book releasing, I've decided to dive back in and finish it, but I'm way back at CIBOLA BURN....hehe
But yeah, about 100 pages into it and enjoying. It will be nice to sort of binge this to the end.
But yeah, about 100 pages into it and enjoying. It will be nice to sort of binge this to the end.
Spoiler
"When the last tree has fallen, and the rivers are poisoned, you cannot eat money, oh no." ~Aurora
“Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone.” ~Ursula Vernon
“Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone.” ~Ursula Vernon
#28027
Posted 28 January 2022 - 07:11 PM
QuickTidal, on 28 January 2022 - 01:51 PM, said:
Since The EXPANSE has now ended with the final book releasing, I've decided to dive back in and finish it, but I'm way back at CIBOLA BURN....hehe
But yeah, about 100 pages into it and enjoying. It will be nice to sort of binge this to the end.
But yeah, about 100 pages into it and enjoying. It will be nice to sort of binge this to the end.
Spoiler
Since you asked....
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#28028
Posted 30 January 2022 - 05:42 PM
About a 150 pages into Quantum of Nightmares, the second New Management book by Charles Stross.
I'm having a hard time getting into this one. It's not bad but it lacks focus, it's doing about 3-4 storylines at once, with different POVs in each one overlapping, with no clear end point so far. 150 p in I'm beginning to see how some parts connect but it's really scattered.
Sure is dreary though. I want a second spin off series called Yes, Mandate about a civil servant working for the Black Pharaoh where Stross just does comedy surrounding the eldritch evil's plans being foiled by British bureaucracy. Or should that be aided by...
I'm having a hard time getting into this one. It's not bad but it lacks focus, it's doing about 3-4 storylines at once, with different POVs in each one overlapping, with no clear end point so far. 150 p in I'm beginning to see how some parts connect but it's really scattered.
Sure is dreary though. I want a second spin off series called Yes, Mandate about a civil servant working for the Black Pharaoh where Stross just does comedy surrounding the eldritch evil's plans being foiled by British bureaucracy. Or should that be aided by...
This post has been edited by Aptorian: 30 January 2022 - 05:45 PM
#28029
Posted 31 January 2022 - 06:57 PM
Aptorian, on 30 January 2022 - 05:42 PM, said:
About a 150 pages into Quantum of Nightmares, the second New Management book by Charles Stross.
I'm having a hard time getting into this one. It's not bad but it lacks focus, it's doing about 3-4 storylines at once, with different POVs in each one overlapping, with no clear end point so far. 150 p in I'm beginning to see how some parts connect but it's really scattered.
Sure is dreary though. I want a second spin off series called Yes, Mandate about a civil servant working for the Black Pharaoh where Stross just does comedy surrounding the eldritch evil's plans being foiled by British bureaucracy. Or should that be aided by...
I'm having a hard time getting into this one. It's not bad but it lacks focus, it's doing about 3-4 storylines at once, with different POVs in each one overlapping, with no clear end point so far. 150 p in I'm beginning to see how some parts connect but it's really scattered.
Sure is dreary though. I want a second spin off series called Yes, Mandate about a civil servant working for the Black Pharaoh where Stross just does comedy surrounding the eldritch evil's plans being foiled by British bureaucracy. Or should that be aided by...
Just Finished this.
Keep going, the payoff is great. I enjoyed this more than many of the LAUNDRY FILES books.
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#28030
Posted 01 February 2022 - 02:47 PM
Wayfarers Book 2: Wasn't expecting such a departure from the first book, and though I missed those characters, this book was essentially on par while it did its own thing. I really loved the themes explored in this book, really welcome stuff to read at this particular time.
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#28031
Posted 01 February 2022 - 04:25 PM
Abyss, on 31 January 2022 - 06:57 PM, said:
Aptorian, on 30 January 2022 - 05:42 PM, said:
About a 150 pages into Quantum of Nightmares, the second New Management book by Charles Stross.
I'm having a hard time getting into this one. It's not bad but it lacks focus, it's doing about 3-4 storylines at once, with different POVs in each one overlapping, with no clear end point so far. 150 p in I'm beginning to see how some parts connect but it's really scattered.
Sure is dreary though. I want a second spin off series called Yes, Mandate about a civil servant working for the Black Pharaoh where Stross just does comedy surrounding the eldritch evil's plans being foiled by British bureaucracy. Or should that be aided by...
I'm having a hard time getting into this one. It's not bad but it lacks focus, it's doing about 3-4 storylines at once, with different POVs in each one overlapping, with no clear end point so far. 150 p in I'm beginning to see how some parts connect but it's really scattered.
Sure is dreary though. I want a second spin off series called Yes, Mandate about a civil servant working for the Black Pharaoh where Stross just does comedy surrounding the eldritch evil's plans being foiled by British bureaucracy. Or should that be aided by...
Just Finished this.
Keep going, the payoff is great. I enjoyed this more than many of the LAUNDRY FILES books.
Finished the book. Still not that hot about the story. Still think the book lacks focus. But I never knew where the hell the story was going, I'll give it that. Really weird world building.
I'm ready to get back to the story of the Laundry and Bob now.
#28032
Posted 01 February 2022 - 05:02 PM
Aptorian, on 01 February 2022 - 04:25 PM, said:
Abyss, on 31 January 2022 - 06:57 PM, said:
Aptorian, on 30 January 2022 - 05:42 PM, said:
About a 150 pages into Quantum of Nightmares, the second New Management book by Charles Stross.
I'm having a hard time getting into this one. It's not bad but it lacks focus, it's doing about 3-4 storylines at once, with different POVs in each one overlapping, with no clear end point so far. 150 p in I'm beginning to see how some parts connect but it's really scattered.
Sure is dreary though. I want a second spin off series called Yes, Mandate about a civil servant working for the Black Pharaoh where Stross just does comedy surrounding the eldritch evil's plans being foiled by British bureaucracy. Or should that be aided by...
I'm having a hard time getting into this one. It's not bad but it lacks focus, it's doing about 3-4 storylines at once, with different POVs in each one overlapping, with no clear end point so far. 150 p in I'm beginning to see how some parts connect but it's really scattered.
Sure is dreary though. I want a second spin off series called Yes, Mandate about a civil servant working for the Black Pharaoh where Stross just does comedy surrounding the eldritch evil's plans being foiled by British bureaucracy. Or should that be aided by...
Just Finished this.
Keep going, the payoff is great. I enjoyed this more than many of the LAUNDRY FILES books.
Finished the book. Still not that hot about the story. Still think the book lacks focus. But I never knew where the hell the story was going, I'll give it that. Really weird world building.
I'm ready to get back to the story of the Laundry and Bob now.
I liked how the disparate storylines all came together. I also really enjoyed this cast, who were a far more diverse and entertaining bunch than the usual LAUNDRY crew.
That said, i do look forward to the next Bob book, which happens to be a novella out March, ESCAPE FROM YOKAI LAND, that has him working w the Japanese version of the Laundry.
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#28033
Posted 03 February 2022 - 11:32 PM
Finished Gemma Files' EXPERIMENTAL FILM the other night. Fantastic book about a former Canadian film teacher/critic who stumbles upon evidence of Canada's first female filmmaker, and gets caught up in a creepy eldritch nightmare. Starts a little slow, but I think that helps ground the characters and setting for when things really start to go off the rails later. Very spooky, and I confess to being a little wary about reading it late at night in the dark.
"Here is light. You will say that it is not a living entity, but you miss the point that it is more, not less. Without occupying space, it fills the universe. It nourishes everything, yet itself feeds upon destruction. We claim to control it, but does it not perhaps cultivate us as a source of food? May it not be that all wood grows so that it can be set ablaze, and that men and women are born to kindle fires?"
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
#28034
Posted 04 February 2022 - 05:47 PM
Just finished BLOOD HEIR by Ilona 'i'm really two people who used to be spies but would rather LARP' Andrews.
The authors were writing this and posting in stages through the early 2020 pandemic. I was following initially then decided i would rather wait til it was done. Glad it did, it was good fun.
BLOOD HEIR is a return to the KATE DANIELS series world. The protagonist is Kate's adopted daughter Julie, who we last saw riding off into the sunset with Kate's resurrected uber-mage-warrior aunt. Eight years later Julie is back in Atlanta and A LOT has changed. She has a murder to solve, a god hunting her, a cover to maintain, city-state, Knight Protector, and Pack politics to navigate, and that's more or less just the first chapter.
This was a pretty great return to this series. Power/confidence wise, Julie is around where Kate was mid-series, more mature in someways, very much younger in others. It works nicely because the setting and characters are familiar but the protag, while similar, is not Kate 2.0. Same goes for the book in general.
I won't spoil who, but a bunch of supporting cast are back, all have evolved to some degree since the last Kate book. There are also new additions, one in particular who is very funny and another who is absolutely glorious.
If you were on the Kateamine bandwagon when that series was getting our attention a few years ago, this is worth your time and money. It doesn't reinvent the genre or turn the world on its side, but it has the same energy and pace that made the MAGIC series worthwhile. Also, predatory unicorn.
The authors were writing this and posting in stages through the early 2020 pandemic. I was following initially then decided i would rather wait til it was done. Glad it did, it was good fun.
BLOOD HEIR is a return to the KATE DANIELS series world. The protagonist is Kate's adopted daughter Julie, who we last saw riding off into the sunset with Kate's resurrected uber-mage-warrior aunt. Eight years later Julie is back in Atlanta and A LOT has changed. She has a murder to solve, a god hunting her, a cover to maintain, city-state, Knight Protector, and Pack politics to navigate, and that's more or less just the first chapter.
This was a pretty great return to this series. Power/confidence wise, Julie is around where Kate was mid-series, more mature in someways, very much younger in others. It works nicely because the setting and characters are familiar but the protag, while similar, is not Kate 2.0. Same goes for the book in general.
I won't spoil who, but a bunch of supporting cast are back, all have evolved to some degree since the last Kate book. There are also new additions, one in particular who is very funny and another who is absolutely glorious.
If you were on the Kateamine bandwagon when that series was getting our attention a few years ago, this is worth your time and money. It doesn't reinvent the genre or turn the world on its side, but it has the same energy and pace that made the MAGIC series worthwhile. Also, predatory unicorn.
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#28035
Posted 04 February 2022 - 06:30 PM
I was pretty disappointed in the finale of the Kate series. It seemed like the authors ran out of steam so totally that the book fell flat.
Which vibe is the Julie book giving? More of the finale or more of the middle series where the authors weren't doing 12 side project novellas a year?
Which vibe is the Julie book giving? More of the finale or more of the middle series where the authors weren't doing 12 side project novellas a year?
I survived the Permian and all I got was this t-shirt.
#28036
Posted 08 February 2022 - 07:41 PM
amphibian, on 04 February 2022 - 06:30 PM, said:
I was pretty disappointed in the finale of the Kate series. It seemed like the authors ran out of steam so totally that the book fell flat.
Which vibe is the Julie book giving? More of the finale or more of the middle series where the authors weren't doing 12 side project novellas a year?
Which vibe is the Julie book giving? More of the finale or more of the middle series where the authors weren't doing 12 side project novellas a year?
Middle of the series, good momentum, feeling good w the characters, seem to have a plan.
I think you'll enjoy it, it has a similar vibe to the middle books when Kate would have to solve a case vs later books where the war against the Big Bad was the focus.
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#28037
Posted 08 February 2022 - 07:53 PM
Just Finished Ben Aaronovich's latest Peter Grant book TALES FROM THE FOLLY.
It's a collection of short stories most of which only previously appeared in hardcover special editions, so all of it was new to me except for RARE BOOK OF CUNNING DEVICE which i had not earbook'd before in any event.
The first half are Peter stories, all variations of short cases he worked on in between the books. They're set at various points in the series which is fun because we get little flashback moments like Leslie working with him on a case or when he was still early days w Bev. The second half are supporting cast stories and also fun - there's an Abigail story that is too endearing for words. Finally at the end are a bunch of short 'slice of life' bits including a great one from Nightingale's pov.
Absolutely worthwhile if you're a fan of the series. All the narrators are great if you go earbook.
It's a collection of short stories most of which only previously appeared in hardcover special editions, so all of it was new to me except for RARE BOOK OF CUNNING DEVICE which i had not earbook'd before in any event.
The first half are Peter stories, all variations of short cases he worked on in between the books. They're set at various points in the series which is fun because we get little flashback moments like Leslie working with him on a case or when he was still early days w Bev. The second half are supporting cast stories and also fun - there's an Abigail story that is too endearing for words. Finally at the end are a bunch of short 'slice of life' bits including a great one from Nightingale's pov.
Absolutely worthwhile if you're a fan of the series. All the narrators are great if you go earbook.
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#28038
Posted 08 February 2022 - 08:56 PM
Finished off Sarah Gailey's THE ECHO WIFE last night. About a scientist who discovers her husband is having an affair... with her clone. An intriguing premise, but I was not at all expecting what actually happened. Fantastic book.
"Here is light. You will say that it is not a living entity, but you miss the point that it is more, not less. Without occupying space, it fills the universe. It nourishes everything, yet itself feeds upon destruction. We claim to control it, but does it not perhaps cultivate us as a source of food? May it not be that all wood grows so that it can be set ablaze, and that men and women are born to kindle fires?"
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
#28039
Posted 15 February 2022 - 01:16 PM
So many years after reading only MAGICIAN: APPRENTICE of Feist's Riftwar (and enjoying it), I'm finally diving properly into MAGICIAN: MASTER and continuing the journey. I did try this book a year or two ago and wasn't able to get into it (the POV switch from Midkemia to Kelewan was too jarring at the time), but now I'm singing along and enjoying.
"When the last tree has fallen, and the rivers are poisoned, you cannot eat money, oh no." ~Aurora
“Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone.” ~Ursula Vernon
“Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone.” ~Ursula Vernon
#28040
Posted 15 February 2022 - 05:31 PM
Just Finished Myke Cole's SIXTEENTH WATCH.
This is a scifi book about a US Coast Guard team in a future where the Moon is settled and various nations are competing for space and resources. Naturally the US is there, and naturally its armed services, specifically the Navy and Coast Guard, are competing for jurisdiction and also PR because inter-service training competitions have become bigger than sports... yeah i know, i know, just go with it, it's central to the story. Also there's a Lunar Cold War that edges on hot.
I've read Cole before, i enjoyed his LEGION v PHALANX semi-fictional analysis, i started but did not lov enough to continue his SHADOW OPS series... in terms of characters and character dev, this may be his best work yet. The pacing is solid, even quiet moments have a fwd momentum to them, and his action scenes are amazing and visceral and surprisingly 'clean' considering they involve people shooting and beating each other in space vacuum. The protag, Capt Jane Oliver, is very well written as a determined career military woman. The story is from her POV and she is by no means invulnerable or a complete hardcase like some milsf leads. She's damaged and driven and brave and scared spitless and completely engaging. The cast around around her, her daughter, her team, her XO and chain of command, officers/competitors from other branches, are VERY well done, even some with brief roles in the story.
The earbook narrator is flawless.
I have one minor complaint, major spoiler do not read if you haven't read the book....
Great book, worth the time and money.
This is a scifi book about a US Coast Guard team in a future where the Moon is settled and various nations are competing for space and resources. Naturally the US is there, and naturally its armed services, specifically the Navy and Coast Guard, are competing for jurisdiction and also PR because inter-service training competitions have become bigger than sports... yeah i know, i know, just go with it, it's central to the story. Also there's a Lunar Cold War that edges on hot.
I've read Cole before, i enjoyed his LEGION v PHALANX semi-fictional analysis, i started but did not lov enough to continue his SHADOW OPS series... in terms of characters and character dev, this may be his best work yet. The pacing is solid, even quiet moments have a fwd momentum to them, and his action scenes are amazing and visceral and surprisingly 'clean' considering they involve people shooting and beating each other in space vacuum. The protag, Capt Jane Oliver, is very well written as a determined career military woman. The story is from her POV and she is by no means invulnerable or a complete hardcase like some milsf leads. She's damaged and driven and brave and scared spitless and completely engaging. The cast around around her, her daughter, her team, her XO and chain of command, officers/competitors from other branches, are VERY well done, even some with brief roles in the story.
The earbook narrator is flawless.
I have one minor complaint, major spoiler do not read if you haven't read the book....
Spoiler
.Great book, worth the time and money.
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