What book(s) are you currently reading or listening? 01 December
I was supposed to post this last week, but got delayed because of Thanksgiving. Hope you all had a fun time.
I finished The House at Sea’s End by Elly Griffiths. It was an okay read, not bad, but thinking about getting into another crime series with more action / mystery and less relationship stuff. But I have got the next 5-6 books so will read them.
Read the next Dresden Files novel, Blood Rites by Jim Butcher. I feel the quality of writing has improved a lot since the first couple of novels. This one felt a bit less intense than the last one, but liked the character developments.
Read Jujitsu Kaisen, Vol 4, not much to say about it. More action, more silliness.
Currently reading The Black Company by Glen Cook. I have the omnibus (Chronicles of the Black Company) which has first three books, so may end up reading all three as one book. The writing style is a bit weird, but I think I have gotten used to it.
What about all of you? What have you been reading or listening? Or have read and listened in last 2-3 weeks?
Been listening to Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky and so far it's fantastic. I've been asking my GPT4 for recommendations that might match a certain set of criteria. It recommended this one as something vaguely similar to the Bobiverse series be Dennis E Taylor, which I really like.
Nice. I just read those for the first time this year. Couldn't find any copy locally so just got the epubs from Project Gunteberg. I have only read first three yet. Let me know what you think about them after reading them.
I’m reading "The Time Machine" by H.G. Wells and I must say, I love his writing style! This is my second book by him. If anyone has any recommendations for something similar, I'm all ears!
Thanks for the suggestion!
I've already read Star Maker. Out of the two, I'm actually enjoying H.G. Wells more. But I'll probably give Olaf Stapledon another shot.
Finished Finnegans Wake - which I had been reading across the year. The group this year allowed for a period of summing up at the end, so we have completed it already. Although the book as a whole was consistently just on the edge - mostly over the edge - of comprehension, the final section still conveyed a haunting degree of completion, ending and loss which, given that the whole book is circular and ends mid-sentence - resuming that sentence one the first page - was rather unexpected.
Currently reading Sense and Sensibility - and enjoying Austen's dry wit.
Currently reading Return of the Living Dad - another of the Virgin New Adventures Doctor Who novels from the 'wilderness years' of the '90s. A slow start to this one has picked up now that the crew have found Benny's long-lost father and his underground railway for aliens.
Currently reading Historical Lovecraft - an anthology of Lovecraftian tales set at various points of history. A very mixed bag with only a couple of tales that stand out so far - and the editors' view of what constitutes 'Lovecraftian' seems extremely broad. Some interesting settings though, so I will persist.
Currently reeading The Earth Transformed by Peter Frankopan - a history focusing the influence of climate and environmental factors on the development of our species and cultures. At times very informative, I'm finding that it does frequently digress, to give other examples or form parallels, to the point where the central argument of the section is almost lost. Extremely interesting as long as one can cope with that though.
The Earth Transformed sounds interesting, but I am not sure I'll enjoy the author digressing so much. Would love to hear what you think about it once you have completed it.
I think that on average I have probably learned - or seen from a new and interesting perspective - around one new idea per chapter from The Earth Transformed - which is pretty good overall. Still only a third of the way through so far though.
They often say that there has never been a really good Lovecraftian movie yet, and I do wonder whether the same is true of Lovecraftian books by other authors sometimes. I tend to prefer short stories rather than novels for horror of any kind. I have read quite a few not-very-good Lovecraftian shorts over the years. There really aren't that many that have stuck with me that ARE good though.
There are some of the classics: Blackwood's The Willows (and, to some extent T Kingfisher's semi-sequel The Hollow Places), and Hope Hodgeson's The House on the Borderlands, and some of Derleth's tales, but I'd struggle to recommend a particular book really.
One of the best Lovecraft fictions in any media that I know of is the BBC The Lovecraft Investigations podcast - which is a modern take on some of his tales but with some other layers to them.
On the bus reading is Howard's Collected Conan works. Great to read in short sessions and the lack of story arcs makes it perfect to put down for periods of time. There is Conan doing Conan stuff and "other characters".
Table stand book is Prof. David Thurfjell's "En lockton i ödemarken : om människans förmåga att besjäla världen" (A call in the wild: about mankind's capability to animate (??) the world)(rough free translation). It is about modern, often secular, Scandinavians (mostly I think) draw towards finding spirituality in the wild. Have but started it, picked it up after watching an interview with Thurfjell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnCB5oywM7g
The Dresden Files audiobooks are so good. They're read by James Marsters of Buffy The Vampire Slayer and he just hits every tone and sigh of Dresden perfectly.
I'm actually finishing up The Olympian Affair, book 2 of Jim Butcher's new series Cinder Spires. It's steampunky magic with political intrigue, airships, and tribes of cats with their own language. The first book was a little meandering but the second one has been very interesting and more dynamic so far
The last couple of month I listened to the Stormlight Archive series but recently took a break.
I started Reamde from Neal Stephenson again. Funny thing is that its normally not my genre. Computer yes but I am more into hard sci-fi (Hamilton or Tchaikovsky i.e.) or epic fantasy like Sanderson.
But this book totally took me away out of my comfort zone. Thats why I started it a second time. Last was 2 years ago.
I am desperate looking for another out of the loop for me but couldn't find any, yet.
Where are you in Stormlight Archive? I have read the first three, thinking about going to re-read the whole series before the fifth book releases next year, instead of just going ahead and reading four. Will probably start a re-read sometimes next year.
I have been looking at interesting sci-fi to read. While I consider myself a fantasy and sci-fi fan, most of my reading have leaned towards fantasy than sci-fi. Would like to hear your favourites.
I am at book 2 second half . Its in german and they split 1 english book in two german audiobooks. So it is book 4 in germany.
My favourites
Peter F. Hamilton
The dreaming void trilogy
Without telling to much it is two sections of a story part fantasy part sci-fi basically.
And if you like his style
The Night's Dawn Trilogy
A massive trilogy that if you stick to it has so many ideas, side stories and places in it you could make several spin off`s out of the lore. It has nothing to do with the void universe.
Adrian Tchaikovski
Children of Time
Also sci-fi about humankind coming to a new "eden" 😉
Currently reading Van Diemen's Land by James Boyce, covering the early history of Tasmania (as a European colony). About a quarter of the way through and interesting so far.
Before that I went through:
A LitRPG series called Apocalypse Tamer by Maxime Durand - standard LitRPG stuff with people gaining game like powers and the end of the world approaching. Wouldn't say it really stands out but easy reading and doesn't take itself too seriously.
Un Lun Dun by China Mieville, a young adult aimed urban fantasy story about saving an alternate London from a self aware cloud of pollution. Plays around amusingly with various chosen one and saving the world tropes, pretty quick read.
Reread Brass Man by Neal Asher - part of his Agent Cormac series in his Polity sci-fi universe. Interstelllar agent tracking down a criminal who has gained various powers, along with a few side stories. I find the Polity universe interesting, albeit somewhat grim for sci fi universes.
Through the Storm by John Ringo and Lydia Sherrer - another one aimed more at young adults, a continuation of a near future sci fi series about teenagers playing a augmented reality game that is turning out to secretly have real world implications. I like the premise but it did seem like this book focused more than the first on inter character drama rather than action or progressing the behind the scenes story.
Reread a few Discworld books, they're basically all worth a re read every now and then.
I’ve been reading through a short story collection of Edgar Allan Poe and really liking it. The variety of genres he wrote in is really impressive and I can definitely see how a lot of later novels were inspired by his works! I also never knew just how old they were (1800s!).
Oh I highly recommend it. As a kid I read a lot of his work and my favorites were the Cask of Amontillado and The Tell-tale Heart. I still love those ones but I feel like I can appreciate the poetry and other stories now.
Another series I've gotten a lot of mileage out of revisiting was Calvin and Hobbes funny enough.
I just finished reading "The Fall of the House of Usher" after watching the Netflix show. It's a great read, and the atmosphere is really eerie, just like I was hoping for.
The show is why I picked it up actually, except I wanted to read it first before watching. I did the same with The Haunting of Hill House and The Turn of the Screw (Haunting of Bly Manor, also still need to watch that one). I tend to enjoy the original books more anyways.
The Book of Dave by Will Self - I've enjoyed everything I've read by him, most recently, prior to this, was Umbrella.
Land of the Lustrous by Haruko Ichikawa for something light. First manga I've read, and very glad I picked it up, though gets expensive as the volumes add up.
I'm reading Hard Reset by Django Wexler on Audible. It's a small little guilty pleasure sci-fi about a pilot and an archeologist repairing a warbot on a post-apocalyptic earth. The performance is very good. After I'm done with that I'm gonna read Holidays on Ice by David Sedaris. I always like to theme a book around the holidays.
On Kindle, I'm reading How To by Randal Monroe. I'm not sure about it currently, I'm bouncing off some of the humor, even though I love XKCD. I'm also reading Dragons of Crumbling castle to my son who is 3 months old. I'm almost done, so after that, maybe the Hobbit? My wife is reading him Roald Dahl's The Witches. When I'm done with How To, I'm moving onto Carpe Jugulum in my second reading through of Discworld.
Then, on MoonReader I've got a PDF of Dan Abnett's Legion from an old Humble Bundle. I don't know about it, I think he put in too much jargon. Usually I love his writing, ever since I read his run on Guardians of the Galaxy, and I'm a Chaos Space Marine fan. Hell, I also love conmen and tricksters, so the Alpha Legion book for the Horus Heresy should be right up my alley, but I'm getting lost in the weeds with it. When I'm done with this one, I'll move onto the next book in the Horus Heresy novels. I should have it since I alway get the Warhammer Humble Bundles.
Finished The End and the Death Volume II by Dan Abnett. Its really good but unless there is a ton I am missing there isn't really enough for much of a third and final book in this end game trilogy for the Siege of Terra. Feels like it should have been two books not three, may be I will change my mind end of January when the next one comes out.
Also finished Matter by Iain Banks. Its another good book but it suffers being read back to back with the rest of the series during my read through of the Culture series. I do not think the story is as strong as it could be. Spoiler:
spoiler
Ending is great if you like left field endings, and brutal endings.
Now reading Surface Detail by Iain Banks. Penultimate Culture book, then I can read the revised Tolkien's letters and his bibliography. First non fiction in a very long time.
I'm currently reading Monbiot's Regenesis, a book on the problems of modern day agriculture and a vision of a new future for food. I'm currently about halfway, and it's mostly still about the problems of the current agricultural practices, but it's already intriguing and throught-provoking.
I just finishef Accelerando by Charles Stross, a really weird and complex scifi novel with lots of interesting concepts.
And now I started Slaughterhouse 5 by Kurt Vonnegut.
I still need to finish "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" . It's been very good so far! Talks about the emergence of human cell cultures and Henrietta's family.
Also, "Mistakes Were Made But Not by Me" is a good recent book I read. It's about cognitive dissonance and gives a lot of real-world examples. It's basically a collection of micro stories that illustrate its points.
I finished The Olympian Affair by Jim Butcher last week. Now I just have a few of novellas that I’m working on. Minor Mage by Kingfisher, Ocean at the End of the Lane by Gaiman, then I’ll pick up either Last Unicorn or The Library at Mount Char.
Just started Arkady Martine's A Memory Called Empire.
I just finished Scalzi's Interdependency trilogy which was entertaining but very Scalzi. I think the next time I read him I'll take it in smaller doses. Irreverence can be entertaining and refreshing when it's a garnish to another style but Scalzi just keeps scooping more of it into the bowl here.