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What We've Been Reading
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What are you reading this October?
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Oct 01, 2016 07:00AM
The leaves are turning, pumpkin spice lattes are back, football is just getting interesting and baseball is getting to the playoffs. So, what are you reading when not carving your jack-o'-lantern?
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But not starting with vampires this year, I'm starting with Frankenstein. Saw it was already read by this group and I realized I've never actually read the whole thing through.
See as kids my cousin and I, who live 6 hours apart, decided we would read Dracula aloud to each other every time we got together, so we could better understand this DOS game she had (didn't help us win the game but it was still a fun process).
Several years later we finished Dracula and thought we would start on Frankenstein, but by then we were older and the fun of taking turns reading a book aloud for a few days at a time, then having month long gaps wore off. So we only got part way.




Since it's October and Halloween is coming up, I started reading The Haunting of Hill House

I'm still working on:
- A Feast for Crows by George R.R. Martin
- The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert A. Heinlein
- The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2015 Edition edited by Rich Horton
And also reading these non-SF/F books:
- In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick
- Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk Deluxe Edition by Ben Fountain
- Conviction by Richard North Patterson

I wished that book won the poll. And thanks for the heads up on the foreword. I rarely read them but good to know.
And also reading these non-SF/F books:
- In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick
This is my ultimate favorite five-star nonfiction this year. SO. GOOD.

Rereading A Storm of Swords for proofreading.


Since it's October and Halloween is coming u..."
Silvana wrote: "Randy wrote: "I started reading The Haunting of Hill House The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson. My version has a Foreword by Stephen King which contained some great insights about the boo..."
I was just about to start The Haunting of Hill House, and I would certainly be interested in Stephen King's opinion of it. Thanks for the spoiler warnings - I'll be sure to read the Foreword after I'm finished!

This is my ultimate favorite five-star nonfiction this year. SO. GOOD."
I just finished it today. First time I think I've given a history book five stars. Highly recommended! Review here if anyone is interested: /review/show...

I wished that book won the poll. And thanks for the heads up on the foreword. I rarely read them but good to know."
Lori wrote: "I was just about to start The Haunting of Hill House, and I would certainly be interested in Stephen King's opinion of it. Thanks for the spoiler warnings - I'll be sure to read the Foreword after I'm finished!"
Excellent! It's like an impromptu group read. :) I'm trying to get through about 7 pages per day or so because I want to finish on Halloween.

/book/show/2...



Since it's October and Halloween is coming u..."
I do wish we could just 'Like' comments, posts, replies and messages, lol, but instead, I did send you a separate message :)

Hi Michael - I might still have a copy of Dragons of Autumn Twilight that I could send to you if it is a book that you plan on keeping. My copy should be in good condition.
Mine is probably in storage but because I packed all the boxes of books myself, I should be able to find it by spring, lol.

Received. Thanks Danita!





I loved Foundation, it feels a little dated, but still a damn fine read.


 Eerie describes The Haunting of Hill House" fairly well. Quite atmospheric, and psychological. Not 'and then the monster jumps out and eats your face' sort of thing. I remember liking it. Been years since I read it.
    They made a fairly good movie for tv of it, too. I saw that before I read the novel. I liked both.
    For another take on the same general idea (a small group of people go to notorious 'haunted house' to explore it), there's also Hell House by Matheson. And also The Shining by King. Both of those are much more 'face-eating monster' types.

I do have a question to pose for you dune lovers (if this is not the right section for this i apologize)



I've just finished reading Stephen Baxter's Proxima, and I loved it - it's a damn fine sci-fi read :-)

I love all 6 Dune novels, what's the question?
Brendan wrote: "Dehric wrote: "I do have a question to pose for you dune lovers (if this is not the right section for this i apologize)"
I love all 6 Dune novels, what's the question?"
Dune has its own discussion topic if your interested.
I love all 6 Dune novels, what's the question?"
Dune has its own discussion topic if your interested.




The best post-zombie apocalypse ever. A handful of terrific characters in a really engaging story. Takes a familiar setup (there's a zombie plague, and an isolated research station is trying to find a cure) and does something completely unexpected with it. Wish I'd read it two years ago when it came out.

Cool. Jump in! I'm about halfway done with it. On pace to finish on Halloween. It's definitely not a "monster eats your face" kind of book...there's a lot of atmosphere and settings and characters. One way to look at it is that the house itself is a central character.
Matheson's Hell House and King's The Shining are both on my To-Read list.

EDIT: Oh, and I also finished Nightfall by Asimov/Silverberg. Seems it was a short story that was stretched into a novel? Probably would have been better as a short story, to be honest.


I thought the Anita Blake series was great up until about the 10th book. She was a great, kick-ass heroine & there were some great other characters. Hamilton really went off the rails, though. Ruined the series & MC for me.



EDIT: Oh, a..."
The short story is a classic.


I've posted my review for Paolo Bacigalupi's The Windup Girl, and it's a fascinating world, but is doesn't quite deliver.

Before I started on book 8, I read Springtseen's new memoir Born to Run.




Switching now to



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