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What are you Reading this December, 2016?
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I got a nice little lesson with

I'm moving onto



Now reading




I did enjoy it. Bester packs several book's worth of SF ideas into a short book, and the writing is pretty sophistica..."
I didn't even think of it having been written around the same time as Childhood's End but it turns out they were only about 3 years apart. Completely different books though, as different as it gets. Someday I need to get to The Demolished Man. I have some Bester short stories too but those seem to get mixed reviews.

Do you enjoy Catalyst?"
Not too much at this point, but I'm only 5 or so chapters in. I did see Rogue One and I liked it a lot. I'm going to need to see it a couple more times in the theater and then buy the Blu-Ray.


Tad Williams' Bobby Dollar urban fantasy with angels trilogy was mostly entertaining but not among my favorities. Happy Hour in Hell in particular was a bit of a trudge at times.
I did enjoy Seveneves, despite some weaker elements (a relatively slow first 125 pages or so, a hard-to-believe significant decision that precedes the book's biggest time jump, etc.). Some of the tech-exposition goes a little overboard (esp. where it's repetitive), but some is fascinating, much of it extrapolating on existing tech & ideas.
& I read PKD's Solar Lottery, which I read for the first time. Some of the political ideas and discussions at the beginning seemed eerily relevant (though they aren't necessarily developed much in the rest of the book, which turns into a fugitive-style thriller complicated by telepathy).


I've been away from the group for a few months while being overwhelmed with moving. Yikes! I hope I never have to do that again.
Anyway, while unpacking endless boxes of books this month, I have been listening to-
We Are Legion (We Are Bob) I really enjoyed this one.
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet This was enjoyable.
Pines I enjoyed this series enough to read all three books, but I don't understand why it needed to be three books. This could have been one stand-alone novel.

- Finished Wheel of Time book 10: Crossroads of Twilight (finally! What a drag ...)
- Read Half a War (great read, but not as great as the first 2)
- Started Wheel of Time book 11: Knife of Dreams (hopefully things will pick up now)

- The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary by Simon Winchester
- Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston ..."
Can't go wrong with Simon Winchester! Love his writing.

Yeah, I liked the book (The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary). Overall it was an interesting story and well-researched. My review is here if anyone is interested: /review/show...

My fave is still Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded

- Finished Wheel of Time book 10: Crossroads of Twilight (finally! What a drag ...)"
I also found that one to be really hard to slog through. I think my first time reading the series (currently on my second time through), it was the book I took the longest to finish at about three months.

My fave is still Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded"
Thanks - I'm gonna see if I can borrow that one next.

- Finished Wheel of Time book 10: Crossroads of Twilight (finally! What a drag ...)"
I also found that one to be really hard to slog through. I think my ..."
Oh boy something to look forward to...

Now I have two more books planned for the end of the year, one an anthology and the other an omnibus.





Somewhere along the way that series became one of my used bookstore hunting quests since I'm a huge fan of the movie Flight of Dragons. So far I've got most of the series but not all of it yet. Sure, I could just order them online, but it's more fun to be on the hunt even if it takes several years to complete!

Currently reading The Three-Body Problem for another group's read.

- Finished Wheel of Time book 10: Crossroads of Twilight (finally! What a drag ...)"
I also found that one to be really hard to slog through..."
10 and 11 were my least favorite volumes. Its been a while since I read them but I remember getting pretty tired of the Perrin/Faile storyline.
I finished slogging through Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer. Ugh, what a steaming pile of litcrap. Playing games with English's gendered pronouns is the new favorite conceit of the Literati. Palmer introduces a child who works Miracles into a godless future, and then abandons that story for more quotidian political conspiracies & dorm room philosophy discussions. (Seriously, the kid can heal the sick, resurrect the dead, turn water to wine, out do all of Jesus's best tricks, and all we're worried about is whether the trains run on time?) I would not bothered finishing had I realized the book was part of a series and had no ending.

Ha, I thought that book was fantastic. I'll probably pick up the sequel as soon as it's out (in 2 months). It's funny though, everything you mentioned not liking (gendered aspects, philosophy, political conspiracies) were the parts I said I liked best in my review.

That takes away all the fun of the used bookstore hunt ;) I've done a few series that way (especially since I started these quests before ebooks were around) and it's such a feeling of accomplishment to actually complete a series.
Plus I much prefer physical books. I tend to keep my eReading to things I can pick up for free, except where something is only in eBook form and have to buy it.
Brendan wrote: "It's funny though, everything you mentioned not liking (gendered aspects..."
I thought Leckie finished beating gendered pronouns to death already. Palmer's addition is to have the narrator use gendered pronouns while leaving the quoted dialog in gender-free "it" & "they", then pausing the lecture us on how she's chosen the pronoun's gender even when it doesn't match the subject's biological gender. And if Palmer "dear reader"'s me one more time I'm going to throw a fruitcake.
I thought Leckie finished beating gendered pronouns to death already. Palmer's addition is to have the narrator use gendered pronouns while leaving the quoted dialog in gender-free "it" & "they", then pausing the lecture us on how she's chosen the pronoun's gender even when it doesn't match the subject's biological gender. And if Palmer "dear reader"'s me one more time I'm going to throw a fruitcake.






Is that true? I know that he did not intend for it to be interpreted as an allegory (which many people do), but do you actually have a citation or evidence that he did not intend for it to be analyzed in any way?
In particular, linguistically (as you mention) -- why go to the trouble of creating multiple languages that adhere to the actual behaviors of real language, and create appendices and supplementary materials, with no intention of having them analyzed?
Did he intend for it to be critiqued? Can one critique without analysis? I don't know the answers.
I can certainly see how the breaking down of sentences can be boring, but Tolkien was also a poet, and poets tend to write carefully structured language -- which can be difficult to appreciate, and sometimes even to understand, without careful deconstruction.
In short, I'm not convinced. :)
Also, I'm intrigued and would love to read this Le Guin essay on Tolkien.

Is that true? I know that he did not intend for it to be interpreted as an allegory (whi..."
And let me apologize for the above post -- I don't mean to make this into a Tolkien debate thread. Just meant to reply with some thoughts and observations about a previous post.
Thanks!
:)


I'm still working on Catalyst - A Rogue One Novel

I recently started A Monster Calls

I'm still working on:
- Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs
- The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2015 Edition ed. by Rich Horton

Is that true? I know that he did not intend for it to be interpreted as an allegory (whi..."
I missed Andrea's original post, so I'm not sure exactly what she said. IMO once a book is written and published, it belongs more to the reader than the author. The author can certainly express his opinion. But it's up to the reader to decide what they see in the book.

This month I also read Terry Goodkind First Confessor, Wizard's First rule and Do Android dream of electric sheep by Phillip K. Dick.


Since that also went faster than expected I then followed up with

Now I still need to finish the Dresden graphic novel omnibus (on the last third) but that won't take me till midnight, so I decided to start on something for the next year



I finished my reread of the Belgariad in December as well. I will likely get to the Mallorean after I move later this month after unpacking my first edition HCs. I may do a reread of the Sparhawk books as well. But I am also working on a reread of The Sword of Shanarra.
Books mentioned in this topic
Stormbringers (other topics)The Malloreon, Vol. 1: Guardians of the West / King of the Murgos / Demon Lord of Karanda (other topics)
Stormbringers (other topics)
Fools' Gold (other topics)
The Light Fantastic (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Philippa Gregory (other topics)Philippa Gregory (other topics)
David Eddings (other topics)
Terry Pratchett (other topics)
Edgar Rice Burroughs (other topics)
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I loved the first book and really wanted to enjoy the sequel, but Metro 2034 proved to be a disappointment - which was a real shame.