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So What Are you Reading?: Generations

The Blood is the Life, a massive tome on the history of vampire movies from 1922 to the present.

I wrote the entry on Anne Rice and INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE, and am now enjoying reading the rest of the book as well. I've made it from NOSFERATU to BLACULA so far, with five more decades of vampire movies to go!
 
Finished up the first Captain's Table book "War Dragons" by LA Graf. I loved the 1st person point of view and am looking forward to more of this series and style of storytelling.
I decided to finish 2024 and start 2025 with my favorite book, "The Count of Monte Cristo". Only 5 chapters in loving it again. Something super cozy about rereading your favorite book.
 
The Blood is the Life, a massive tome on the history of vampire movies from 1922 to the present.

I wrote the entry on Anne Rice and INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE, and am now enjoying reading the rest of the book as well. I've made it from NOSFERATU to BLACULA so far, with five more decades of vampire movies to go!
Yes, we have Nosferatu. We have Nosferatu today. (With live accompaniment by organist Robert York, on the "Mighty Austin.")
 
I finished a reread of the Plagues of Night/Raise the Dawn duology. If one wanted a suitably epic and satisfying place to end their post-series reading journey, this one could be it. Also, is this duology the story that covers the most months in the post-Nemesis timeline (advancing it forward, not counting things like flashbacks or other time hopping)?

For my book club, I also finished a reread of Way Station by Clifford Simak. I highly recommend this book, especially for those who find the messages in Star Trek appealing. Way Station makes a person consider the big picture issues of living in an elegant manner, and that is no small feat.

Current reading:

Star Trek: Indistinguishable From Magic (1st time, somehow; marriage and kids have a way of making it harder to keep up with hobbies sometimes)
Mars by Ben Bova (also a first time, just never made the time commitment before for this 500 page book)
Star Wars: The Rise and Fall of the Galactic Empire (in-universe, a history of the Empire written by Beaumont Kin sometime after the Battle of Exegol)
 
I finished a reread of the Plagues of Night/Raise the Dawn duology. If one wanted a suitably epic and satisfying place to end their post-series reading journey, this one could be it. Also, is this duology the story that covers the most months in the post-Nemesis timeline (advancing it forward, not counting things like flashbacks or other time hopping)?

Let's see... I have it down as spanning April-October 2382 and February-October 2383, with an epilogue jumping forward to September 2384, so I'm not sure whether you'd count the epilogue as "time hopping." So that's either a year and a half or 2 years 5 months.

Voyager: Full Circle spans 2 years and 10 months in mostly chronological order, though the prologue is in 2380 and the first 18 numbered chapters are in 2378-9, so I'm not sure whether to count Chapters 1-18 as a flashback or the prologue as a flashforward. If you go with the former, then the main body would take only 11 months.

By the same token, chapters 7-24 of Cold Equations: The Persistence of Memory span over 17 years, but they're an extended flashback within a frame that takes only a week.

I thought DTI: Watching the Clock might be competitive, but its main body spans 11 months. And DTI: Time Lock spans a bit less than that.
 
Thanks for the insights, Christopher. All of the novels mentioned in your post feel like big stories, and picking which covers the most time is pretty much down to semantics and focus.
 
At first I missed that you said "in the post-Nemesis timeline," and I was going to mention my own Lost Era novel The Art of the Impossible, which covered 18 years, but that's not post-Nemesis, obviously.........
 
Mars by Ben Bova (also a first time, just never made the time commitment before for this 500 page book)
With the possible exception of one or two of his science books, the only Ben Bova I've read was Escape! (back in elementary school, as I recall, or maybe high school).
 
I am starting off the year with my favorite book, "The Count of Monte Cristo". I have read it several times before and it just feels so good to get back into that world again. Nothing quite so cozy as a well read book by the fire this season. Hoping to really dig into it tomorrow!
 
Just realized that I never posted my December reading log here. In December I read (or finished reading):

Star Trek: Open a Channel—A Woman’s Trek by Nana Visitor (2024)

Strange Novel Worlds: Essays on Star Trek Tie-In Fiction edited by Caroline-Isabelle Caron with Kristin Noone (2024)

Comics:

Star Trek: Defiant Vol. 3: Hell Is Only a Word hardcover (2024)

Star Trek: Sons of Star Trek trade paperback (2024)

The Bat-Man: First Knight hardcover (2024)

S.H.I.E.L.D. Vol. 1: Perfect Bullets trade paperback (2015) (read the individual issues on Marvel Unlimited digital service)

S.H.I.E.L.D. Vol. 2: The Man Called D.E.A.T.H. trade paperback (2016) (read the individual issues on Marvel Unlimited digital service)

Ms. Marvel Vol. 3: Crushed trade paperback (2015) (read the individual issues on Marvel Unlimited digital service)

Superman: The Action Comics Archives Vol. 4 (2005)

I finished 2024 having read (or finished reading) 66 books. Which was nine short of my revised goal I set for myself in October when I passed what had been my original GoodReads goal for 2024, which was 50 books.

— David Young
 
I finished reading Star Wars: The High Republic: The Rising Storm by Cavan Scott earlier today and I started Doctor Who: Last of the Gaderene by Mark Gatiss.
 
Now halfway through Lost to Eternity. And I've thumbed through Warp Your Own Way, but only for the purpose of finding the "unreachable" page that's one of the page images in either the Amazon page or the B&N page (or maybe both) for the opus.

I must admit that I was expecting a slightly larger format for Warp Your Own Way, maybe 8 1/2 x 11, or even 9 x 12. (I don't know why I was; as it is, it's a slightly larger format than the only graphic novel I have in my library, Jen Wang's The Prince and the Dressmaker.) That might be why I and a store employee both struck out trying to find it in the Marina Pacifica B&N.

(Incidentally, I bought The Prince . . . because it was featured at the Cartoon Art Museum of San Francisco; despite the title and the subject matter, it is not "a drag.")
 
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Rereading:

Captain Nemo by Kevin J. Anderson

This tale celebrates and pays homage to the work of Jules Verne. The conceit is that Verne based a lot of his stories on the exploits and adventures of his friend Andre Nemo. This allows for use of those concepts without having to keep all of the details exactly alike since the books were only "based on a true story."

Star Trek: Brinkmanship by Una McCormack

Una does character, culture, and wordcraft as well or better than any author out there, and this is on fully display in her Typhon Pact entry. I'm at the end of the third chapter, and I can just imagine the fun and satisfaction she had in showcasing Picard's finely honed diplomatic skills.

Reading:

Mars by Ben Bova

I've been fascinated by the concept of the Grand Tour series for a long time, but book length and slightly lower rating averages have kept me away until now. I like the mixture of planetary exploration with understandable human relationships and politics in Mars quite a lot, enough to want to read other works in the series. There is more focus on people's sex lives in this story than I was expecting. It's not enough to be off-putting, but it is something to be aware of when considering reading it.

Star Wars: The Rise and Fall of the Galactic Empire by Chris Kempshall

I'm reading this one or two chapters at a time because it is pretty dense material. It is well written and has obvious applicability to our own lives. Some of the sentences, even though they are sometimes very long, have been fragments. I am not sure if this is from intentional stylistic decision or if they were not caught in editing.

One of the joys in reading new Star Wars reference books is seeing how they incorporate new material, especially since so much of the older material is now in a "pick and choose" status. Some obvious stuff that is making an impact in this new book is Andor, Rebels, and the sequel trilogy.

Overall, I'm enjoying all four books in progress and excited for my future 2025 reading.
 
The conceit is that Verne based a lot of his stories on the exploits and adventures of his friend Andre Nemo.

That's bizarre, because "Captain Nemo" was a pseudonym derived from The Odyssey and meaning "Nobody," because he'd renounced his past identity. So claiming it was somebody's real surname seems like missing the point.
 
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