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SF/F Books: Chapter Two - What Are You Reading?

Still plodding my way through Corps of Engineers: Wounds, though I'm on the last story. Up next is The War of the Worlds; I'm doing a research project on it this semester, and I don't think I've read it since I was in grade school...
 
Victory Conditions. Wish there are more but VC is the last in the Vatta's War series. Kinda short. Hoping EM will write more for this setting.
 
I'm finally caught up on my Trek/Wars tie-ins for the moment, so I'm reading some books that I picked up at Phoenix Comic-Con. The first is Crystal Doors: Sky Realm. At the halfway point, it's really pretty good. I've seen most of the plot elements and character archetypes used before, but I still find it good, lighthearted fantasy.
 
Kate Wilhelm: Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang

I envy you-you get to read it for the first time. A classic tale.

Just finished The Gladiator by Turtledove. Its part of his "youth" Crosstime Traffic series. Good story but he overexplains for his "young" audience. Sad, as the thing is more original than a lot he's put out in the last few years...
 
OK, gang, I highly recommend Scott Westerfeld's Succession duology. It was supposed to be one book, but the publisher chopped it in two. The first is The Risen Empire, the second is The Killing of Worlds.

I read TRE this past summer, and just completed TKoW. Great stuff. Hard sci-fi, but good space opera. All the info on the tech is there, but not overwhelming like the Honor Harrington info-dumps. Good twist at the end.

Westerfeld gives us a take on the Borg in this series called the Rix. I won't tell you how they turn out, but they're much scarier than the Borg, and I do believe that the Rix could take the Borg without a second thought. Well, the Rix would have a second thought, and then the Borg would be spacepizza.

Agreed.

My at hand reading in SF is Baxter's Transcendent, Reynolds' Century Rain, Vance's Lurulu, Asimov's Pebble in the Sky, Bank's Inversions, Stross's Atrocity Archives.
 
OK, gang, I highly recommend Scott Westerfeld's Succession duology. It was supposed to be one book, but the publisher chopped it in two. The first is The Risen Empire, the second is The Killing of Worlds.

I read TRE this past summer, and just completed TKoW. Great stuff. Hard sci-fi, but good space opera. All the info on the tech is there, but not overwhelming like the Honor Harrington info-dumps. Good twist at the end.

Westerfeld gives us a take on the Borg in this series called the Rix. I won't tell you how they turn out, but they're much scarier than the Borg, and I do believe that the Rix could take the Borg without a second thought. Well, the Rix would have a second thought, and then the Borg would be spacepizza.
I've been looking for a new series to start, so I started on the Discworld books, but I hadn't really got in to the two I'd previously read, so I ordered a few other books yesterday in case I didn't get in to The Light Fantastic (which I'm really enjoying at the minute). The Risen Empire was one of them. Along with Loss Lord, which was recommended by someone I know. The 2 omnibuses of Simon R Green's Hawk & Fisher and the first Deathstalker book, because I've really enjoyed the Nightside books.
 
I'm back to Jeffrey Ford's Well-Built City trilogy. I read the first, The Physiognomy, a little while back, so I'm currently reading Memoranda and will probably read The Beyond right after it.

It's fantasy, probably, but it isn't generic epic fantasy at all. Much more surreal in feel.
 
Now reading Spook Country by William Gibson. Seems like pretty typical Gibson fare about halfway through.
 
God Emperor of Dune. Finally. I'm gonna make it through this time, I swear. It's been about four years since I last tried, so here goes nothing.
 
I'm about a third of the way through Empire in Black and Gold by Adrian Tchaikovsky. It's the first in the Shadows of the Apt trilogy, the other two not published as yet.

All the races seen in this novel are humans evolved from insects and such. The ones thus-far are beetles, wasps, moths, spiders, ants, flies, mantids, and so on. Each culture has a specific trait, like the mantids' warrior ethos or the beetles' mechanical aptitude.

The story centres on four students from different backgrounds who are sent by their tutor, a spymaster, to investigate the wasp-empire (in black and gold) which is taking over the world. So far it is extremely well done and a totally different type of fantasy to what I have read in the past.

I would recommend it to anyone, and I haven't even finished it yet.

On another note, I recommend The Magician's Apprentice by Trudi Canavan, the prequel novel to her excellent Black Magicians' Trilogy. I'll be reading that one soon.
 
Y the Last Man Book 5 (the trade). I bought the first one a month ago and was hooked. It may seem like a juvenelle idea, Yorick being the last man alive on a planet of women, but it seems very thought out. Brian Vaughan really did his research on how many women worked in each field. For example, the vast majority of commercial pilots are men so when the plague hit practically all of them crashed. Also in 2002 there was only one military in the world that had female combat soldiers. I highly recommend them, although I imagine most on this board has either read them or is at least aware of them.
 
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