• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

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

I'm reading Ellen Kushner's Riverside books. I started by rereading Swordspoint, which I first read about twenty years ago, and now I'm almost done The Fall of the Kings (published about six years ago and co-written by Delia Sherman) and then I'll read The Privilege of the Sword (published in 2007).

Swordspoint is fantasy with the only fantasy element being that the world in which it is set doesn't exist. The main characters are a swordsman and his lover, who is not quite what he seems. There's political intrigue, action, witty dialogue, mysteries to be resolved, and a bit of, shall we say, adult content, primarily of the gay male variety.

The Fall of the Kings, set a generation or two later, has somewhat more of a fantasy feel. An academic researching the days before the nobles overthrew the monarchy and wiped out the kings' wizards finds himself and his lover, a young aristocrat, taking on the seemingly mythic roles of the wizard and the true king. Again, loads of action, great characters, great setting, great dialogue.

The third book features a young woman as a central character, which should make for a nice change of pace. There are strong woman characters in the first two books but for the most part men are the main characters. I'm having enough fun reading these that I may have to get a copy of the 2003 edition of Swordspoint, which adds a few short stories set in the same world (they aren't in the old Tor edition I have).

Well worth reading for people for something both sophisticated and fun, and for people tired of the same old same old in fantasy. Swordspoint has been described as a cross between Alexandre Dumas and Georgette Heyer. That's not a bad comparison.
 
I'm not, I read it a while back. I just brought it up because I felt it was one of his best non-SF efforts.
 
Made it to book six in the Honor Harrington series. I enjoy military science fiction, as well as military stories in general. Unfortunately, David Webber makes the mistakes that most military fiction writers, no matter the genre, make. Shallow characterization and character developement, though coupled with rich technology and tactics.

I'm a bit spoiled and demand both in my military stories. But that makes it easier to sift through them, as the writers who write military subjects, yet provide the charactaerization are relatively few.

Started Jack Campbells "Lost Fleet" series, and that one is at least starting out promising.

Big fan of the Starfist series as well...
 
Right now, I'm reading Greg Benford's "Artifact" and waiting to see how it's going to turn into SF.

Next up is Dean Koontz's "Darkest Evening Of The Year" for a pro review
 
Just finished Ring of Fire II ed. Eric Flint. A mix of good and so-so stories in the 1632 universe. I am currently reading the Grantville Gazette(s) online at a free site I found. PM me if you want the url. Next up is the Turtledove book that just came out unless another Mirror Universe book hits the stores b4 I get there.

Starbreaker-try MacLeod's novels-excellent read.

am also reading Interstellar Patrol by C. Anvil: its a light collection of stories in a shared universe that Eric Flint re-published. The stories date back decades and were lost for a while from the public eye but Flint got them together in one volume and got them back out there. If anyone is interested its available at Baen's Bar free library. :bolian:
 
Read TNG Death In Winter, then EE Smith's Triplanetary when the possibility of a Lensman movie came out.

Enjoyed both, for different reasons.

Now reading Fatherland by Robert Harris.
 
Ruaidhri said:
Now reading Fatherland by Robert Harris.
I remember seeing the first half of the movie ages ago (don't really remember details); I didn't know it had been a book. I just placed a hold on it from my local library.

I've also decided to skip John le Carre for the moment and move straight into Homer's Odyssey.
 
Finished The Naming of the Dead by Ian Rankin.

Though I enjoyed them, Rankin's last few stories were somewhat stale, but I enjoyed this one immensely. I'd score it a 9.

No idea what's on deck, I'm off to bed.
 
I've just finished Academ's Fury, and started Cursor's Fury. I'm really enjoying the Codex Alera series.
And I'm about 5 chapters in to Star Trek: SCE: Have Tech, Will Travel.
 
Fatherland featured Rutger Hauer in a 60's Germany that had hidden the Final Solution. Good made-for-tv translation.
 
I got Simon Green's latest Nightside book right after Christmas in 2007, although the copyright said 2008. I've been reading it slowly to make it last awhile so that I don't have too long to wait until April and the next Dresden Files book.
 
Mistral said:
Fatherland featured Rutger Hauer in a 60's Germany that had hidden the Final Solution. Good made-for-tv translation.

Wonder if it's available on DVD somewhere; might be interesting to see after finishing the book.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top