Ubik by Philip K. Dick - definitely lived up to its reputation as one of PKD's greatest novels.
As someone who's reading the book right now, I can confirm that it is indeed a great read.finally got the audiobook: First Lords Fury, Jim Butcher - Alera book 06
should be a great... read... errr... listen...
I do remember him briefly mentioning an idea for a sci-fi series about some sort of law enforcement agent or whatever. I think I'd like to see that before anything else, see how Butcher handles sci-fi after two great fantasy series.
I'm reading the latest Dozois sci-fi short fiction anthology. There are good years and bad years, and so far this year isn't so hot. But I'm only about a third of the way through it, so it could always pick up.
I'm also re-reading John Gardner's Grendel, and I am once again stupefied by how good it is.
I'm also finally reading Turtledove's The Great War series. I expected to get the next one in the series for Christmas, but my wife managed to buy the wrong book - she skipped one. I actually read about 40 pages before saying to myself, "I think I missed some of the story here." There are so many in the various interlocking series, though, it's an understandable mistake.
With regard to The Man in the High Castle, I don't really judge it by the standards I usually apply to alternate history. I like alternate history that either amuses me with its cleverness or its protagonist's coolness [e.g. Lest Darkness Fall or the Belisarius books] or with its little details [e.g. the Nantucket books] but that's not really what TMITHC is about. In fact, it's not really alternate history per se, but kind of a hallucogenic meditation on whether there's such a thing as history at all. In kind of the same way that Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep isn't really about robots, The Man in the High Castle is not really about alternate history.
I'm also finally reading Turtledove's The Great War series. I expected to get the next one in the series for Christmas, but my wife managed to buy the wrong book - she skipped one. I actually read about 40 pages before saying to myself, "I think I missed some of the story here." There are so many in the various interlocking series, though, it's an understandable mistake.
I need to read Walk in Hell. So I've basically just started.
I think the problem is that I said I needed "the third one" and so my wife got me Breakthroughs. Because the series, for some absurd reason, does not have How Few Remain listed as the first book.
Seriously, Harry! How Few Remain is Great War #1. Stop confusing readers and their poor non-genre-reading spouses!
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