Having finished the Q Continuum trilogy, now on Gaiman's American Gods - still my favourite of his
I'm reading Startrek Collision course by Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens and Debt of Bones by Terry Goodkind.
Two, I found both the sailing jargon and the battle/firearms jargon to be beyond my comprehension, and therefore a real slog to read through as the story wore on and it took up more and more of the narrative.
I just finished Stephen King's 11/22/63. I picked it up from the library on Tuesday afternoon, began reading it yesterday morning, and that's how I've been spending my free time since then. I don't read a lot of King (horror isn't a genre that attracts me), but this -- utterly captivating. I have a perverse attachment to the 50s/60s (was raised on that music and television from the era), so the sheer amount of immersive detail King threw in would have thrilled me, even if the storytelling wasn't so compelling. There's a subtle shade of horror and anticipation throughout the book, and the ending...
Suffice it to say, I think it tops my list of King books. I wonder if Christopher has read it, given the time-travel angle.
Section 31: Abyss by Jeffrey Lang and David Weddle
I'm enjoying it so far. Bashir was one of my favorite characters on DS9, so it's nice to have a book that focuses primarily on him.I quite enjoyed that book when I read it. Also have always liked Bashir and Ezri together.Section 31: Abyss by Jeffrey Lang and David Weddle
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