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What are you reading?

I am listening to The Absolutely True diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie, narrated by Sherman Alexie.

My current dead-tree book is Amarcord by Zoran Zivkovic. It is a collection of short stories with the common theme of memory. Previous short story collections by Zivkovic I have read had different themes (mist, books, music, time) ,
 
The Laundry Files seems familiar. If it's a Tor series, I probably read a short story from it when it was the freebie of the week. As I recall, it was somewhat scary with a dash of weird sexual stuff. And unicorns.

No, that's something different - but I think I want to read that! :D (Charlie is published by Ace.)

I finished In the Presence of Mine Enemies last night. While it was well-written, and an interesting take on a possible alternate history, I found the plot utterly predictable. I enjoyed it, but I don't know that I'll reread it any time in the next ten years (whereas I think I've reread every other Turtledove novel that I own, that I've already read, at least once or twice).
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That's the "Nazi Germany won, and then collapsed like Soviet Russia" novel, right? Turtledove does love his historic parallels.

That pretty well sums it up - and while I couldn't put my finger on it earlier, the parallel to the Soviet Union's collapse may be exactly what made it so predictable for me.

They're way down the reading list, of course, but I picked up a couple more books yesterday (like I needed any more, but as I said to the clerk who was helping me look up publication dates, "I was in the mall for other reasons, but this bookstore is here, so I'm here"): The Fractal Prince by Hannu Ranajmiemi - I read his debut novel, The Quantum Thief, last year - and Off to Be the Wizard by Scott Meyer. I'd never heard of the book, or him, before, but when I read the back cover blurb:

A regular guy travels back in time to King Arthur's court after hacking reality... what could possibly go wrong?

I thought, I have to read this.
 
^^ Yeah, I can't stop buying books, either. I was at B&N, looking for something for my Mother, when The Doctor and the Dinosaurs caught my eye. It looks great in and of itself, but I mainly got it because I'm afraid it may be too similar to something I'm writing. :rommie:
 
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt. This'll be book #36 for 2014, which has to be some sort of record for me.

I had my kindle down to only 6 unread books before going on another book-buying spree. It's up to 3 pages again. I think I'm also annoying my emergency!roomate by responding to everything he says with 'I just read a book about ___' and then telling him all about it.
 
Having just finished The White War, concerning the Italian front of WW1, I'm debating my next read. That book was excellent if mildly depressing (seriously. twelve battles for the same river?), so I want something uplifting. I'm considering my favorite author, Isaac Asimov's, book on The Universe. Last published in 1980, my fear is that it is badly dated by this point. History doesn't change much, but science marches on at the quick-step.
 
Just finished Star Trek Titan: Taking Wing.

And in the car, I'm on the last cd of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.
 
Last week, I read Elizabeth Warren's A Fighting Chance, then started on JFK in the Senate: Pathway to the Presidency. I finished that one last night, which apparently is the first book to focus on JFK's senatorial career.

I'll start reading Glenn Greenwald's No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA, and the U.S. Surveillance State sometime in the next few days.
 
I've finished The Martian - would love a sequel/companion book about a real colonization attempt, or maybe I'll just write fanfic :lol: - I enjoyed it so much I miss the characters now that I'm done with it.

Having mastered feeding the kid with one hand while reading on my phone with the other, I'm now into the second book of Wool (had read the first previously, but re-read it quickly the last two days to refresh my memory). The yarncrafter in me loves that each book title has something to do with yarn. And generally I love a good dystopia, so I'm looking forward to making my way through the whole thing.

Next in the queue is Season of the Harvest, and then I may go back through this thread and see what else has been recommended that I want to read.
 
Just finished A Long Line of Dead Men by Lawrence Block which was surprisingly excellent and I'm now reading This Town Will Never Let Us Go by Lawrence Miles.
 
Believe it or not, I picked up my copy of Voyager: The Eternal Tide and read some this morning. I've had it since it came out, read about half, and set it down. I sat and read three or four chapters.
 
Just finished Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn (not so keen on the ending) and on to Uncle Tungsten: Memories of a Chemical Boyhood by Oliver Sacks
 
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