Spyke
lemmy.world

I'm finally getting into both discworld and culture. I've read a number of other discworld books before, two of the night watch, mort, I think another I don't recall right now. Now I'm reading The Colour or Magic. It's enjoyable but I'm finding I'm going a little slower on it than the others.

I also have the second culture book, Player of Games, ready to go when I finish the discworld book. I really liked how bonkers Consider Phlebas was (felt like a constant stream of chaos for the crew).

30
lemmy.world

The first two Discworld books are VERY different from the rest of the series. There is definitely stuff to enjoy there, but Pratchett had not yet found his voice. I'm in my second read through of the series, and it is interesting to see the concepts mature over time. Granny Weatherwax in Equal Rites is almost a different character than Granny Weatherwax in Maskerade.

20
SinTacksreply
programming.dev

I’m reading Lords and Ladies now. I couldn’t get into them years ago but after reading the Tiffany aching series I’m much more attached to the witches and really enjoying going through. Especially with the recently rerecorded audiobooks which are so very good.

8
lemmy.world

One of my favorites! Yeah, I almost bounced off discworld the first time, but I'm glad I stuck with it. I'll probably use the audiobooks for my next read through! Either that or physical books. My wife just gave birth, so physical books will let me read them to my son.

4

Congrats! Doing character voices when reading to my kids is still a cherished memory for me

3
Nebulizerreply
lemmy.world

I had heard that colour of magic was hard to start with, which is why I went with guards guards and mort. I just love the characterization of ankh morpork. I've been mixing other books in-between so I don't burn out on Pratchett's writing style, and it's been good.

4
lemmy.world

I've never read any Pratchett, and I just picked up Small Gods on a friend's recommendation. I'm really enjoying it!

13

It's one of my favourites and is the one I've reread the most.

8

My first was Jingo. Picked it up at Value Village to read the first few sentences and could not put it down. Now I've been through the series several times and will surely start over again soon.

3
lemmy.world

I have 60 pages left of The Wheel of Time series, and what a ride it's been. Just incredible!

Already looking for a series to fill the massive impending void. Was thinking of maybe Mazalan or Law Trilogy. Any advice or other suggestions, anyone?

18
undercrustreply
lemmy.ca

Oh man, what a ride indeed. That series really is epic! And just in time for Season 2 of WoT to drop on Amazon!

If you liked that series, and in particular the last 2-3 books, then I'd recommend working your way through Brandon Sanderson's Cosmere, and the Stormlight Archive series in particular. Not classic sci-fi (although I'd argue it still fits on some levels), but an excellent fit after reading Robert Jordan.

12
lemmy.world

I loved the series! And was pleasantly surprised how seamless the transition was between Jordan and Sanderson. In fact, I think I liked Sanderson's writing just a tiny bit more, so was thinking of maybe trying some of his proper stuff next. So thanks for the suggestions!

3
undercrustreply
lemmy.ca

Amazing! Sanderson writes an incredibly inter-woven series of stories that are largely independent of one another, but do intersect in different ways, and the deeper we get into his worlds, the more the overlapping elements of his universe start to come into the narrative.

The Cosmere is big and complex, and I just finished re-reading the whole thing in a suggested order that helps build up the Cosmere in a way that's a bit friendlier to a new reader. Each series takes place on different planets in their universe, and in the case of the Mistborn series, in two different eras separated by a few hundred years.

Here's how I read it:

PHASE ONE (largely independent)

Scadrial

  • Mistborn (The Final Empire): Mistborn Era 1-1
  • The Well Of Ascension: Mistborn Era 1-2
  • The Hero Of Ages: Mistborn Era 1-3
  • The Eleventh Metal (Novella in Arcanum Unbounded)

Sel

  • Elantris
  • The Hope of Elantris (Novella in Arcanum Unbounded)
  • The Emperor's Soul (Novella in Arcanum Unbounded)

Nalthis

  • Warbreaker

Taldain

  • White Sand (either the original 3-part graphic novel or the new prose version)

Threnody

  • Shadows for Silence in the Forests of Hell (Novella in Arcanum Unbounded)

First of the Sun

  • Sixth of the Dust (Novella in Arcanum Unbounded)

PHASE TWO (starting to weave in Cosmere references more heavily)

Scadrial

  • The Alloy Of Law: Mistborn Era 2-1
  • Allomancer Jak (Novella in Arcanum Unbounded)
  • Shadows Of Self: Mistborn Era 2-2
  • The Bands Of Mourning: Mistborn Era 2-3
  • Mistborn: Secret History (Novella in Arcanum Unbounded)

Roshar

  • The Way Of Kings: Stormlight Archive 1
  • Words Of Radiance: Stormlight Archive 2
  • Edgedancer (Novella in Arcanum Unbounded)
  • Oathbringer: Stormlight Archive 3
  • Dawnshard (Novella)
  • Rhythm Of War: Stormlight Archive 4

Scadrial (again!)

  • The Lost Metal (this one makes much more sense after Roshar)

There's also a few shorts Brandon wrote as a secret project during the pandemic that are starting to be released now:

Lumar

  • Tress Of The Emerald Sea

Komashi

  • Yuri and the Nightmare Painter

???

  • Kickstarter Secret Project #3 in October 2023
3

Wow! Thank you so much for taking the time to put this together! Very much appreciated 🙏

1
jballsreply
sh.itjust.works

I'd say go with the Stormlight Archive or the Mistborn series next. Both are long enough to fill that void.

5
DAVENP0RTreply
lemmy.world

I always suggest starting with Mistborn Era 1 and then moving to Stormlight Archive. It's more of a slow burn introduction to the Cosmere.

3
lemmy.world

Appreciate the recommendation! Quick question- Is Mistborn and Stormlight Archive all interconnected? Or in the same universe?

1

They're in the same universe and there are some Easter eggs you'll notice if you read both, but the stories themselves are standalone. You can read either without ever knowing about the other and you wouldn't miss anything.

2
lemmy.world

I just finished re-reading the entire Expanse series and fell back on an old friend, Harry Dresden. Going to put that Weir book on my list though. I really enjoyed The Martian so I’d like to explore more of his work.

18

Highly recommend listening to the Project Hail Mary audiobook rather than reading it. It adds an extra dimension to the story that you miss out on otherwise.

7

If you like Dresden I would recommend the Alex Verus series by Benedict Jacka.

2
startrek.website

Snowcrash: pleasantly surprised by the quality of the world building, which I love.

16

Had the same feeling reading Snow Crash directly after Zodiac. Found that I need to read sth different between his books to be able to switch tracks in his world building.

Admittedly, Diamond Age is less fast paced than Snow Crash, with more parallel development and longer threads, which makes it difficult to keep track. But I love it.

1
Pulptasticreply
midwest.social

I have enjoyed all of his works. The Baroque Cycle took me a few tries to get into before I stuck it out; great read but man is it long and dry at times. Anathem was challenging because of the new lexicon he introduced.

My favorites are snowcrash, seveneves, termination shock, and cryptonomicon in roughly that order.

1
Snowydayreply
startrek.website

It’s amazing how many things he’s predicted (or noticed and predicted would become mainstream) over the years.

Bitcoin, metaverse, the importance of cryptography in modern IT, monetized streaming video, …

3

Seriously though. They fucking called it, unironically, the metaverse. That's a coined ass phrase. Distopian from the beginning. Weird choice on Meta's part haha.

3

I've been blasting through Broken Earth series by N. K. Jemisin, already on The Stone Sky. So good and captivating. Also reading 'The Yiddish Policeman's Union' by Michael Chabon

12
lemmy.world

Started reading Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler. I really like the style of writing, so much detail into the main character's mind.

It is also impressive just how relevant the topics are today, for a book written back in 1993 (climate change, wealth disparity, etc.). It's really fascinating (scary?) to see what the author thought the U.S. would look like in 2024 and onwards.

11
s20
lemmy.ml
  • Zoe Punches the Future in the Dick and If This Book Exists, You're in the Wrong Universe by Jason Pargin
  • The Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells
11
Izzyreply
lemmy.world

I read the first 4 Murderbot Diaries a long time ago and the other day I learned there are at least 4 more. 🤖☠️

9
s20reply
lemmy.ml

I adore the Murderbot Diaries. It's weird how something so violent can be so, I dunno, calming.

8
kbin.social

I binged as much Murderbot as I could about two years ago. Super fun reads. Plus I think the loosely connected novella format is interesting and makes them all that much bingier.

5

I did the same recently and agree 100%. They're just such charming stories. Sometimes I want my hard scifi but others I want a good story that gives me the thrill of not being able to put a book down.

4
kbin.social

I did Project Hail Mary two books back, so I won't revisit that for a while. I HIGHLY recommend the audiobook though; I honestly can't see how it could hold up in text form, it feels like it was made to be an audiobook.

I'm currently on the Bobiverse books (#1) by Dennis E Taylor.

11
jballsreply
sh.itjust.works

I was so curious about how that book could work NOT as an audiobook so I snagged a copy from my library to check it out. SPOILERS: >!Rocky's speech is depicted as musical notes. Not nearly as impactful as the audiobook.!<

2
jballsreply
sh.itjust.works

Yes! The more complex the speech, the more complex the music. It's really cool.

3
lemmy.world

I read this book decades ago when I was a teenager, and it had a huge impact (no pun intended) on me. It’s one of the first novels I can remember that made me sob when it was over. I need to read it again.

This led me to Stranger in a Strange Land which was just wild and gave me a view into relationships that I wasn’t expecting.

4

I haven’t read The Moon is a harsh Mistress yet, but Stranger in a strange Land is amazing.

3
0xb
lemmy.world

Just finished Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel.

It's good, but I found it to be unmoving. I can see that whatever is written is well written but it didn't made me feel anything. I didn't find it funny, emotional, surprising, annoying. At no point I was tempted to stop reading it nor I was anxious to continue. For me it's a really solid 7/10. Maybe I'm in the minority on that and maybe it's because it's not the kind of book that I would usually read.

On what's next I have been wanting to read the Three Body Problem but I'm curious about the translation. I've read books in english that were originally written in my native spanish and there's definitely a certain feel to them. It will be the first book originally in Chinese that I read, so I wonder about the translation, and if it would be better to get an English translation or a Spanish translation.

10
Izzyreply
lemmy.world

The translator of Three Body Problem Ken Liu is a native Chinese speaker with exceptional English language skills. I don't believe there are any issues with the translation work itself, but there are some oddities of intentionally reworked plots in the English release due to the book "Ball Lightning" not having been released for the English market yet so the references would not have made sense. I find this to be a poor decision, but you can always read Ball Lightning and about what that subplot was intended to be afterward. The Spanish version would likely have the same issue.

8

Thanks, you give me something to check out with that thing about the changes to the plot.

1

I found The Sea of Tranquility a bit dry but whimsical nonetheless.

In a genre overburdened by books with two dimensional characters and core dumps of exposition, it was an interesting puzzle but it also isn’t making me want to reread it either. 7.5 or 8.

2
lemmy.nz

I recently finished Alastair Reynolds' House of Suns, which I enjoyed. It's actually the first of his books I've read. I'm looking forward to reading more of his books.

Currently I'm reading Neuromancer for the first time.

9
Che Bananareply
lemmy.ml

In the middle of Absolution Gap. I really enjoyed his one off books (pushing ice, century rain, terminal world and his colaboration with Baxter on Medusa Chronicles) however i finished the "last" book of the Revelation Space series and was very, very underwhelmed.

3
lemmy.nz

What’s your favourite standalone book from him? I’m not wanting to start any series at the moment.

2
Che Bananareply
lemmy.ml

as a stand alone The Prefect, it is set in the Revelation Space Glitter Band era, and is a good introduction to it but absolutely apart from the R.space books. He has written a second book and since changed the name, but I have the sneaking suspicion he wrote the Prefect with the intention of it being stand alone and since has shoehorned in a second and is writing a third book. I would also recommend his short story collections: diamond dogs turquoise days, and galactic north.

2
lemm.ee

Right now I'm reading Leviathan Wakes and I cannot put it down. It's such a good book!

At work I'm listening to The Digital Plague and it's pretty darn good. Book 2 of the Avery Cates series which is in the dark, gritty cyberpunk genre with a good amount of dark humor.

Both are really good books!

9
lemmy.sdf.org

I am reading Leviathan Falls now. The entire series is great. I haven't wanted to put any of them down.

5

I'm nearing the second go through of Leviathan Wakes, knowing where the series ends, it's great to revisit it.

3
lemmy.world

Just finished Leviathan Wakes. At first I looked at the length of the book and thought no way am I going to get through it. But then it caught on and I really enjoyed the ride. Although I did feel a bit tired after I finished it.

1
eldoomreply
lemm.ee

I thought the same when I got it. I ordered it online and when it arrived I was kinda surprised.. But I've gotten through a little bit more than 3/4 of it in about a week so I guess I like it lol!

2

Yeah, very addictive. And you can guess why, with all those chapters ending on a cliffhanger.

2

It's so good. I know it's not everyone's cup of tea but I love how the story is told based on observations rather than exposition through dialogues. I don't always need to relate to characters and their lives, sometime I just want to know about the weird gravity or atmosphere and stuff. For the longest time people said it could not be made into a movie, but Denis Villeneuve stepped up to the plate and I cannot wait to see what he does with it.

2

Just finished reading NK Jemisin's We Became a City and it's sequel and they were so good I immediately started the Fifth Season by her as well. Highly recommended!

8

Three fifth season is really good! I felt the second book was a little “less”, but it sets up the third book really well.

1

Looks like a good read to get me in the mood for the Starfield game that is coming out soon.

2
midwest.social

I’m listening to the expanse series while I work on my basement. I’ve already read the entire series, but it’s so good I’m happy to listen again. On cibola burn now!

I also read Semiosis by sue Burke recently, it was a fun pulpy series (two books total I think)

7
jballsreply
sh.itjust.works

Have you tried the new Expanse videogame by Telltale? I played the first episode but haven't gotten further into it. Not having read the books, I feel like I'm probably missing out on a lot.

1
programming.dev

So many people reading such impressive books and here I am reading Skullduggery Pleasant - a series about a skeleton detective who throws fireballs. It's not high art, but it's fun!

7

There is a fair bit of quality that can go into making a GOOD purely fun thing, and even when it's pure schlock there's no shame in that. Some times you want a steak, sometimes you want a burger. Both can be good or bad in their own ways, and neither is better than the other.

2
lemmy.world

Ready Player Two. About a quarter through it and so far I have little hope it'll get any better than it's reputation, even though I'm a massive VR nerd.

6
feddit.it

How's ready player one? I'm curious, but I wonder if it's a good book or not.

4

Ready Player One is a very good beach book, and especially so if you're a child of the 80s. Fun read, nothing groundbreaking, tons and tons of trivia and nostalgia.

6
s20reply

It's bad, but in a kinda fun way? I've read it once, and then I listened to the audio book version read by Will Wheaton. I can recommend the audio book as a kinda dumb, fun thing to listen to while doing house work.

I dunno. Guilty pleasure, I guess?

5
MajorHavocreply
lemmy.world

It's a fun light read.

There's a lot of nostalgia, and a lot of hints at fun things about the 80s that the reader could have missed. It's Captain America's little culture notebook, but mostly for the 80s, and in light novel form.

1

Welp, since I wasn't alive in the 80s and a lot of the media I consume has been influenced by it, could be an interesting read! Event though a lot of things will probably fly over my head.

2

The second book was rough. I really had to make myself finish it.

3
lemm.ee

Midnight Tides. I definitely finished it once, but it's all hazy.

I will finish the Malazan series this time, and I super hope Tehol/Bugg stick around.

6

I enjoyed Malazan Book of the Fallen so much, but at a certain point I gave up on trying to figure out which confusing plot elements were due to me forgetting an earlier reference and which were intended to be a mystery and tried to enjoy the story for what was in front of me. Re-reading the series cleared up a lot of my questions but not all of them by any means. It's an enormous story! I think I might hit this series up again after the book I'm reading now.

2

I'm going through Reaper's Gale. MT is up there in quality for me!

It's a shame the malazan sub didn't move to lemmy, it's the only sub I really miss from there.

2
lemmy.ca

Re-reading a bunch of Discworld. Really need to read Project Hail Mary, only heard good things about it

6

I absolutely loved The Martian, but I had a hard time getting through Hail Mary. It was a great concept, and engaging science fiction, except most of the characters, including the main one, are completely insufferable. No conversation is believable or even interesting. Just juvenile stuff. Almost put it down 3/4 of the way through because I felt like I couldn't take it any longer. I'm glad that I made it through, but it was really tough, and I'm not gonna read it ever again.

Not trying to discourage you from reading it, just hoping to lower your expectations a bit so that you're pleasantly surprised when it's not the trash fire I'm making it out to be. I hope you enjoy it more than I did!

1
lemmy.world

Exclusively Terry Pratchett. I've been reading (again for the most part) all the discworld books and finaly hit the ones i never read.

6

I don't even know you but I am stoked for you! I discovered Discworld a few years back as an adult and have been through the series several times since. It's my go-to when I need a diversion and don't have a new book or series that I'm excited for. The series is just amazing.

3

Hyperion is so good, I remember reading (cantos) it with rather high expectations and it consistently exceeded them. Not perfect, but very nice, especially world building.

6
literature.cafe

I really want to read Children of Time, but I am forcing myself to finish reading the Dune series I just bought lol.

6
moriquendereply
lemmy.world

Dune is a really interesting story and universe, but I had such a hard time actually reading the books. I can't keep up with the amount of personal introspection it contains. I would have needed like an abridged version that focused more on getting the story moving.

5

I love the hyper specialization in the Dune universe (especially the face dancers), but there is waaaaay too much whining and navel gazing.

3

I guess that's what the movie is lol, I'm excited for part 2 coming out this year.

2

Love Scalzi but wish he could vary his voice more. I find I have to spread out reading his books as the snark will all blur after a while.

1
lemmy.world

I really need to read the Expanse series! I loved the show, and I've heard the books are significantly better.

If you're gonna check out Gibson's Neuromancer, maybe check out Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash. Both are foundational cyberpunk.

Edit: Also, Project Hail Mary is one of my favorite novels. Can't gush enough about that one. Reminded me a lot of Greg Bear's Eon.

6
Eq0reply
literature.cafe

I enjoyed Neuromancer much better than Snowcrash, I have to say. I’m particularly blown away by how much it still holds up! It could have been written yesterday. While I felt Snowcrash aged more, mostly for the style.

1
lemmy.world

Yeah, some elements of Snow Crash have definitely not aged well. The pervy sex scenes with the underaged girl have definitely outlived their welcome. Stephenson has certainly come a long way as a writer since he wrote this.

3
lemmy.world

I wouldn't say that the Expanse books are "significantly better" than the show - they're both fantastic, and both have bits where they're better than the others (for example, the books have more characters and storylines, plus the arc of the last three books, while the show is amazingly well adapted and in many ways is a second revision of the overall story).

I'm still holding out hope for seasons 7-9 happening at some point in ~5 years. Assuming it's adapted at the same level as the prior seasons, seeing the final trilogy on screen will be epic!

1

I just picked up reading again recently, so I have compiled a huge list of books to read. I watched the expanse, so probably want to get through my list before I think about reading the book series. Maybe the others seasons will be renewed by then.

1

Aside from Project Hail Mary I am reading a couple other things. One of them for another book club I am in. I am listening to The Employees by Olga Ravn which I swear feels like being subjected to 2 hours of Rorschach tests asking you how some sequence of words makes you feel. I don't think I enjoy it very much as there is no fictional science or details about anything going on. The other is Diaspora by Greg Egan which I am enjoying greatly as it is nothing but technical details. Hopefully I don't end up being in the middle of too many books to actually finish any of them in a timely manner.

6

Finally getting around to reading Neuromancer. While I find some of the dialogue a little confusing I’m really enjoying its themes and the plot has me hooked. I can see why this book was so influential; it’s a little uncanny how many things Gibson predicted in this work.

6
batmaniamreply
lemmy.world

I'm just copy pasting from above because I liked this book and am trying to bait a conversation lol. It was a fun one.

I just finished! I liked it a lot to, although I give it a solid B. Humor was great, there were some really nifty concepts, I just don’t think it was a slam dunk. I think the author will do some really great stuff in the future though. It’s a perfect vacation read: Plot is pretty linear for the most part, it’s not terribly long, and it keeps a solid pace.

I’m going to compare it to a not so great book, but because of the elements about that book I liked: “NeXt” by Chriton. I’m in the biochemistry field, and “NeXt” is really interesting as a capture of where the public (and a lot of professionals) thought the field was going. The human genome project was well underway, everything seemed possible. “Lumpsucker” shoots into the future a bit (“Next” is 100% contemporary), but really captures a ton over the last 5 years that simmers in public consciousness the way Next did. It’s not like the topics both discuss don’t get plenty of headlines, but they both do a cool job capturing a general “vibe” around the topics as opposed to just facts. I found it really cathartic to read, actually.

So all in all, to anyone else, I’d give it a strong recommend. It wont go down as an all time classic but the author put together something beyond competent, and really added some spice here and there capturing something special.

1

I'm halfway through and despite the story evolving quite slowly I really enjoy reading it.

1

I've been cleasing my palate after 3 clarkes and 6 the expanse (plus shorts). Just finished Um Defeito de Cor, by Ana M. Golçalves, a semi-mult generation saga about a slave in Brazil. Very, very good, but I don't know if it has any translation. This has 1k pages, so I'm reading Piranesi, by Susanna Clarke, just to read something thin. It's... good. Strange.

I have Flash Foward, Expanse #7-9, Culture #1 and Red Mars on the queue =)

6

I went to pick up neuromancer, but someone kidnapped me and put a bomb in my head, and now I have to rob a bank

5

project Hail Mary was fantastic. I just finished "The Postman" by David Brin and "Dark Angel" by John Sandford. I really enjoyed "Powersat" and its sequals by David Brin too.

Edit: i also recently read "Radicalized" by Cory Doctorow because it contained the novella "unauthorized Bread"

5

I just finished Radicalized too! Just started Walkaway by the same author, might be enjoying it even more. Doctorow and Kim Stanley Robinson are probably my favorite authors this year, I can't stop reading them.

1
lemmy.world

I tried dungeon crawler carl because I saw it recommended so much. This has been the most fun series I've read in a long time. I'm up to book 6 which just came out. I'm listening to the audiobooks and the narrator is excellent. I originally thought there had to be multiple narrators, but nope. The premise sounds silly, and it is, but the execution is excellent and is great fun.

5

Same here! Just started the 4th audio book. The narrator and production quality is outstanding.

2

I started Wool because I was digging the show Silo, but honestly found it pretty flat. The characters and story telling are super dry, and the show does a much better job of it imo, which is rare.

5
kbin.social

Getting rid of Twitter and Reddit has been productive. I read the Expanse (and the novella collection) as well as Project Hail Mary, and the first book of the Three Body Problem.

5

Nice, hopefully Lemmy doesn't take too much of your time. At least you will only get exactly what you search for.

1

Just finished "The Gone World" by Tom Sweterlitsch.

A mix of SciFi, detective and coslic horror. Pretty good, I really liked the ending.

4

Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson, will probably pick up Ghost from the Grand Banks by Clarke soon.

4

I'm reading Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin on recommendation by a colleague, Feet of Clay by Terry Pratchett in my second run through of the Discworld series, and Death Troopers by Joe Schreiber, since I never got around to that one when I was DEEP into Star Wars books.

4

Hyperion is so good, I'm rereading it right now. Second time through the series.

4

Back when I had free time I was reading through the Dune series, currently about halfway into God Emporer of Dune.

4
feddit.uk

Currently reading Nemesis Games, part of The Expanse series by James S. A. Corey

4

Strange Highways by Dean Koontz, not exactly typical sci-fi but there are stories in the collection about time travel, aliens that take over human hosts like Body Snatchers, and genetically engineered super-intelligent rats that want to kill humanity. Koontz began his early career as a sci-fi writer and didn't find much success, until he steered into the horror genre later. It shines through fairly often in some of his stories, when the aliens or science experiment monsters show up.

3
lemmy.world

I'm working my way through "Way of Kings" right now. I haven't had much time for reading lately, so it's going slow, but the book is fantastic.

3

Love the Stormlight Archive! The audiobooks are great and a new one is coming later next year.

The Mistborn series is also fantastic. The first trilogy is fantasy, but the Wax and Wayne series shows developing tech throughout, giving the books a fantasy steampunk feel.

I also just listened to Alcatraz vs the Evil Librarians and it was silly fun, looking forward to the rest if the series.

Love me some Brandon Sanderson!

2

Way of Kings was amazing, but Words of Radiance is even better. I wish I had more free time because I'd love to read these all again.

2

Just finished Lightbringer by Pierce Brown. Red Rising series is a must!

Currently reading Codex Alera 5 and loving every minute of it

3
lemmy.world

Just finished House of leaves, great book but really uncomventional

3
batmaniamreply
lemmy.world

I've got that sitting on my shelf! Have been only able to do audiobooks for a few weeks and know that's one you want to read read. Glad to see another endorsement.

2
PaRappareply
sopuli.xyz

Highly recommend, I think audio books get a bit of grief, but it's a really convenient way to engage with text you may not have before.

House of Leaves has several concurrent narratives tracking through it and it's a novel that benefits from a physical edition because you can tease the threads in the order you like.

2

Oh I've got no shame in audio books. I have a lot of drive time depending on where work takes me, and it's been amazing. Still love turning the trees over, but I don't want that to stop me from all the good stuff out there. But I just know house of leaves does some cool stuff physically.

1

Right now I’m reading the entire Dark Space series. All 6 books in collection available on Amazon kindle. I don’t recall if they have physical copies for purchase or not, but it is an attention grabbing series with a great storyline. This is not hardcore sci-if with a bunch of science and mathematics probablilities

3

I'm about to start Leviathan Falls (final novel in The Expanse). Every bit of it has been phenomenal, and I can't imagine the last book will be any different.

3

I am currently reading A House With Good Bones by T. Kingfisher. I love her other work so I am excited to read this and the first few chapters read easily for me which is nice.

On a more SciFi note I just finished Artifact Space by Miles Cameron and it was decent. The protagonist is kinda annoying with the "I'm an idiot" thing but is pretty much good at everything they do. The author also goes into a lot of details on stuff that doesn't feel important to the story so it kinda felt like a slog to get through some of the earlier parts.

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I'm working my way through Glynn Stewart's "Duchy of Terra' series, and Edgar Rice Burroughs "John Carter of Mars".

Both are a little bit on the light and adventure-y side, which is my speed right now.

Next up is revisiting Nathan Lowell's "Tales from the Golden Age of the Solar Clipper", which is kind of my happy place.

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lemmy.world

Been listening to The Wise Man's Fear (Kingkiller Chronicles bk 2) by Patrick Rothfuss, and reading The Colour of Magic (Discworld) by Sir Terry Pratchett.

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lemmy.world

I picked up The Colour of Magic after getting burnt out on the horror elements in last book of the Dark Forest series. I wanted something bright and colorful and fun. I looooooved it! I'm on book 15 now. If you're into audio books, the ones that are coming out now on Audible are incredible. Normally I hate when there is more than one narrator because it sounds like a bunch of people talking over walkie talkies, but with less chemistry. This isn't like that at all. It genuinely adds to the story (though it might take away from some of the puns, not seeing the written words).

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lemmy.world

Thank you for the suggestion! I will look into them, but in all honesty this isn't my first time reading them, I'm actually reading them with my partner at the moment because he hasn't read Discworld before and needs a little encouragement to read.

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I'm about half way through Quantum Radio by AG Riddle. It's pretty good so far. Alternate history / multiverse with good characters and action. Makes me think somewhat of Man in the High Castle meets Sliders.

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I'm re-reading the First Law series, actually listening to Steven Pacey read it to me. I recently finished Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse. I want to read A Memory Called Empire next.

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kbin.social

Reading Venemous Lumpsucker because it was in the news recently as winning an award. It's very funny, a satire on Corporate Business and climate change. It actually reminds me of when I read Stark by Ben Elton as a young teen in many ways - it's more inventive but there's a similar vibe (the world is helpless in the hands of corporate greed because corporate people just don't know what else to do).

2/3 of the way through and it's definitely easy to read and funny

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I just finished! I liked it a lot to, although I give it a solid B. Humor was great, there were some really nifty concepts, I just don't think it was a slam dunk. I think the author will do some really great stuff in the future though. It's a perfect vacation read: Plot is pretty linear for the most part, it's not terribly long, and it keeps a solid pace.

I'm going to compare it to a not so great book, but because of the elements about that book I liked: "NeXt" by Chriton. I'm in the biochemistry field, and "NeXt" is really interesting as a capture of where the public (and a lot of professionals) thought the field was going. The human genome project was well underway, everything seemed possible. "Lumpsucker" shoots into the future a bit ("Next" is 100% contemporary), but really captures a ton over the last 5 years that simmers in public consciousness the way Next did. It's not like the topics both discuss don't get plenty of headlines, but they both do a cool job capturing a general "vibe" around the topics as opposed to just facts. I found it really cathartic to read, actually.

So all in all, to anyone else, I'd give it a strong recommend. It wont go down as an all time classic but the author put together something beyond competent, and really added some spice here and there capturing something special.

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Children of Time. I heard about it from Quinn's reviews and have been wanting to read it ever since.

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lemmy.world

I was a huge SF fan when i was younger, but gradually the habit to read books disappeared from my radar. But i decided to pick it up again and bought two books to start with: I am almost halfway through the Three body problem from Cixin Liu, but frankly; so far, i don't get the appeal. The way the author writes is quite cold or distancing - if that is a word - and i find it hard to feel for any of the characters. So, i also just started reading Children of time, from Adrian Tchaikovski.

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DogMuffinsreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Yeah I couldn't get through the three body problem.

Bobiverse audiobooks are the gold standard for contemporary sci-fi IMO.

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Just started Bob Legion. LOVE it so far. If you like bob and haven't done Project Hail Marry there's some common DNA. Also the audiobook voice actor is the same.

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mathosreply
lemmy.world

I just finished The Dark Forest and I've got to say: I was not enjoying myself until halfway through. TBP was a slog and the first half of TDF was more of the same. But the second half of TDF? It was alllll worth it for me. I couldn't put it down and I'm super excited to start book three.

Ymmv but I've got no regrets sticking with it.

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Papancareply
lemmy.world

Fingers crossed it will work out this way with Three Body Problem. I will finish it

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mathosreply
lemmy.world

How'd it go? I finished the third book. No regrets

Also finished Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky which I actually enjoyed a lot more.. but maybe I'm a simpleton

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I finished it and it picked up in the final couple of chapters, but i too still preferred Children of Time; that was maybe the most eye opening 'what if' about a completely believable alien species. I've read many SF books, but this one was the only one where i found it to be a totally convincing, completely different species.

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The black fleet trilogy. Normally "space opera" isn't my preferred genre but these books are pretty great.

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I just finished up The Ballad of Songsbirds and Snakes. Back when I read The Hunger Games trilogy, I flew through it and really loved it. This was a nice successor/prequel. Collins really knows how to keep a story moving and she did a nice job laying groundwork for decisions made at the end. Maybe a little too obvious, but consistent anyway.

This weekend, I'm hoping to get through a Jack Reacher book I started on Kindle one night when I couldn't sleep. And then it's on to Caliban's War as I continue The Expanse saga.

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Slogging through Norman Spinrad's Bug Jack Barron

Usually I love Spinrad, but this is just so dated: The idea that a TV talk show host with a massive audience is holding the rich and powerful accountable, as opposed to pandering to them...

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I just finished the Three Body Problem trilogy, which I loved. Now I'm trying to figure out what I want to read next.

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Working my way through Return of the Crimson Guard by Ian Esselmont. Going to take a break from Malazan after this and dig into shorter stuff I've been meaning to get to.

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Last month I picked up a grab bag at a used bookstore store in my old home town. I plan to grab one at random until I get through them all. So I don't know what I'm reading this month but I know it's something from this bag.

I've finished "Dance if the Hag" and "Pennterra" so far. Just started "northern stars" today.

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We Hear Voices by Evie Green- Sucks the book came out in 2020 at the heart of covid but so far it is a damn fine story interesting to see how it goes.

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I listened to And Then She Vanished by Nick Jones and found it entertaining enough to start the second book in the series right after. It's not really scifi, I mean, time travel could easily be tagged fantasy as well. I don't know if I'll finish the series though. It's missing something that I can't quite put my finger on. Somewhat shallow and the secondary characters are paper thin. Fine reading to pass the time (or spend 12 hours on a train...) but nothing I'll be thinking about once I'm done. I've been struggling to get through the first few chapters of Perdido Street Station for a while, I may give it another go this weekend.

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Yesterday, finished Stephen Markley's The Deluge, a great read and a tremendous effort - highly recommend it.

The Deluge is a speculative fiction novel that focuses on the sociopolitical, economic, and ecological development of a series of catastrophic personal and global events stretching from the late 2010s with the narrative concluding around the late 2030s.

It's a longer novel, around 800 pages, if you prefer something more compact Markley's previous novel Ohio is terrific as well.

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I’ve been on a reread of the eragon series, which I haven’t read since they came out. So like 20ish years from book one

Book 5 is coming out in a few months.

Loved these books when I was younger. Still very much love it.

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I'm halfway through Gaiman's American Gods and then I'm going to complete my journey though The Culture with The Hydrogen Sonata.

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August I read American Prometheus, Pageboy, and the Ministry for the Future. All were worth reading for one reason or another. Ministry was particularly relevant with ongoing climate change.

I started Someone Else's Shoes which is good so far. After that I have added some ideas from this thread to my queue. I kinda just pick something that sounds interesting and give it a shot, with only a few books each year that are actually planned.

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I am currently on Book 11 of the Expeditionary Force Series by Craig Alanson. I have really enjoyed it. It's a fun space adventure series. Light reading, interesting characters, very funny at times. Sometimes suspenseful but and very few bad things happen to the good guys. I don't know about the rest of you, but I already have too many bad/sad/dramatic things from my real life. This series is a great scifi escape!

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100%.

I finished all of them and they are great entertainment.

Some SciFi is deep, thought provoking, and requires reflection.

And some is just fun to read. This is definitely the later, but it does a great job of it.

The Bobiverse books are of similar content, although the base premises is a bit more thought provoking.

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Everything by Martha Wells. I'm into fantasy more than sci-fi, but Murderbot Diaries got me started. Loved Witch King, and I'm now reading through the Ile-Rien series. I'd say her more recent work is her best but I'm enjoying the older stuff a lot.

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I've been trying to get through A Memory Called Empire for like 2 years now. I keep hearing how good it is l, but I'm maybe halfway through and I feel like the story has been slow going, and the poetry thing is weird too. It is very well written though. Maybe someone has something encouraging to say about it

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