Jayd0g wrote: » Completed the Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin yesterday after recommendations in this thread. Thoroughly enjoyed it, thanks folks!
keane2097 wrote: » I'm listening to Rendezvous With Rama on Audible while reading summaries of the Dresden Files books to remind myself of the story-lines. I often expect classic sci-fi to be a bit ****e and I'm always wrong. RWR is absolutely class 70% of the way through, as was Ringworld, as was Stars My Destination, as was anything by Asimov I ever picked up. I must try to remember this.
Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre is presented as a found document. Like its predecessor, it involves humans coming into conflict with something uncanny. And, like its predecessor, its structure offers plenty of foreshadowing of discomfiting events. But Devolution differs from World War Z in a few substantial ways as well, which ultimately make it a more intimate book than its predecessor—and a far stranger one.
Glebee wrote: » Sorry folks, dont want to start a new thread on this. Anybody have issue with Amazon kindle purchase not showing up on their account. Im a sucker for buying kindle bargin books for 99p and know I wont get to them for a while. Picked up Book1 and 2 in Abercrombies Shatterd Sea series last year, both for 99p. Book 2 shows up in my account but Book 1 is not there. When I go to the Book 1 store page it says that I purchased but does not give me option to download to kindle. A few other books are also acting similar...
Thargor wrote: » Max Brooks of World War Z fame has a new one:
wyrn wrote: » I've had this, it's usually when there's a new publisher or it's republished. There's been a few times where I've nearly bought the same book twice. Your best bet is to look at your content page. Click on "Accounts and Lists" -> Manage Content and Devices -> Content (this is where all the books you bought are registered, you can search within this list)
By the end of the 30th century humanity has the capability to travel the universe, to journey beyond earth and beyond the confines of the vulnerable human frame. The descendants of centuries of scientific, cultural and physical development divide into three: fleshers — true Homo sapiens; Gleisner robots — embodying human minds within machines that interact with the physical world; and polises — supercomputers teeming with intelligent software, containing the direct copies of billions of human personalities now existing only in the virtual reality of the polis. Diaspora is the story of Yatima — a polis being created from random mutations of the Konishi polis base mind seed — and of humankind, Of an astrophysical accident that spurs the thousandfold cloning of the polises. Of the discovery of an alien race and of a kink in time that means humanity — whatever form it takes — will never again be threatened by acts of God.
keane2097 wrote: » Finished RWR last night and the ending was very satisfying. My Goodreads review is 'Just perfect' which sums it up. The follow-ups written by some other chap - yay or nay? I've started the new Dresden Files book on Audible now. They're good craic.
Thargor wrote: » Reading Diaspora by Greg Egan as part of my project to force myself to clear the backlog of hundreds of ebooks I've been collecting and not reading since the first Sony Ereaders appeared. It's good, early 90s but you wouldn't know it, feels like hard sci-fi from this year. Some chapters do contain an awful lot of physics and tech descriptions that devolve into paragraph after paragraph of gibberish Neal Stephenson style but you can skim them. The opening chapter where he describes the main character being born is probably responsible for a lot of people giving up on it.
cdgalwegian wrote: » Yeah, the opening is a chore, and can be skimmed. It's pretty good as hard sci-fi goes after that.
pixelburp wrote: » About halfway through the third book in the Tower of Babel series, " the Hod King". My god the writing in these books is sublime, evocative and imaginative but never overwrought or overlong either. I'm so used to functional, realist prose from popular SciFi I've forgotten how artful literature in the genre can be. The cast has become more ensemble since the first novel and the structure reflects that, bouncing around the various members of Thomas Senlins crew.
cdgalwegian wrote: » Is this fantasy, snook in as sci-fi due to steampunkery? Just reading reviews of the series, so not sure to whether to dip in or not, as generally reader of hard sci-fi (but amenable to some non hard sci-fi in right circumstances).
Glebee wrote: » Just finished The Heros. Brilliant stuff from Abercrombie. Question is should I countinue on with Red Country next? i know these series of his books are not really connected but there is a bit of a link between them. I have book 1 and 2 of his Shattered Seas series ready to go but I wonder should I finish off Red Country first??
lordgoat wrote: » Still working my way through Feist, have maybe 5 books left. Any other big fantasy series I can go to after this. One requirements are 1 - it's complete no bull**** like GRRM or Rothfuss please, I wait for Sanderson to finish them before picking them up again. 2 - Not Erikson (read it) 3 - Pretty much read anything but ones I dislike are: Goodkind, Jordan, Tolkien (I know but he needed an editor) Thanks
keane2097 wrote: » The Amber Series is always worth a recommendation although in my eyes the audiobook read by the man himself is the way to go. If you liked Erikson you may enjoy The Black Company books, I think they're great.
quickbeam wrote: » As I didn't like Feist, and do like Jordan and Tolkien, you may not take my suggestions: Robiin Hobb Farseer Trilogy First Law by Joe Abercrombie Dresden The Dark Tower Gentleman Bastards The Witcher Broken Empire by Mark Lawrence I've not read all of the above, but I have read some and they're all on my to read list as I've heard good reports and they sound like my thing.
Thargor wrote: » House of Suns is so good.
mcgovern wrote: » Shadows of the Apt by Adrian Tchaikovsky.
Igotadose wrote: » Stephen Donaldson's Chronicles of Thomas Covenant The Riverworld series by Philip Jose Farmer
lordgoat wrote: » Read Tom Cov years ago, enjoyed the first 3.