Igotadose wrote: » Just finished "Four Roads Cross" by Max Gladstone. Not bad, I kind of like stories where Lawyers are the villains Now starting "Walking to Aldebaran" by Adrian Tchaikovsky. BTW, RIP Terry Goodkind. "Wizards First Rule" was an amazing read. The subsequent novels I thought ran out of steam, I read two or three of them then gave up.
which eventually numbered 21 installments
Thargor wrote: » Finished Guns of the Dawn by Adrian Tchikovsky. It was... okay I suppose? Very bland compared to his other stuff. I dont understand why he made the armies so small in it tbh, it was all a bit forgettable...
fenris wrote: » Finished The Trouble with Peace just in time to get stuck into Battle Ground - By Jim Butcher, the latest Dresden Files, this is a good week to have crap weather!!!
Buford T. Justice XIX wrote: » Reading The City by Stella Gemmell. I left it last year but bought it on Kindle on sale so I went at it again. Enjoying it much more this time, I must admit. I left Gardens of the Moon after getting about half way. Someone please tell me that Kruppe has some function in the story other than to annoy me?:( Does he play a big part or can I just skip his chapters without losing much of the plot?
Thargor wrote: » Moved on to the Calculating Stars, was worried it was going to be a bit "Girls can do science too!!!" but it's not like that at all, it's great so far.
bluewolf wrote: » number 1 best seller out yesterdayhttps://www.amazon.co.uk/Wintersteel-Cradle-Book-Will-Wight-ebook/dp/B08JMF22F2 it's an excellent series and that was the best book yet
ixoy wrote: » Books 1-7 are *free* today. I've read the first two so far and enjoyed them.
Thargor wrote: » Finally dragged my way through the Calculating Stars, hated it. Absolutely despised the main character. Theres this disease among American writers at the minute especially in sci-fi/fantasy where the barriers to entry seem to be lower where they reuse the same character over and over again, its hard to articulate but its a kind of pompous, smug, self-righteous type. I cant really explain it but The Martian would be its purest form... Boring cnuts overcoming the odds type thing. You see it over and over again these days and its really grating.
keane2097 wrote: » I'm just after finishing Seveneves which was my first Neal Stephenson book. It was very good. The amount of research he puts in must be insane. Possibly tailed off a tiny bit at the very end but most enjoyable overall. I presume this is at the hard end when people talk about hard sci-fi? It's a genre I seem to enjoy. Any recommendation.
pixelburp wrote: » If you want to watch basically the same premise - women thrust into the Astronaut programme during the 1950s or 1960s - then Apple TV's "For All Mankind" got you covered. I've only watched the first 3 or 4 episodes but it's very good. Comes from Ronald D Moore (he of the BSG reboot & Star Trek DS9), and is itself an alternate universe story (minus the meteor). Tells a story where the USSR were the first on the moon, and how NASA adjusts itself to being second and where it goes from there...
Reg'stoy wrote: » Reading Isaac Asimov's Foundation series in the reading order that he himself suggested. Big shout out to my local library here in Swords and the service in general as some of the books have come opposite ends of the country. Got the idea because I had seen the trailer for the apple tv adaptation and so I started with Prelude to Foundation, but I found his suggested reading order online where he says to start off with the complete robot collection. I definitely think that starting with the robot collection added something to The caves of steel book.