Our reads in May 2024

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Our reads in May 2024

1dustydigger
mayo 1, 3:42 am

Another month trying to steady the tottering TBR mountain. What are your plans for May?

2dustydigger
Editado: mayo 14, 12:36 pm

Had major eye problems amongst all my myriad autoimmune woes in April,did little reading most of the month. Had tests last week and the eyes seem to be working better,not so much gunk around now,but I will need a new glasses prescription before the eyes can cope with a lot of reading.I'll post a very token TBR now,I have books to finish off from last month.Hoping to get back to full steam ahead by June.
Dusty's TBR for May
C J Cherryh - Hellburner
Clifford D Simak - The Werewolf Principle
Poul Anderson - The Broken Sword
Darcy Coates - The Hollow dead
Jorn Lier Horst - Dregs

3Stevil2001
Editado: mayo 1, 7:06 am

Still working on Some Desperate Glory.

5paradoxosalpha
Editado: mayo 12, 2:51 pm

I finished Children of the Sky in the final hour of April and posted a review. Here's how May is shaping up:

In Progress
The Hearing Trumpet

On Deck
Titanium Noir
The Incal: Psychoverse
Revival

Ordered/Requested
Shigidi and the Brass Head of Obalufon

6RobertDay
mayo 1, 10:27 am

>5 paradoxosalpha: I had never heard of Leonora Carrington until we went to see an exhibition at the Sainsbury Arts Centre at the University of East Anglia in Norwich in 2010 about Carrington, Remedios Varo and Kati Horna. I brought back the catalogue (Surreal Friends) and brought these artists onto my radar, though if you read the other review of Surreal Friends on LT, you might conclude that Carrington was at best an unreliable narrator of her own story.

I'd heard of The Hearing Trumpet in passing, but hadn't really considered it to be something I'd be likely to see. Now I must look out for a copy.

7Sakerfalcon
mayo 1, 10:39 am

>6 RobertDay: The hearing trumpet is one of my favourite books! I'm very envious of you getting to see that exhibition.

8paradoxosalpha
Editado: mayo 1, 10:48 am

>6 RobertDay:
My copy of The Hearing Trumpet is a Penguin Modern Classics edition that I picked up secondhand, but it still smells fresh off the press and doesn't seem like it would be hard to procure new.

9paradoxosalpha
mayo 1, 10:51 am

For readers entertained by the 20th-century history of English Surrealism, I would recommend the novel Exquisite Corpse by Robert Irwin.

10Neil_Luvs_Books
mayo 1, 6:16 pm

Yesterday, I started The Crystal World by JG Ballard. It had been sitting on my TBR shelf for a few years and I have read a couple of posts in this group that Ballard is a good writer. Well… the first chapter has impressed already. Looking forward to this read.

Not yet sure what I’ll read after that. William Gibson’s Blue Ant trilogy has been staring at me on my bookshelf for awhile so I might take on that next.

11vwinsloe
mayo 2, 6:45 am

>7 Sakerfalcon: I've added The Hearing Trumpet to my wishlist. >8 paradoxosalpha: It looks like the book is available to purchase new on Thriftbooks.

12Sakerfalcon
mayo 2, 7:44 am

I'm continuing with the Liaden series, now up to Trader's leap.

13ScoLgo
mayo 2, 10:57 am

>11 vwinsloe: To see nearly all new and used copies on offer, give Bookfinder a try. I usually search on ISBN to help find the specific edition I'm after but there are a number of ways to filter results. Here are a couple links for The Hearing Trumpet:


BTW... I see my library offers the ebook via Overdrive/Libby so that might be another way to acquire the book.

14JacobHolt
mayo 2, 1:08 pm

>4 Shrike58: I hope you enjoy Cahokia Jazz! I read it in March, and I'm still thinking about it.

15PocheFamily
mayo 2, 2:09 pm

About to pick up Touched by Walter Mosley. Apparently a dystopian fantasy contemplating how humanity and technological innovation threaten everything else. Or something... I shall see soon enough.

16skid0612
mayo 2, 7:48 pm

>15 PocheFamily: A quick little read with the typical Mosley feel. I adore his detective novels and find his science fiction thought provoking. If you remotely enjoy 'touched' I heartily recommend Futureland

17vwinsloe
mayo 3, 8:28 am

>13 ScoLgo: Cool, thanks, I didn't know about that site.

18ScoLgo
mayo 3, 11:20 am

>17 vwinsloe: You're welcome!

Have you seen The Literature Map?

19Cecrow
mayo 3, 1:12 pm

>18 ScoLgo:, sorry to butt in but that map is way cool! I entered 'Charles Dickens' with some skepticism and it came back with huge accuracy - a lot of predictable names, but also several surprise names that I do also like.

20vwinsloe
mayo 4, 7:07 am

>18 ScoLgo: wow, no! That is also cool. Thank you.

21Shrike58
Editado: mayo 6, 7:55 am

Knocked off The Imposition of Unnecessary Obstacles; if you liked the first book in this series you'll have little reason not to enjoy this one. Next up: Jack Four. My understanding is that this isn't vintage Asher, but I need my fix of kinetic, cinematic mayhem, and don't feel like tackling one of the man's older novels right now.

22RobertDay
mayo 4, 10:17 am

Finished Priest's Episodes; now reading Paul McAuley's Players - another of his techno-thriller efforts, written 2007 and about MMORPGs, which he sets out to explain to the uninitiated - perhaps not in such an info-dumping way as he did in Whole Wide World for DDOS attacks, but there's still an element of clunk about it. The murder mystery isn't much of a mystery - what's not given away in the blurb becomes fairly clear about three chapters in when we're introduced to an exceptionally mad and unpleasant tech billionaire and his (just plain unpleasant) sidekick, and the only mystery looks as if it is going to be sorting out everyone's agenda.

23Stevil2001
mayo 4, 1:48 pm

Done with Some Desperate Glory, really good book; now I'm on a mini-break from Hugo reading with the Library of America Ursula K. Le Guin: Collected Poems.

24ChrisG1
mayo 4, 6:23 pm

Finished The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian by Robert E. Howard. In my youth, I had read the Conan books that included stories by L. Sprague de Camp & Lin Carter, in addition to Howards. This book collects only Howard stories. It's a quality edition put out by Del Rey illustrated by Mark Schultz. Recommended for those who enjoy this kind of thing.

25paradoxosalpha
mayo 4, 6:35 pm

Yeah, those 21st-century Del Rey Conan editions are really definitive--certainly a cut above the old de Camp & Carter ones.

26paradoxosalpha
mayo 5, 5:45 pm

I finished The Hearing Trumpet and posted my review. Also, the hold fairy manifested a copy of Shigidi and the Brass Head of Obalufon for me this week, so that's next.

27cindydavid4
mayo 5, 6:19 pm

now reading The Mammoth Book of Time Travel SF which have many interesting takes on time travel, one of my faves is the truth about weena a sequel to Well's time Machine others include The Catch by Kage Baker ,Time Gypsy by Ellen Klages,try and change the past by Fritz leiber and Red Letter Day by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. but my fav is Molly Brown - Women on the Brink of a Cataclysm a take on the SF meme of finding yourself while time traveling. written by a comedian, its interesting and hilarious. if you are in to the subject, think youd find this collection a good read

28Neil_Luvs_Books
mayo 5, 10:28 pm

I just completed The Crystal World. I’m not sure what to make of it. I certainly enjoyed the prose. The entire novel seemed to drift along dreamlike punctuated by unexpected action. It feels like an experience that remains unresolved.

29Stevil2001
mayo 6, 10:24 am

Started a Lodestar finalist last night, The Sinister Booksellers of Bath by Garth Nix.

30ChrisRiesbeck
mayo 6, 1:39 pm

Finished The Other Wind and started The Veils of Azlaroc.

31drmamm
mayo 6, 4:30 pm

I finished Exhalation, which is a short story collection by Ted Chiang. It was OK. The stories were very imaginative and thought-provoking, but they sometimes read like essays rather than stories. The characters and the tiny slivers of plot were just meant to carry the idea. Which is a perfectly fine way to write a story sometimes, but it left me wanting more than an interesting premise. Definitely not a waste of time, though, and fans of "idea" stories would like it.

32vwinsloe
mayo 7, 6:46 am

>31 drmamm: Exhalation is on my TBR, and from your description, it sounds appealing to me. Thanks.

33CurrerBell
mayo 7, 9:07 am

Oh brother. Oh bother. To Your Scattered Bodies Go had great world-building, which encouraged me to go on with the quintet when at some point I should have applied the Pearl Rule. Now I've finished The Magic Labyrinth 2** (and I give it that much because at least it does "sorta-sorta" wrap things up and give some answers to what this quintet is all about), having finished it up because I tend to feel honor-bound not to use a Wikipedia plot summary and drop reading the whole clunker series.

I'm going on to Gods of Riverworld but only because the finale's Wikipedia plot summary is rather skimpy (which I can't blame any summary writer for, considering that writing a summary of these Riverworld books can relive all the tedium of eternal rebirth in that danged river valley) and I want to see if there's anything I've missed.

This is a quintet that should have been wrapped up in a trilogy at most – or best of all, one over-sized single volume. Great concept, but there's such a cumbersome jungle (jumble?) of characters and so many divergent plot threads as to make this whole thing into a self-indulgent bog.

34elenchus
mayo 7, 12:38 pm

>33 CurrerBell:

I continue to watch with interest here on the sidelines. As you say, the concept is great and I have fond but very, very vague recollection of characters and scenes but very little of the overarching plot. This makes for a tempting candidate for re-read, and I'm using your commentary as a cautionary tale. There is, after all, so much to read and re-read.

35pgmcc
mayo 7, 12:47 pm

>31 drmamm:
I have Exhalation on my shelf. (I say shelf, but that is metaphorical. I have multiple bookcases, let alone shelves.) I read and enjoyed his first collection and your post tells me Exhalation is similar in that it has great ideas in the stories but he seems to find difficulty finding an ending in many of his stories. I look forward to reading this collection.

36Neil_Luvs_Books
Editado: mayo 7, 4:20 pm

Yesterday I started All Systems Red the first novella in the Murderbot Diaries. Today I finished it. I enjoyed it and will likely be reading the sequels in the near future. It has some similarities to the Imperial Radch original trilogy and also some similar themes to the film Ex Machina.

37elenchus
Editado: mayo 7, 6:21 pm

>36 Neil_Luvs_Books:

I also see parallels between Murderbot and Imperial Radch, and while I'm not as enamoured of Leckie's characters as yet, her world-building is as layered and nuanced as Wells's. I am intrigued by Leckie's inclusion of religion, as well as singing and song in Ancillary Justice, for example.

Still need to screen Ex Machina, and that's another bump for me.

38RobertDay
mayo 7, 6:53 pm

>37 elenchus: Don't forget the tea services!

I always saw the concentration on tea services in the Leckie books as being like the glory days of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, when officers sat around in clubs, chatting about the latest scandals, pontificating on Glory and Duty to the Emperor and admiring each others' gorgeous uniforms. Little in the way of military puissance, but gorgeous uniforms.

39cindydavid4
mayo 7, 7:22 pm

reading starter villian Ive seen scalzis name but for some reason never read his books. This reading is for a RL book group and am enjoying it quite a bit. (talking cats? what else can you want? )Hopefully it continues to be good

40paradoxosalpha
mayo 7, 8:48 pm

Ex Machina is terrific, but I wouldn't compare it much to Murderbot, despite some arguable overlap of subject matter. The tone I get from each is so vastly different from the other.

41PocheFamily
mayo 7, 10:27 pm

>16 skid0612: Thanks for the recommendation.

But first I need to figure out what I just read ... am mostly left wondering "what just happened?" after reading Touched. There's a lot to unpack. I'm probably just being dense (and not just distracted by the zombies). Maybe there are several, not just one metaphor ... or maybe it's just a story.

42elenchus
mayo 7, 11:34 pm

>38 RobertDay:

The tea service is great, too. So colonial, with that being a constant across disparate cultures. I just finished the short story "Night's Slow Poison", featuring a civilization attacked by the Radch, yet they also unabashedly resort to the comfort of tea.

43Shrike58
mayo 8, 1:23 pm

Knocked off Jack Four last night, no thanks to being woken up by a tornado warning. Anyway, it was good Neal Asher but not great Neal Asher; I really have to get back to his "Polity Agent" books sometime.

44rshart3
mayo 8, 11:01 pm

Finally reread Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand many years after reading it when it was new. I liked it less than the first time, but am glad I did it. The worldbuilding is great. He's brilliant with language & philosophy, and with his treatment of gender and sexuality. He's just brilliant generally. But the plotting is somehow minimal and confusing at the same time; and I found the characters wooden, despite many colorful quirks. As before, I could say that my favorite thing is the title.

45Neil_Luvs_Books
mayo 9, 8:23 pm

>40 paradoxosalpha: true, the tone between Ex Machina and Murderbot is different. But I was thinking of the similarity between the two AIs in each both desiring freedom and self-determination.

46Neil_Luvs_Books
Editado: mayo 9, 8:27 pm

>42 elenchus: I have one more episode of Shōgun to watch and you reminded me of the similarity between the serving of tea in Japanese and Imperial Radch cultures. I wonder if Leckie was thinking of Japan when she wrote the tea service into the Ancilliary novels?

I am half way through The Skylark of Space. It’s a fun read but the implicit racism is disconcerting when it appears on the page.

47paradoxosalpha
Editado: mayo 9, 10:40 pm

>45 Neil_Luvs_Books:
We have a really good idea what Murderbot desires, because it tells us all the time.
To me, the gripping core of Ex Machina is not knowing what Ava "desires."

48Neil_Luvs_Books
Editado: mayo 10, 12:20 am

>47 paradoxosalpha: Hmmmm… I always had the sense in Ex Machina that she wanted to leave. I wonder if I am not remembering correctly. Weren’t there lots of clues indicating what she wanted even though she didn’t voice them? I’ll have to watch it again. It’s a good film worth watching again.

49ChrisG1
mayo 10, 9:16 am

Just finished The Robots of Dawn by Isaac Asimov - I'm working my way through his Robot/Foundation sequence. Asimov enjoyed exploring the implications of robots to human societies. I take it for granted that his work is pretty dated at this point, but still found it an enjoyable read.

50bnielsen
mayo 10, 12:44 pm

I'm reading some of Frederik Pohls short stories. His Midas World robots remind me of Asimovs.

51Stevil2001
mayo 10, 12:58 pm

Starting my next Best Graphic Story finalist, Shubeik Lubeik, also known as Your Wish Is My Command.

52andyl
mayo 10, 5:06 pm

I am currently reading The House Of Styx which I bought some time ago and have only just got around to it. Quite different in feel to his earlier Quantum Evolution series.

53Neil_Luvs_Books
Editado: mayo 10, 6:26 pm

>50 bnielsen: One of my favourite books is The Best of Frederik Pohl. The short story in there, Tunnel Under the World, is my fav short story of all time. I remember reading it to my daughter on Halloween when she was a child. Goosebumps!

54Neil_Luvs_Books
mayo 10, 6:27 pm

>49 ChrisG1: This is also a future reading project of mine: to reread Asimov's Robots/Empire/Foundation series, this time in chronological order rather than publication order just for a different reading experience compared to the first time I read them.

55bnielsen
mayo 11, 4:34 pm

>53 Neil_Luvs_Books: I'm getting rid of some Danish translations of old science fiction stories, so I take the opportunity to read both the original and the Danish translation. Some of the translations of Pohl's short fiction are okay (but I'm still getting rid of them :-)

56ChrisG1
Editado: mayo 11, 9:43 pm

Finished His Majesty's Dragon by Naomi Novik. The Napoleonic Wars....with dragons. Yep, this could have been done campy, but the author handled it more straightforwardly & wove an enjoyable, entertaining story.

57paradoxosalpha
Editado: mayo 12, 6:39 pm

I finished and reviewed Shigidi and the Brass Head of Obalufon, and Titanium Noir is next.

58dustydigger
mayo 14, 12:55 pm

Very little reading done,but enjoyed a reread of C J Cherryh's Hellburner .Very complicated setting,but each reread I understand a little more! lol.I just love Cherryh's immersive style,always enjoy falling back into her worlds.
Clifford D Simak's The Werewolf Principle wasnt among the very best work of Simak,but even lower level Simak has interesting themes,sympathetic characters,some philosophy and of course lovely descriptions of nature,so I enjoyed it a lot. Ending was a bit rushed and perhaps not credible,but still a nice read. I have a mini goal of trying to fill all the gaps in my Simak novels.17 down,about 7 or 8 to go,if I can locate free pdfs online:0)
Trying again with Poul Anderson's The Broken Sword.I have never had much enthusiasm for the whole nordic sort of mythology,Beowulf and Eddas included.
(I exclude Tolkien,he has pretty much Anglesized his elves etc,apart from the names IMO) But I'll make yet another attempt at Broken Sword,see if I can get beyond about 25%!

59AndreasJ
mayo 14, 1:10 pm

I DNF’d The Broken Sword ages ago. I’ve this vague idea I should give it another chance, but it’ll probably never happen - too much else to read.

60ChrisRiesbeck
mayo 14, 4:18 pm

Finished The Veils of Azlaroc, started The Black Sun (lot of false hits on that title).

61Shrike58
mayo 15, 9:39 am

Poul Anderson was never one of my faves, at least to the degree that I felt the need to be the completist. To put it another way, by the time I arrived at the golden age of science fiction (13), I already appreciated that his politics were not mine.

62Shrike58
mayo 15, 9:43 am

Speaking of agendas, I just wrapped up The Atlas Complex. I regard the trilogy as a qualified success; your enthusiasm for the book will depend on how much patience you have with a pack of characters with delusions of grandeur, and for whom the getting of wisdom is a rough road. I do find it amusing that there are people over at Goodreads who love Ms. Blake's characters rather more than she does, and took it really personal when bad things happened to them!

63drmamm
mayo 15, 9:51 pm

I'm about 10% of the way through Swan Song. Very dark and disturbing so far.

64Neil_Luvs_Books
Editado: mayo 15, 11:50 pm

I finished The Skylark of Space. I don’t think it has aged very well. Verne, Wells, & Burroughs have aged better I think. It was interesting to read something that was unabashedly sexist and racist without meaning to. I think it really reflects the culture that Doc Smith was writing in.

65elorin
Editado: mayo 16, 12:51 am

Just finished Murderbot 2, Artificial Condition. I'm liking Murderbot. Almost too self deprecating, but not quite.

66AndreasJ
mayo 16, 1:35 am

>61 Shrike58:

I've liked much else by Anderson, but in general I think I've appreciated his sf better than his fantasy.

67Stevil2001
Editado: mayo 16, 10:06 am

I'm reading another Hugo Best Graphic Story finalist, Saga, Volume Eleven, then onto Ai Jiang's novelette I Am AI.

68Karlstar
mayo 16, 12:04 pm

Any Jeopardy fans here catch the question this week about the name of the capital city in Hyperion? I was surprised to see Hyperion come up.

69Darth-Heather
mayo 16, 3:43 pm

>68 Karlstar: yes! then I was mad at myself because I couldn't think of it quickly enough.

70RobertDay
mayo 16, 5:22 pm

>64 Neil_Luvs_Books: A couple of years ago, I re-read Galactic Patrol, out of some sort of curiosity. I was surprised by some of the things I found, things I could never have noticed when Smith was my go-to writer for thrilling space opera. But I felt no urge to carry on and re-read any more.

And then I read Clifford Simak's Cosmic Engineers. Much to my surprise, this stacked up badly against the Doc Smith.

Reviews for both books were posted.

71Neil_Luvs_Books
mayo 16, 7:39 pm

>70 RobertDay: interesting about Simak! I have his City and Way Station on my bookshelf waiting to be read. I have only heard good things about those two books.

72rshart3
mayo 16, 11:41 pm

>71 Neil_Luvs_Books:, >70 RobertDay: Simak was one of those spotty writers, sometimes very good, sometimes so-so. Maybe not surprising considering how prolific he was.

73bnielsen
Ayer, 1:05 am

>70 RobertDay: Thanks for the review of C.E. "a fairly preachy piece" describes a lot of the Simak I've read :-)

74RobertDay
Ayer, 6:42 am

>7 Sakerfalcon:! Way Station was always a favourite of mine. I'm a bit afraid to re-read it, in case disappointment lurks within.

75Stevil2001
Editado: Ayer, 6:57 am

I read Way Station a few years ago and really enjoyed it. City also has some great moments. I am particularly fond of Why Call Them Back from Heaven?, which goes a bit weird at the end but is an effective piece of satire.

76Petroglyph
Ayer, 11:16 am

I've coincidentally just started reading Simak's Shakespeare's planet, which I picked up because I seemed to remember liking the wild imagination of whatever short stories of his I encountered in anthologies. I'll be reading it with more interest now!

>61 Shrike58:

I've only read one Poul Anderson novel (Orbit unlimited), which basically was a retelling of American myth-making and its right-wing self-aggrandizement has put me off reading more novels by him. Though I will likely make the little effort required to read some of his short stories (I have fond memories of A little knowledge when I was around the Golden Age).

77Watry
Ayer, 11:54 am

I'm reading Lake of Souls. I'm about 110 pages in. I'm super picky about my short stories but I am really enjoying this one.

78Stevil2001
Ayer, 2:38 pm

>76 Petroglyph: I have an old flip-book edition of Anderson's There Will Be Time and The Dancer from Atlantis. I read the former many times as a kid and loved it; I could never make it past the first couple chapters of the latter! I did read The High Crusade a couple years ago and found it a total blast, just sheer fun in novel form.

>77 Watry: I haven't picked this up yet but Leckie is in my top five of current working sf authors, so I imagine I will soon.

79pgmcc
Ayer, 5:07 pm

I have started Ken MacLeod's Beyond the Light Horizon, the third book in the Lightspeed Trilogy.

As with Book 2, he has included a summary of what has gone before to save people the trouble of having to reread the first two books before getting stuck into the final instalment.

80paradoxosalpha
Ayer, 5:33 pm

>79 pgmcc:

Beyond the Hallowed Sky is nowhere in my public library consortium. I'll have to put in a request, since I'll be glad to tackle another MacLeod trilogy at some point.

81pgmcc
Ayer, 5:35 pm

>80 paradoxosalpha:
I always fond MacLeod's book rewarding.

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