- What book is currently on your nightstand?
- Who is the author?
- What genre?
- How do you like it?
- Would you recommend it to others?
Been reading Guards! Guards!
Written by Terry Pratchett
Fantasy/Comedy
I’m absolutely loving it right now
For sure would recommend to anyone with a love of fantasy and snarky humor
Doing it as a trade of with one of my buddies. I’ve been trying to get him to read Dune for years because I know he’d love it and he finally agreed on the terms that I read this one. It’s been a win win because we’re both thoroughly enjoying our respective books.
I finished Guards! Guards! recently - loved it! For years I struggled to get into Discworld because I kept starting The Colour of Magic and then failing to finish it. Eventually broke the back of it and then progressed onto the other books - with hindsight I wish I’d done what I’ve seen suggested before, to start with something like Guards! Guards! instead of reading in release order.
Yeah my buddy had me start there under the logic that I would enjoy it so much that I would get utterly sucked into the series and he would finally have someone to talk to about it lol. Which is understandable because that’s the same reason I wanted him to read Dune. Neither of us really have many other friends that read unfortunately.
@Entropy Never did much like Color of Magic, but I love the guards books. Men at Arms and Night Watch are all-time favorites. Pratchett loved Carrot, but he was fascinated with Vimes (and Vetinari).
I found Colour of Magic fine once I got into it, but it took me several attempts before it clicked for me - usually made it perhaps 50 pages in and then failed to pick up to again, so restarted a few years later. Whereas when I started Guards! Guards!, I couldn’t put it down and blitzed through it in no time.
I particularly found that the Ankh-Morpork of Guards! Guards! was a far more interesting and settled setting than how it was depicted in Colour of Magic (where I thought it struggled to rise above being a generic fantasy parody and so never really caught my attention).
What book: Born a crime.
Author: Trevor Noah
Genre: Memoir
How do you like it: very much. I barely read a book where I was shaking my head so much bc of the atrocities that were going on in the South African apartheid
Would you recommend it? Absolutely.
I have read a few person accounts of that time in SA, and I am not surprised in the slightest at your reaction. Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom is the first that springs to mind. Inspiring, yet heartbreaking.
Thanks! I was looking for more books on that topic.
I’ll second Long Walk to Freedom. While I think it’s a book that everyone can profit from reading, if you have interest in that subject I think it’s a no-brainer.
I can’t recommend it highly enough.
Our Share of Night by Mariana Enríquez, translated by Megan McDowell
I’ve been reading such a long list of rave reviews from authors like Kazuo Ishiguro and Alan Moore and publications like the LA Review of Books as well as hearing the same from close friends that I finally bumped this book to the top of my backlog stack.
It’s a horror book set in the early '80s in Argentina, weaving the kind of mystical conspiracy of Umberto Eco’s Foucault’s Pendulum or Pérez-Reverte’s The Club Dumas and Ninth Gate novels over and through the very real state terrorism of the Argentinian Junta’s Dirty War. I’m only about 75 pages into the 600 or so, and the slow-burn opening is just now starting to unfold into something more overtly disturbing, but the deceptively simple/basic prose creates a remarkably sophisticated and subtle story that is creeping into me like magic. Disturbing magic, lol.
Highly recommend.
@McBinary
Iain McGilchrist, The Master and His Emissary. Fascinating stuff.Liz Williams, Detective Inspector Chen Novels 1-3 A fun mystery / fantasy series based on Asian mythology.
Space Opera by Catherynne M. Valente, sci-fi satire/comedy. Absolutely hilarious, loving it so far. Often compared lovingly to Hitchhiker’s and it’s been holding up which says a lot. It’s definitely funny but under that is some incredible world building which just makes it that much better. Highly recommend!
Oh man, this has been on my TBR. I loved The Past Is Red by her, and enjoyed Comfort Me With Apples, but I think Space Opera is solidly my wheelhouse. I need to grab a copy.
I started Hyperion by Dan Simmons. Last week and it has been a bit of a slog to get into it. The world building is fantastic, the scifi concepts are next level, but the way the writing style changes during each characters recounting of their time on Hyperion is disorienting and takes a while to get back up to reading it at a normal speed if that makes sense. I’d recommend it to any true scifi fan at this point, but my opinion is still in limbo on whether I like it… I’ll let y’all know later.
I had to take a break from it and read the second Murderbot novella Artificial Condition, which was an excellent distraction. :)
I just finished Narcissus and Goldmund, by Hermann Hesse. Beautiful book, and kind of similar to every other Hesse book I’ve read? I’m kind of finding that Hesse just writes the same book over and over again, but they’re all amazing so I’m going to keep reading them. It tackles themes of duality of man, men vs women, art vs logic, sin vs virtue, death vs life. Loved it.
Next up is The Iron Heel, by Jack London. Only a few pages in but I’m excited. Socialist classic dystopia that uses footnotes to tell the full story.
N & G is one I have not read by Hesse, and I can say the same for The Iron Heel in regards to London. I have really enjoyed both authors though I haven’t read them in a long time. Cheers for the recommendations.
Daytime reading: Witch King by Martha Wells
- Fantasy – My mental jury is still out on this one. Characters are likeable, but the world is still quite murky which makes certain motivations and behaviors hard to parse.
Nighttime reading: The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu by Tom Lin
- ??? – Haven’t gotten far enough in it to even know. It’s a period piece in mid 19th century. Maybe magical realism?
by Martha Wells
I like her Murderbot books enough that I would probably give anything she writes a chance!
That’s basically why I picked this one up. Her characterizations are great honestly. And the world is unfurling, but the longer certain topics are kept murky (who ARE these antagonists??), the more I think the payoff had better be good.
I’m reading Jane Eyre again and realising that what happened to Rochester had to happen, because otherwise he would have controlled Jane for the rest of his life. This was the only way she got to control him.
I’m also reading Der Hausmann by Kolosowa and Night Watch by Pratchett
Historical fiction, modern fiction and sort of fantasy? I recommend all of them.
I’m also reading two-ish books! The first isDead Ringers by Christopher Golden. It’s a horror novel about doppelgängers. I’m only like 2 chapters in so that’s really all I know lol. The second is Dreamcatcher by Stephen King—another horror novel that I’m actually re-reading. It’s about a group of friends who, while out on their yearly gamehunting trip, get caught in the crossfire of a supernatural event. Loved it the first time, and so far I’m loving it the second time around :)
What book is currently on your nightstand?
American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer
Who is the author?
Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin
What genre?
BiographyHow do you like it?
Excellent Book! It’s long, and it’s somewhat heavy reading, in light of it’s rather serious subject matter - building a weapon of mass destruction, dealing with McCarthyism. I’ve been at it over a month, but I appreciate that I can look at the cast list for the movie (which is based on this book), and recognize all of the character names! The authors definitely turned over every stone on studying the man - the book was about 25 years in the making - and the meticulousness shows.
Would you recommend it to others?
If you’re a history buff, definitely. For a more casual reader, it may be a bit much, though if you stick with it, you get a lot of fascinating stories.
Look to Windward
Iain M Banks.
SF.
Banks is one of my favourite authors and LTW is also my favourite. I have reread it every year or two since it was published in 2000.
I recommend Banks to everyone who has a passing interest in SF, his non SF works, published under Iain Banks are also great especially The Bridge.
According to StoryGraph that one is #7 in the “Culture” series. How tightly are the books integrated, do you need to read them in order? Would you recommend starting at #1?
Each story is standalone, and you could read any first but LTW does broadly reference events from early books.
A good starting point is Player of Games, which was my first. Solely because that it was the first one a friend gave me to read.
I read Consider Phlebas next and was hooked. Either is a good starting point. From there published order works.
I’ve never read any Banks. How would you compare him to Alastair Reynolds? I’m a HUGE Reynolds fan, especially stuff like House of Suns and Pushing Ice.
I’m looking for some new epic space opera to read :)
I have never read Reynolds looks like time for me to check him out.
Banks is the best post-scarcity space opera I have ever read. The galaxy (ours…) is filled with millions of sentient beings at various tech levels and many stories involve The Culture’s interaction with civs below (and sometimes above) them on the tech tree. The human civ, The Culture is always my answer to the question: If you could live in any fictional universe, which would it be?.
Each book is a stand-alone story that stretch across about 800 years of time and can be read in any order. A good starting point is Player of Games.
Cheers! Too many good books to read!!
Still working on the Stormlight Archive as an ebook. That’s going to take ages because most of my reading time is audio.
For audio I got three books into Sarah J Maas’s Court of Thorns and Roses series. I think it’s less popular than her Throne of Glass series, but it’s included on Scribd and the other isn’t, so figured I’d start there. It’s fantasy, and scribd calls it young adult, but there are some pretty dark actions and dark choices the character has to make. I’m really enjoying the perspective you get, especially in book 2 and 3, but I can’t comment why without spoiling them.
How much romance is in her books? I don’t enjoy reading books with a good bit of romance.
It’s there, including some that feels a little excessively lovey-dovey (a lot that has romance has similar), and some sex scenes. In terms of the level of them it’s more than innuendo but I’ve read more explicit. It more drives the characters’ actions, though. They’re making sacrifices and making hard decisions influenced by their emotional state from their relationships with other characters.
It’s hard to be more specific than that, though. I read a silly amount, but I don’t approach the 80-90% that’s fiction from an analytical perspective. I can give the broad strokes and could (though generally don’t) discuss why I think characters made decisions they did in the ones where characters feel 3D, but I don’t really do it in a way that I could compare different levels of different traits of books. I can find enjoyment out of a pretty broad range of style choices and complexity if there isn’t something glaringly off I can’t ignore. It’s only nonfiction I actually judge.
Thank you for the concisely verbose response.