• What book is currently on your nightstand?
  • Who is the author?
  • What genre?
  • How do you like it?
  • Would you recommend it to others?

Probably lots of bleed-over from the last week since it was posted so late, but…

  • HisBane@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Currently reading “The Kaiju Preservation Society” by John Scalzi. Lightweight, humorous sci-fi. Just recently finished “The Gentleman of Moscow” by Amor Towles, which is lovely storytelling if you enjoy character building. KPS is definitely a much different feel.
    Depending on what you like to read, I would recommend both - but for different reasons.

    • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I really enjoyed Scalzi’s Interdependency series. Definitely light compared to some (and there were arcs/characters I would have liked to see develop a bit more), but it’s a decent enough ride.

      • tjhart85@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Yeah The Interdependency felt like it really needs a few short stories in the same universe to cover a few of the characters and another novel at least for what happens after the ending!

    • mack123@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I loved Scalzi’s Old man war series. Good entertaining sci fi, with some interesting questions to ponder under the stories.

    • readbeanicecream@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Currently reading “The Kaiju Preservation Society” by John Scalzi.

      This was a fun read. I enjoyed it enough to put Red Shirts on my reading list, just have not gotten around to it yet. If you want to stick with the Kaiju genre, Project Nemesis by Jeremy Robinson had a similar vibe.

    • tjhart85@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I just finished KPS and loved it! It was fun in a “this entire thing is fucking ridiculous” sort of way that Scalzi (and the book itself) fully acknowledges.

      “I lift things” started infiltrating my spoken phrases without me realizing it and I was like “wtf‽” when I realized.

      • HisBane@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Have you checked out “Fuzzy Nation”, “Red Shirts”, or the “Lock In” series? All fun stories by Scalzi in similar veins (Lock In is a bit more serious, but not like The Interdependency).

        • tjhart85@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I have!

          I’ve yet to find anything Scalzi has written that I’m not a fan of.

          Another less known gem is Agent To The Stars … Had me laughing in a way usually reserved for re-reads of The HitchHikers Guide To The Galaxy!

  • Teali0@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss. I’m maybe a quarter or a third of the way through it and I quite like it! It’s been a slow-go mostly just because I’m not good at dedicating time to read. I recently got the audio book to make more progress while driving.

    • McBinary@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Patrick did a short cameo on the twitch show “Critical Role” which is a D&D campaign that is led and played by voice actors. It’s incredible if you’ve never watched it. Patrick’s role was a paladin and he was a little awkward with the format, but his character was very good and some of the notes left behind by him were incredible for building the story up even more even after he left.

  • IllegallyBlonde@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    American Prometheus, the Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer, by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin.

    I wanted to check it out before the movie comes out, and I highly recommend it for a very in depth view of his life.

    I also recently finished On the Origin of Time, by Thomas Hertog, which I also recommend. It’s about Stephen Hawking’s final ideas and theories, told by one of his closest proteges. There are some incredible ideas in this book that I had never heard of before, and I’m a cosmology nerd.

  • Prefix4578@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    About to finish The word for world is forest, by Ursula K. LeGuin

    It’s sci-fi, about the clash between Earth colonizers on a world covered by a forest and the people already living there.

    Beautifully written and super short. She’s able to show a lot in basically 100 pages
    So I cannot recommend it enough! She’s just so good at depicting other societies and putting and anthropological point of view

    Check The left hand of darkness too if this caught your interest

  • mrnotoriousman@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Halfway through book 2 of The Hyperion Cantos by Dan Simmons

    My friend described it as a “scifi version of the Canterbury Tales” and I am loving it so far!

    • McBinary@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Hyperion is my next in line to read. I caught a thread on reddit before leaving about best scifi books to read aside from the classics and Hyperion was way up there in recommendations. I’m pretty excited for it.

    • ThatIdiotMonro@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Might have to give it another go. Loved the first 2/3, but remember hating the last bit. Seems I was alone in that, though.

      • jimmigee@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        The last bit was jarring for me. I still love that book, but it felt like two separate novels back-to-back.

  • Andjhostet@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I just finished Heart of Darkness. Wow, what a dark and wild ride. I also rewatched Apocalypse Now and it’s amazing as ever, and much better now that I’ve read the source material. Side note, but the Theatrical Edition is so much better than redux it’s not even funny.

    I’ve also been reading Anne of Green Gables, when I need something a bit brighter. I’m not going to lie though. After Heart of Darkness, it feels a bit unimportant and I’m losing steam with it a bit.

    I’m also rereading Watership Down. I might take a break from this to focus on Anne of Green Gables. I love Watership Down, but two kids books at the same time is a bit much.

    For my next serious read, I’m probably going to pick up some Hesse. I have Narcissus and Goldmund, or Beneath the Wheel, excited for both.

  • herriott101@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I just finished Wind, Sand and Stars by Antoine de Saint-Exupery. It’s an autobiographical piece from the Author of Little Prince about his days flying between the wars.

    https://bookwyrm.social/book/196242/s/wind-sand-and-stars

    I’m just about to move onto Femina by Janina Remirez. Which is a history of the world told through the eyes of the deliberately women left out of it. I’m looking forward to it, it sounds excellent. Filling a much needed gap in the popular understanding of women’s role in history.

    https://bookwyrm.social/book/705231/s/femina

  • GeekFTW@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Had a need to be silly for a bit so I decided to re-read both The Zombie Survival Guide (Max Brooks) and The Zombie Combat Manual (Roger Ma). Been a long time and guess it’s time to ‘brush up on the basics’ lmao.

  • smallaubergine@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Inglorious Empire by Shashi Tharoor. A friend of mine turned me onto the book, Tharoor does a really good job of laying out how exactly the British Empire decimated in the indian region’s economy through its brutal rule

  • tjhart85@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Leviathan Falls
    James S. A. Corey / Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck
    Science Fiction / Space Opera
    I’m about half way in and enjoying it so far.

    As for recommending it … well, it’s book 9 in a series that also includes a ton of short stories. I’d definitely recommend the series, but wouldn’t recommend starting here!

    I’d also highly recommend the show since it was a fantastic bit of story telling and thee authors (mostly Ty from what I gather) were involved and had writing input on.

    Quick series summary stolen from Wikipedia and edited to not give overall spoilers:

    The Expanse is set in a future in which humanity has colonized much of the Solar System, but does not have interstellar travel. The G-force exerted during acceleration when travelling across the Solar System is debilitating without the use of special drugs. In the asteroid belt and beyond, tensions are rising between Earth’s United Nations, Mars, and the outer planets. The residents of the outer planets have developed a creole language due to their physical isolation from Earth and Mars. The series initially takes place in the Solar System, using many real locations such as Ceres and Eros in the asteroid belt, several moons of Jupiter, with Ganymede and Europa the most developed, and small science bases as far out as Phoebe around Saturn and Titania around Uranus, as well as well-established domed and underground settlements on Mars and the Moon.


    Also - as a sidenote: Not really sold on Bookwyrm being a replacement for Goodreads, but I hope it becomes one!

  • psyspoop@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Still trudging ever so slowly through Crossroads of Twilight. I’ve barely been reading lately, hopefully I can find the willpower to finish it out so I can move on to the next books which I’ve heard get more interesting.

    • dragna@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      ah close to the end of the 5 book slog. Honestly only Jordan could get away with it (barely).

  • NoRodent@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    On my nightstand:

    The Wandering Earth, by Liu Cixin (author of the famous Three Body Problem trilogy), hard(-ish) sci-fi.

    It’s a collection of short stories named after the first story, Wandering Earth. I’m still only in the very beginning of the first story but it already introduces some really interesting ideas which is what I loved about the Three Body Problem. So I’m sure I’ll like the rest. If you liked TBP, I’d definitely recommend.

    On my phone:

    Hyperion, by Dan Simmons, 1989, sci-fi/space opera(?)

    Does it need introducing?

    Anyway, since I don’t read on my phone all that much and usually only in short bursts (meaning I usually read each page at least twice), for the past month, maybe even more, I’ve been slowly getting through the first chapter (The Priest’s Tale) but once it got to the cruciform thing, I had to finish that chapter in one sitting. Now I started the second chapter, The Soldier’s Tale, and can’t wait for being mind blown again. Already got amused by this:

    There were tales of cadets receiving fatal wounds in the OCS:HTN sims and being pulled dead from their immersion creches.

    So… If you die in the Matrix, you die in real life too. Is that where they got that idea from? :) It’s always fun reading through old sci-fi classics and finding likely inspiration for newer stuff or even inventing something that everyone else then uses later. Asimov’s Foundation was all like this, so many things that eg. Star Wars straight up copied (eg. Trantor/Coruscant).

  • Kiwiapple87@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Sci-fi book Stargate SG-1 Sacrifice Moon by Julie Fortune. And I like it so far it’s written fairly well. At least well enough to satisfy my craving for new Stargate stories.

    I am also readying the fantasy book Yumi and the Nightmare Painter by Brandon Sanderson. And so far it’s great! But I just started this one so it’s hard to really say much right now