Results 46 to 60 of 69
Thread: Reading in June 2012
-
June 20th, 2012, 09:54 AM #46
And in this week's update we have:
finished:
Clifford D. Simak's Our Children's Children
read:
Arthur C. Clarke's Childhood's End
Clifford D. Simak's A Death in the House and Out of Their Minds
Ursula K. LeGuin's Old Music and the Slave Women
Isaac Asimov's Fantastic Voyage
J.G. Ballard's Crash (I know, not really SF)
currently reading:
Cliffod D. Simak's Why Call Them Back from Heaven?
I'm having fun with the CDS books, got a kick out of Childhood's End take on the future (in fact I even blogged about that one), I endured Crash (yes, I know, I brought it on myself), and Old Music... and Fantastic Voyage added a nice bit of variety to my week.
-
June 20th, 2012, 02:33 PM #47
-
June 21st, 2012, 12:20 PM #48
Finished Alastair Reynolds' Revelation Space. I liked it. Gonna start Isaac Asimov's Prelude to Foundation. Haven't read any Asimov since middle school, when I read I, Robot and The Gods Themselves. Really looking forward to finally starting the Foundation books.
-
June 21st, 2012, 01:58 PM #49
-
June 21st, 2012, 02:53 PM #50Administrator Administrator
- Join Date
- Jul 2001
- Location
- Hobbit Towers, England
- Posts
- 11,414
- Blog Entries
- 126
Finished Robopocalypse. Hmmm. Entertaining but scarcely cutting edge. Review at SFFWorld soon.
Now reading Samit Basu's Turbulence, a superhero story but set in South Asia. Really impressed so far. Think Heroes, but with a better plot and a nicely different environment.
MarkMark
-
June 21st, 2012, 05:58 PM #51
I started Existence by David Brin. Although there is a steep familiarization curve (i.e. adapting to a century, give or take, of cultural evolution), I like what I've read thus far (approx. 50pp).
-
June 22nd, 2012, 08:53 AM #52
Started reading a couple of "oldies" Merchanter's Luck by C.J. Cherryh and In Honor of the Queen by David Weber while still working my way through The Neutronium Alchemist by Peter Hamilton (which I still enjoy but need a break from on occasion). Will let everyone know how it goes!
-
June 22nd, 2012, 10:35 AM #53
-
June 22nd, 2012, 02:04 PM #54
-
June 22nd, 2012, 06:24 PM #55
Yes, what happened was that several years ago I was left without a TV. I couldn't afford an HD one at the time (they were still kind of expensive), and I didn't feel like either wasting my money on an old-fashioned one or going into debt. Anyway by the time I had managed to save enough to afford the one actually I wanted I had already gotten used to being TV-less, and I just never went back. I read on average two or three hours a day, which is basically the same amount of time I used to spend watching TV on a daily basis, and that does translate into roughly 100 pages a day.
-
June 23rd, 2012, 10:50 PM #56
I finished reading the first four of the 'Ender' series by Orson Scott Card..Ender's Game, Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide and Children of the Mind. Looking at these four as a series, I would say I enjoyed my time with these characters very much, though it decreased slightly in Xenocide and even more so with Children.
Ender's Game and Speaker are truly two highlights in the genre that I have read. Xenocide was a bit repetitive, but I still appreciated the struggles all the characters took in terms of protecting their own determinations in the right to life. Children was good in the parts where it felt it took the story forward, but some of the dialogue began to wane and the many parts that felt like a recap were a chore to push through.
-
June 24th, 2012, 01:57 PM #57
I decided to stick with Scalzi and am almost through with Android's Dream. I think Scalzi is just a very funny version of Heinlein. Fun, quick reads.
-
June 24th, 2012, 02:04 PM #58
-
June 24th, 2012, 03:29 PM #59Administrator Administrator
- Join Date
- Jul 2001
- Location
- Hobbit Towers, England
- Posts
- 11,414
- Blog Entries
- 126
Finished Samit Basu's novel, Turbulence. Great read. Superheroes, but mainly in India rather than the US or Britain (although there's a great ending in London.) Gives a very different perspective on things. Fast, funny, intelligent. SFFWorld review to follow.
MarkMark
-
June 26th, 2012, 12:38 AM #60Registered User
- Join Date
- May 2004
- Location
- Canberra, Australia
- Posts
- 1,103
I got caught up reading Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick over the weekend. I’ve had it lying around for ages, but never read it. I picked it up on a whimsy and couldn’t put it down. What a book! People will at least have heard of it as the inspiration for Bladerunner, but it is very different to the film (much better actually if that's not too hard to believe). Don’t go into this expecting a cyberpunk action thriller. Instead, expect a very thoughtful, funny and dark examination of the nature of empathy and what it means to be human. I really liked Deckard’s character: a bureaucrat more than a cop, resigned to his own imminent death on a ruined world. It's a very existentialist book in a lot of way. Some of the scenes in this book will stay with me forever, especially the scene with the spider (people who have read it will know what I'm talking about). I’ll admit I was a bit confused by the ending, but in a good way because it left me with plenty to think about. This one goes onto my list of all-time favourites.



Reply With Quote
Good going! Do you have time to enjoy them at that speed?

Bookmarks