Reading in Science Fiction in November 2021

I know I've read at least one of them as I've got a paperback copy of Caliban's War and had it for years. Vaguely remember it as being pretty good. Haven't seen the TV series either but I have Leviathan Wakes lined up, which I got a 10th anniversary edition of not long ago. Looks like I'm in the same boat as you, Raf.
 
What no reviews for books 8 and 9? VBG

I'm behind with the series personally.... but I think Rob's kept up! Happy to help though, Raf. I don't think there's any major spoilers in there, btw, but it's been a while, so just in case.... WARNING! WARNING! :)


And whilst I'm on this: I think that the 10th Anniversary edition (here in the UK at least) looks horrible:

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Another one of those new type of covers where the font/type obscures the rest of the book. Not for me, I'm afraid!
 
I'm behind with the series personally.... but I think Rob's kept up! Happy to help though, Raf. I don't think there's any major spoilers in there, btw, but it's been a while, so just in case.... WARNING! WARNING! :)


And whilst I'm on this: I think that the 10th Anniversary edition (here in the UK at least) looks horrible:

image001-5.png


Another one of those new type of covers where the font/type obscures the rest of the book. Not for me, I'm afraid!

It's a tad lurid, true, and I think the dust jacket should have been the same design as the hardcover. But if you want a hardback version, this is what you get.
But hey! It'll be worth a fortune in a few years!! :p
 
I read Far from the Light of Heaven by Tade Thompson, which is basically a locked room murder mystery set on a spaceship. It was OK, plenty of humour throughout and unusual characters popping in. But just thought it was a bit "SF lite", and some of the characters felt a bit superficial. A shame as I was expecting better after the promising Wormwood Trilogy.
 
Started The Deep Man by M Mersault (a debut coming from Baen in Jan 22, got the e-arc they are selling now as I really liked the sample and am in the mood for such); so far a variation on the far future Human imperium with advanced technology and many Houses; here humanity is depending on alien technology that comes in trading waves (with only the Emperor knowing by Quantum Entanglement what the benevolent aliens want to trade for) every seven years or so, hence the Houses depend on the Emperor's goodwill for knowing what goods they need to stock up.

Another quirk of this universe is the separation of the population in Vested citizens who enjoy all the rights, privileges but also responsibilities (including making a living, being ready at any time to duel for their lives if another Vested citizen takes offence at them, being able to ingest mood-altering drugs etc so the higher classes and the gutter of the empire consists of such), and demicit people - the majority - who are housed, fed, given free healthcare and education, as well as money stipends - but whose lives are extremely regulated in many ways - eg they cannot manually fly aircars, serve in the military or on spaceships, take drugs etc; as per reforms some centuries back under the current Yung dynasty, every demicit has one opportunity per lifetime to apply for vested citizenship after taking some (free) classes and passing a citizenship exam; this way they give up their assured but constricted lifestyle for the possibility of advancement, quick death if they unwittingly insult another citizen in the mood for a quick dueling kill, or decay to homelessness and the gutter.

All seemed to hum along nicely until the emperor is assassinated, a cluster is in rebellion with some serious starships at hand and rumors of discontent from the Heavyworlds citizens (making up 2% of the Imperium population but 50% of its Marines and 20% of its warships personnel and who have been looked upon as almost "subhuman" for their appearance and mores for centuries) who are far more dangerous than few planets rebelling.

The main heroes, young (30's - as usual there is rejuv and people can live from 100+ to 400+ depending on their wealth) starship captain, Commander Saef Sinclair-Maru of a house that was crucial in putting the Yung dynasty on the throne but then failed to excel at the politics of centuries of peace, so slowly hemorrhaging assets and lands, and Inga Maru, his cousin from an impoverished family (half) branch who has quite unusual traits have to untangle what happens, discover the conspirators (if there are such), defeat the rebels and restore the House Sinclair-Maru to its due place,

A fanatical follower of the House creeds (including achieving the Deep Man state) and of the Dynasty maxims (one being that dueling to the death is necessary to prune the aristocracy from incompetents and jerks), Raef has already 7 aristocratic dueling kills to his name and is one of a few names explicitly appearing as "not to offend at any cost" in the courses for new citizens, so he is miffed at first that Inga, a collateral of the family knows and follows them too, but of course that starts coming in handy when assassination attempts start piling up and he even didn't yet get to his ship and selected his crew...

Fun and fast so far and if it keeps going I expect to be a top read of 2022 for me and a new author to watch
 
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I somehow managed to NOT read Lois McMaster Bujold until very recently. In my defence, she just did not figure in Dutch libraries / bookshops in the late eighties and nineties; the period which formed my basis voor SF. Asimov, Vance, Aldiss, Pohl, Bear, Niven..all present and accounted for, but no Bujold. Anyway, rectified this oversight last week. Started Shards of Honor, and now well underway in Barrayar. It's good! Starting out, I had a mild fear it would be a tad on the mushy side (copper haired female in distress falling for her stern but righteous captor), but i was soon set straight. Bujold does not shy away from the brutalities of war or the psychological or physical damage humans are willing to inflict on each other. Don't know whether I will finish the entire Vorkosigan saga, but very much enjoying it so far.
 
Finished The Deep Man by M Mersault and it was excellent till the end, while stopping at a good TBC point that promises a lot for the next installment which is now a huge asap; managed to be both funny and grim, lighter and serious, achieving a very good balance, while keeping its narrative energy and making one turn pages
 
I'm going to put "The Expanse" on my TBR list for now. Not quite ready to commit to a 9 novel series yet.

I did stumble onto a new (for me) space opera type author by the name of Bennet R. Coles. Read the first couple of chapters of his new 2 novel series. "Winds of Marque". It seems like it may be a mixed genre scfi / fantasy story, but I'm not far enough into the book to say for sure.

I like what I'm reading though.

 
I've been on a Fantasy kick for the last 9 books. I'm getting the ol' scifi urge again and was considering taking on James S,A. Corey's Expanse series. Looks to be 9 of them.

Any opinions on that series of books. Never saw the TV show.

I really struggled through the first half of the first book before the meat of the story kicked in, then I breezed through it and the next two books. I think Caliban's War (Book 2) has better characters in the mix.
 
I've been on a Fantasy kick for the last 9 books. I'm getting the ol' scifi urge again and was considering taking on James S,A. Corey's Expanse series. Looks to be 9 of them.

Any opinions on that series of books. Never saw the TV show.
The books are a great series, and go into more depth than the show. It’s best if you read them before watching the series. Keep in mind that there are also a series of shorter novellas that come before or after the main novels. These aren’t strictly necessary for the story, but fill in the backstory of the universe. Speaking of that, the Expanse itself is a well thought out place for the stories to take place. The whole series was reportedly planned out in advance and is populated by some interesting and complex characters.

It’s probably best that you watch the show after reading the books, as the show makes some fairly predictable changes to the way things are described. For example, all the main cast members are generally younger and sexier than described in the novels. I’m not knocking the show BTW, it’s good as well, but slightly different in some ways. The authors are actually involved in it’s production, so it’s more authentic than many adaptations.
 
Finished Ultima. As expressed by others, not as good as Proxima, but once it got going, definitely enjoyable. "One time on campaign..." <insert eye roll>

One more to go in my 4 book x 4 month challenge (really helped me make a dent in my TBR pile, might have to keep it going into 2022).

Fleet Elements by Walter Jon Williams up next. The last book in the series left me hanging, so anxious to get into this one.
 
Just finished the 2 novel series by Bennet R. Coles. "Winds of Marque" and "Dark Star Rising". There seems to be a bit of steampunk mixed in with solar sail technologies and no small amount of high seas pirating. I'm putting it here in the scif thread due to the space travel.

But the story is definitely a fantasy / scifi mixed genre offering. I read somewhere that the max acceleration you could get out of solar sail was about 10% the speed of light. In our solar system way out here on the rim, anyway.

This story take places in an empire spanning the core galactic worlds. Where the relative closeness of many suns cause strong, chaotic solar winds that drive the ships across space. Nothing is ever mentioned about relativistic effects as they ply the space lanes like ships on water.

Space battles are fought at fairly close range with broadside cannon fire. Ammo being solid ball & chain shot driven by black powder. But with laser and missiles used only when necessary. One scene is where a Captain has an old time photo (daguerreotype) taken and the characters marvel at the clarity. Ships are closed with and boarding parties sent out armed with swords & pistols.

Another scene has them using brass telescopes to spy out enemy ships from the bridge. It is an odd mix of technologies. There are mentions of musket fire during sorties.

Sir Francis Drake in space. All that said, it was an enjoyable read. Executive officer Sir Liam Blackwood is given Letters of Marque by the emperor to pose as a merchant and track down pirates and revolutionaries. Maybe a bit simplistic, but a good story.

Still feeling a bit of the innate space pirate-ness. So onto Chris Wooding's "Ketty Jay" series.
 
I've started on the Apocalypse books by Gary Gibson.

A duology followed by a third book....
(I haven't read enough yet to learn why it isn't published as a trilogy!)
 
Read about half of Galaxias by S Baxter so far (see the excellent review by Mark/Hobbit here that decided me on getting the book - I was more than half inclined as I am in a sf mood for now, but not yet to ready to tackle the huge N Stephenson recent novel, but the recent Baxter novels haven't really clicked though he has some earlier ones like Time and the Destiny Children novels that are favorites of mine);

Very entertaining so far and I really like it - if there is one complaint is that the characters seem kind of interchangeable, but the novel has energy and the combination of hard sf (learning all wants to know about the Sun that is currently known/speculated), medium-term world-building (by 2057 Alaska is the economic and political center of the (rump) USA as is Newcastle of the English federation, though King George VII -presumably the current 8-year-old prince - is still king of independent Scotland too though not of Wales) and storyline, works very well so far. Expect to finish it soon and to be another top 10 novel of 2021 which shapes up as a fairly strong year for me in sff
 
Read about half of Galaxias by S Baxter so far (see the excellent review by Mark/Hobbit here that decided me on getting the book

Thanks, Suciul. Really pleased you're enjoying it. Be interested to see what you think about the ending! :)

It's a bit of a given that Baxter's characters are often skimpy on details whilst he deals with bigger concepts. In that way he is very like Arthur C Clarke, IMO. That style's not for everyone, but I like it.

M.
 

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