still in the mood for space opera (and still not getting into Poseidon Wake), stumbled upon the releases of Ian Sales new series (Age of Discord) starting with A Prospect of War; bought an ebook earlier today after liking the sample pages and it reads very well so far about 50 pages or so in
Sorry, where did you get the ebook? I can't find it at any of the usual retailers
EDIT: Nevermind. I've just found the link from the author's blog.
Still trying to get my head around Al Robertson's Crashing Heaven, which I'm in the middle of writing a review of. Keep veering between 'brilliant' and 'bonkers'. An AI that can control people and runs around on a space station as a wooden puppet.... yeah. Still working on it!
Looking forward to both your review and reading that one myself.
I have to admit, Mark, I was surprised and maybe a little disappointed we didn't see more of the Morlock's underground society. But Wells' novel was much more interested in ideas than an adventure plot, which might be more of a focus for the film versions. I'm keen to give the Pal film a viewing.The Time Machine and War of the Worlds are two of my favourite all-time stories. And unbelievably short for so many big ideas. (I also love the 1950's movies, though they don't follow the books that closely.)
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I've since started Screw The Galaxy by Steven Campbell, the first book in his Hard Luck Hank series. While I initially thought this would be a semi-humorous tongue-in-cheek type of novel, it's surprised me with the depth it has. Good, solid characters and a story that is keeping me interested really marks this one out as a surprise read - I seem to be finding a few of those lately.
Liked this one much more than you. I thought it held together very well. I am surprised it hasn't been nominated for more awards -- got a nod for the BSFA but not the Clarke. One of the better 2014 books I've read.This morning I finished reading Wolves by Simon Ings. It's an unusual novel; primarily mainstream with a hint of scifi through augmented reality, but ultimately it's a coming of age story of the two main male characters (Conrad and Michel), who have been friends since childhood.
It's quite well written, I found myself wanting to keep going to see how it ends up, but overall I would have to rate it average. Maybe because it is a bit of a mish-mash of events and genres, it doesn't cohere as well as it should.
Memorable but ultimately a loss of potential.
Liked this one much more than you. I thought it held together very well. I am surprised it hasn't been nominated for more awards -- got a nod for the BSFA but not the Clarke. One of the better 2014 books I've read.
I really liked it too, unfortunately I thought it went a bit down hill with the next books (second was still good, but by the third I thought the romance side of the story overtook the rest a bit too much).I'm reading Fortune's Pawn by Rachel Bach. It's the first book in the Paradox trilogy. Very entertaining so far.
