Reading in SF, September 2024

This is the one with humans living with dinosaurs, isn't it? Always meant to read it, but never have. Be interested to know how it goes!

It is just a fantastic book! :)I'm surprised you haven't read it. But in terms of genre, this book is more science fiction or alternate history than fantasy.
And yes, in this book there were dinosaurs and humans living on Earth at the same time. There were also some other creatures like Neanderthals. The dinosaurs didn't die out, and they even managed to create their own civilisation. :) And it was a civilisation based more on biology than technology. I don't know how to explain it. But all their stuff was biological and alive, even their weapons and warm blankets.:rolleyes:
 
It is just a fantastic book! :)I'm surprised you haven't read it. But in terms of genre, this book is more science fiction or alternate history than fantasy.
Thanks Raya. I will read all sorts, and I do generally like Harrison's books. I may even have had a copy of this at one point, but for some reason didn't read it. Too many books, too little time... :)
 
Finished The Exodus Gambit (House Adamant 1) by G Stewart about which I talked a bit above and it was excellent so I am eager to start book 2, The Old Guard (book 3 is due in March 2025 so luckily no long waits here - all btw are KU); my Goodreads review:

Very entertaining with great characters and set-up. While the storyline is a familiar one, the execution matters a lot and here it kept me turning the pages until I finished it and I definitely plan to read the second series book next.

The universe is also fairly familiar - a central "democratic" and super powerful human polity dominated to a large extent by corrupt and profit-seeking giant interstellar corporations, United Worlds here, the plucky small kingdom of Adamant on the far side of the human space with six habitable worlds and a locally powerful navy, with close enemies (the Richelieu Dominion) and friends (the Concordat of Amal Jadid the native polity of Frederick Adamant-Griffin, the Prince Consort and father of our heroine, lt commander Lorraine Adamant, youngest and fourth in succession to her mother Valeriya the "King" of Adamant), other local polities of the fringe cluster where Adamant is located with diverse relationships in-between and with the UW looming over them.

The government of Adamant, a democratic monarchy has the interesting feature that it doesn't have a crown prince/princess but 5 Pentarchs - in the usual succession order but all need to be over 18, so Lorraine is now 4th Pentarch as the youngest daughter after her two older brothers and older sister but when her twin baby nieces will become of age in 17 years, she will fall out of the Pentarchy, unless the "King" retires or dies and then a 6-month election from the 5 Pentarchs at the time decides the next ruler.
Similarly, her favorite uncle, Benjamin, commander of the Adamant Navy and famed admiral who decisively defeated the Richelieu Dominion in their latest aggressive war a decade past is now 5th Pentarch, though he used to be Second Pentarch and one of the succession favorites alongside his sister Valeriya, but he was badly injured in the accident that killed their father so couldn't really contest the election and lost to his sister, loss which he seemed to have taken with grace, at least until now decades later...

Lorraine, now 28, admired and loved his uncle who taught her the military arts and much more - they have been keeping a long-distance chess contest for years in which Lorraine only recently started having occasional success - and she was eager to follow in his footsteps in the Navy, even being ready to resign her Pentarchy in favor of her cousin, Benjamin's heir, just before the action of the book starts as she most likely would anyway fall out of it in the future...

So when deployed on a space mission on the frigate Goldenrod and Benjamin executes his coup murdering all of Lorraine's family except potentially her second brother who was an army officer and could have been protected by the army who didn't love Benjamin for reasons explained in the book, Lorraine barely escapes assassination by luck and timely action of her chief bodyguard, major Vigo, only to be numb with grief and incredulity that her uncle could have done such a thing. After somehow internalizing all, she realizes that her uncle would have a bunch of other options for her neutralization, from more direct assassination attempts to destroying the ship, to simply faking proof that Lorraine was behind the murders (of course Benjamin faked an attempt on himself too which he "luckily" survived and then took power as emergency Regent until future time when the election for King could be held) so she has to think fast on her feet, hope that both her guard and the crew of Goldenrod would stay loyal and assess her options to respond...

The other interesting thing is the translight mode of travel (slower of course than wormholing) which is done in integral multiples of the speed of light (quanta of c) and of course that dictates a lot of the strategy and tactics of the book.

Overall excellent stuff so far and with a good ending at a tbc point, I am eager to see what happens next and I highly recommend this series.
 
Thanks Raya. I will read all sorts, and I do generally like Harrison's books. I may even have had a copy of this at one point, but for some reason didn't read it. Too many books, too little time... :)

I also often find myself in a ‘too many books, too little time’ situation. ;)But this book is really good!
 
But there were sections mainly in the last half that were long info dumps that really disrupted the flow. They did help explain what was happening, but they were too verbose with irrelevant information. I lost my way a bit after that to find it just an average to good overall.

Quite agree with this. It always perplexes me when people cite this as one of their favourite Lem books and I wonder if they've actually read it and not just seen either of the two film versions, which are far more romantic and emotional. Solaris is a very interesting book but it's a dry and difficult read and more like a work of art than a satisfying story.
 
Speaking of dry, difficult reads: Green Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson. I've been at this one since early summer and have finally finished it as the days are getting shorter. I found the first half fascinating in the way that Red Mars is: great characters, solid well told adventures, different factions and new native Martian children, all interesting and followable.

The second half - after it becomes clear that either a rebellion or another terrorist attack is imminent - became for me like a stack of notes detailing everything said in every meeting about absolutely everything and everyone: where they were going, what they were eating, who they were sleeping with (currently), which side they were on, then whose side they were really on, etc.

There is far too much going on 'off the page' as well (ie: hearsay about such and such an uprising here, or reports of this going on there). I was losing the will to live and could only skim read the last 100 pages which is just like one very long news report. Plus most of the original characters are pretty nasty people by this time and it's difficult to feel empathy towards many of them.

To be fair to the book I had a patch of at least 1 month in the middle where I didn't read anything of it at all, so maybe I lost my way with it a bit. That said, I think KSR had so many ideas he wanted to cram into the book that he resorted to just listing everything without thinking about the readability of it at all.

Not one I'd care to re read, but 3/5 for the first half.
 
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Quite agree with this. It always perplexes me when people cite this as one of their favourite Lem books and I wonder if they've actually read it and not just seen either of the two film versions, which are far more romantic and emotional. Solaris is a very interesting book but it's a dry and difficult read and more like a work of art than a satisfying story.

I think Solaris is a creepy book rather than romantic. Just imagine a giant baby appearing out of nowhere, ghost guests and other things mentioned in it! But it has some very interesting ideas.
 
Currently rereading The Chanur Saga by C.J. Cherryh an omnibus of the first three books, which is one of my all time favorite space operas. Finally put in an order for four new books, one scifi and three fantasy. Looking forward to some fall reading.
 
Currently rereading The Chanur Saga by C.J. Cherryh an omnibus of the first three books, which is one of my all time favorite space operas.
Decided a couple of weeks ago that I was going to try her Foreigner series again. Twenty years ago, I found that the first book was good, but hard work. I have the next half a dozen books in the pile ready to try again. :)
 
Saw mention of Rise of The Winter Wolf by Shawn Purdy either here or another forum comparing it to Dungeon Runner Carl series (which i love dearly) so I downloaded the kindle version book 1, Rise of The Winter Wolf: The Initialization. About 15% in and so far Im find the writing puerile and derivative. Can't figure out why it has a 4.4 rating on Goodreads.
Will continue some more in hope that it improves, but in no way is it remotely in same class as DRC.
 
Finished The Old Guard by G. Stewart second book in the House Adamant series (talked also about the first book, The Exodus Gambit, in this thread); excellent stuff and the only annoying thing is that the next installment will be available in March 2025 only; my Goodreads review:

Excellent sequel to The Exodus gambit - asking the dominant human power, the United Worlds based on Earth, for help restoring the legitimate government of Adamant, Lorraine and her team acquire new friends and new enemies, find out more about her uncle's coup, and its enablers from the powerful interstellars that didn't like the anticolonial policy of Lorraine's mother and finally she has to make a fundamental decision about how to proceed.

Also lots of backstory about Lorraine's family and some insight into why her uncle turned so decisively against it (didn't help that Lorraine's mother used some underhanded methods that denigrated her brother Benjamin before the monarchical election - methods she later regretted).

A lot of descriptions of Earth's civilization, many sfnal allusions (of course we had the planet Tolkien in the first volume, now we have the Mesa Alignment which promotes genetical modification of the human genome beyond the currently accepted protocols) and much more about the self-aware AI's - called synthetic intelligences which have full personhood and rights under the Asimov protocols etc

Another good ending at a perfect tbc point and the only thing I don't like, namely that we have to wait until March 2025 for the next installment...

Highly recommended and continuing to fulfill the promise of the first volume.
 
Finished The Doomsday Vault by S. Harper a 2024 reissue of a 2011 novel, the first in the Clockwork Empire series (though sadly first and last for me in the series) interesting premise and lots of inventiveness but the action is of the non-stop eventually jumping the shark type with the book reading more like a cartoon where the heroes go from peril to peril unscathed and without really any repercussion or reflection, so it kind of gets boring at some point; no more books in the series, and most likely from the author for me.

Blurb:

In a clockwork Britannia, Alice's prospects are slim. At 21, her age and her unladylike interest in automatons have sealed her fate as an undesirable marriage prospect. But a devastating plague sends Alice off in a direction beyond the pale—towards a clandestine organization, mad inventors, life-altering secrets, and into the arms of an intrepid fiddle-playing airship pilot.
 
I finished Adrian Tchaikovsky’s Doors of Eden earlier this month and really enjoyed it. Some parts were slow and could have benefitted from a heavier hand with editing, but the overall world building was fantastic. I loved the different branches of earth’s timeline and evolution, and Tchaikovsky did a great job of tying everything together in the end. And what other novel has space-faring giant trilobites?

I also wrapped up Dark Matter by Blake Crouch. The twist in the last third of the book added depth to the story, but I was overall unimpressed with Crouch’s writing style. One of those authors that doesn’t click for me… it’s not objectively poor, just not my speed.

Finally, to break up portions of The Archimedes Engine, I dipped my toe into Asimov’s Foundation universe with Caves of Steel. While there are portions of the novel that clearly date the story, the plot still holds up. A great mixture of SF and noir/detective elements. The characters felt a little flat (except for the main robot, ironically), but the goal of the story felt more like a humans/robots sociology thought experiment, which I am all here for. It was a relatively quick read. I’m looking forward to reading through the stories in The Complete Robot once the used eBay copy gets here.

Back to The Archimedes Engine and its (enjoyable and compelling) density.
 
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Finished Starship's Mage by G Stewart (first in a loong series so I guess a popular one - #16 is scheduled for January) and it was interesting but not as good as I expected overall, though the series has promise so I may read more. My Goodreads review:

Intriguing premise and universe with magic-powered starships (the "magic" being actually something genetically engineered several centuries previously) - mages, pirates, fleets revenge etc
The book has energy and moves well but it is of the non-stop action continually raising the stakes type getting close to jumping the shark so to speak. Too many convenient happenings and just so converging plotlines for full enjoyment though the series has promise and I will try the next book sooner rather than later

Blurb:

A ship that cannot leave. A Mage that will not stay. A meeting of desperations. In a galaxy tied together by the magic of the elite Jump Mages, Damien Montgomery graduates into their numbers - only to discover that without connections, he can't find a ship and is stuck in the Sherwood system. Pirates attacked David White's jump freighter, leaving him with a dead Mage and a damaged ship - stuck in Sherwood, where a grieving father has blacklisted him from hiring a replacement Jump Mage. When their desperate needs meet, Damien Montgomery is drawn into a conflict with the most powerful criminal organization in the galaxy-and to the attention of the Mage-King of Mars himself!
 

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