What are you reading in 2022?


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Cadence

Legend
Supporter
Just finished Moon Pool by Merritt (from Appendix N). I really liked the first half and then it was... okish. To much tell instead of show? And the cosmology was just ok.

Reading the collected Lord Darcy now.

(First time on both books).

"Lord Darcy" (the collected edition edited by Eric Flint) was spectacular.

Have two more Merritt books to go to next.
 

KiloGex 22

Villager
Finally getting around to reading UbiquiCity. I've had the book for a year, but just never got around to it. Got it because I was playing in a game based in the world, but then the game ended. Still an incredible setting, so I'm still moving on to it.
 

Finished de Camp's The Tritonian Ring. I enjoyed the story, but it's got problems. I read a tone of Appendix N and adjacent works, so I'm used to a certain level of dated, problematic content. But The Tritonian Ring hit my tolerance threshold in a few spots. There's some really egregious, offensive stuff in it. And the offhand way in which it's presented somehow makes it even worse.

Now I'm reading Samuel R. Delany's The Jewels of Aptor.
 

G

Guest 7034872

Guest
I just finished Zelazny's Amber Chronicles (thanks again to Snarf). The first several books I enjoyed very much, though I admit the whole thing did become formulaic after a while: mix in equal portions of Sam Spade, the Three Musketeers, incessant political intrigue (Bond-style explanatory monologues and all) a funny kind of Neoplatonism, and David Lewis' pluralism about possible worlds, and there you have it. Really, though, that's the worst I can say of the books by way of criticism. They were fun, crisply-written, easy reads, and generally a lot more well-thought-out than most stuff I see today. I'm not likely to re-read them, but I do recommend them.
 
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WayneLigon

Adventurer
Currently reading (and in a few cases, re-reading) the entire Maradaine series by Marshall Ryan Maresca


The setting is a low-magic pre-gunpowder world about at 'Age of Sail' levels of sophistication and ingenuity, helped on in places by geniuses like Verci Rynax. Most of the action concerns the huge City of Maradaine.

Right now, there are four series, and a stand-alone book:
The Maradaine Novels (The Thorn)
The Maradaine Constabulary
The Streets of Maradaine
The Maradaine Elite
Stand alone: An Unintended Voyage

There are overarching plots between all the books, which run in parallel with each others. There are two suggested reading methods:

1) In-world chronological means the first books of each series, in the order above.

2) Sticking with the same characters reading order is:
The Streets of Maradaine
The Maradaine Novels (The Thorn)
The Maradaine Constabulary
The Maradaine Elite

Both end with 'An Unintended Voyage'

Then Phase Two starts with 'Assassins of Consequence', which is Thorn Book 4



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I enjoyed Delany's The Jewels of Aptor. It reminded me a bit of a more pulpy A Canticle for Leibowitz, though of course Delany infuses it with layers of meaning as he does.

Now I'm back to the Wayward Children series with Seanan McGuire's In an Absent Dream.
 

Blue

Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal
Haven't been reading for enjoyment as much recently.

I'm in the middle of two books, but I've had urges recently for some short reads based on mood. One was The Rolling Stones by Robert Heinlein, but I could not find my copy and was denied. The other was Chess With A Dragon by David Gerrold. I picked it up after arriving home Sunday night, and finished it in one sitting.

It's a concise read, a novella in length at best, and spends little to none of that on character development. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't pack quite a story into those few pages. My favorite chapter is like five paragraphs long, and the next chapter is even shorter.

The pages are yellowing, but except for some touchstones to the USSR as shorthand for descriptions of a side character it has held up well. Hard to say of a lot of SF of that era.

It's so short I really don't want to say anything about it as basically everything is plot relevant, except that humanity feels correctly portrayed.

It has 3.8/5 on GoodReads, and that's probably where it belongs. For the effort you put into reading it, you'll get a lot out. Including, it seems, an urge out of the blue to reread it four or five years later.
 

Richards

Legend
I finished The Bone Palace on the plane today (it was another courier trip day, this time to the east coast and back) and moved on to a book I picked up at a Half-Price Books I discovered over by the Gamers store where we took my son's Playstation 4 to get fixed a town away: Destroyer #63: The Sky is Falling. Yep, another novel in the series featuring Remo Williams and Chiun, the Master of Sinanju, this time putting a stop to a superweapon that drills holes in the ozone layer and turns pure sunlight into a deadly beam. Light-hearted fun and almost always worth a read; this one's as entertaining as expected.

Johnathan
 

Levistus's_Leviathan

5e Freelancer
I recently finished Skyward and Starsight by Brandon Sanderson. I really enjoyed Skyward. Starsight was still enjoyable, but I liked it less than Skyward (don't get me wrong, the books aren't bad, he just took a different direction with the series after the first book than I would have preferred). I started Cytonic, but stopped midway through it because I just wasn't invested enough in it to finish it (for now, at least).

I've now moved on to The Golden Compass by Phillip Pullman. I'm only about 50 pages in, but I'm enjoying it so far. So far it really hasn't explained some of the main elements of the setting necessary to understanding the story, but I've also read The Way of Kings, so I'm fairly accustomed to that feeling.
 
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