Recently Read:
Ringworld's Children, Larry Niven
The best Ringworld book since the original, IMO.
Gods of Mars, Edgar Rice Burroughs
I don't enjoy the Burroughs's Mars stories as much as a good Robert E. Howard yarn because John Carter is so over-the-top. He IS the high level fighter taking on armies single-handedly. Still, 'don't enjoy as much as a good Robert E. Howard yarn' is praising with faint criticism, and this was still a rip-roaring good read.
The City of Towers, Keith Baker
The Shattered Continent, Keith Baker
I was very pleasantly surprised by these. Most novels by game designers don't come off too well, but not only does Keith's enthusiasm for the setting shine through, he actually tells a really enjoyable story with solid characterization, too. I'll pick up the third one soon.
Perdido Street Station, China Mieville
Exceedingly well written, and at its peak toward the middle, one of the best horror novels I've ever read. Brilliant buildup of suspense leading to a shocking and terrifying reveal. Especially when I was reading it at 1:00 AM. Only, it's not really intended as horror, it started slow, and the resolution was anticlimatic. Overall, I liked it better than I expected and didn't mind the somewhat odd, if period-appropriate, late-19th/early-20th century socialist agitation nearly as much as I would have thought, but it definitely wasn't as good as I thought it would be for a while.
On Tap:
Probably nothing for a while; I've got a lot of work to do (including fiction, and I don't like to read too much during the actual working period of a fiction project), a couple of console games begging to be played, a campaign running. And then there's that whole social life thing...
When I get the time, I'll pick up the final Dreaming Dark book and probably another China Mieville, since I did enjoy PSS.