What are you reading in 2023?

Zaukrie

New Publisher
I've started the second inheritance trilogy book. I'm unsure how I feel so far.... Not sure I should read them this close together
 

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For the next book, yeah, I might do a re-read first. Because as amazing as those books are, each one of after the first throws you right into the deep end first thing.

Just starting Nona the Ninth. It's nearly as difficult to understand as Harrow was. While I like the Locked Tomb series and think Tamsyn Muir is a very talented author, it is a bit frustrating having to relearn how to read them with every new book. I really hope Alecto will be a bit easier to read/understand.
 

Blue

Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal
In my scattered reread of Discworld, I have just restarted the Witches subseries with Equal Rites. After having last read Tiffany Aching, the last few Watch books, and the Moist von Lipwig, it really is a jump back - chronologically written so much earlier both the tone of Sir Terry's writing and the maturity of the Discworld setting itself were a jump backward.

But not the humor. Had me laughing every other page with his particular brand of funny. Looking forward to the next one.

Currently reading The Dirty Streets of Heaven, a heaven & hell urban fantasy by Tad Williams. I'm about 70 pages into it, and it's not clicking. Basically by this point I need to care about either the protagonist or the plot. But Bobby Dollar hasn't made me like him yet, and there has been too little in the mystery to give me a bone to worry. I'm still continuing, the setting is curious enough to ensure that. It just hasn't hooked me yet.
 

Levistus's_Leviathan

5e Freelancer
For the next book, yeah, I might do a re-read first. Because as amazing as those books are, each one of after the first throws you right into the deep end first thing.
I don't necessarily mind being "thrown in the deep end" at the start of a book. Like I said in last year's "what are you reading" thread, I really enjoyed The Way of Kings, and it does exactly that. But I like how in the Stormlight Archive, by the end of the first book you learn the rules of the setting and every sequel builds on your understanding on it.

But with the Locked Tomb, Tamsyn Muir doesn't let you get your bearings. You're thrown in the deep end with every book. It's like if every book in the Stormlight Archive was as hard to understand as The Way of Kings. I don't think that's necessarily a bad thing, but it's not really a decision I'm fond of at the moment. It certainly doesn't make her series easy to read or understand.

I'll see how it goes. My opinion of Harrow changed about 2/3rds of the way through it, so hopefully that will happen with Nona, too.
 

Blue

Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal
My wife and I have started the Dresden Files as bedtime reading. We finished The Expanse with 2022.
I have also started reading Terrorism and the Ethics of War by Stephen Nathanson.
The Expanse. I hope you liked it, I found it really good.

My wife and I really like the Dresden Files as well. The first few books are still finding the beat though - Storm Front is both a very important book, but also perhaps the "least Harry" of them. And it contains some things that end up not quite true later in the series.
 

Blue

Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal
I don't necessarily mind being "thrown in the deep end" at the start of a book. Like I said in last year's "what are you reading" thread, I really enjoyed The Way of Kings, and it does exactly that. But I like how in the Stormlight Archive, by the end of the first book you learn the rules of the setting and every sequel builds on your understanding on it.

But with the Locked Tomb, Tamsyn Muir doesn't let you get your bearings. You're thrown in the deep end with every book. It's like if every book in the Stormlight Archive was as hard to understand as The Way of Kings. I don't think that's necessarily a bad thing, but it's not really a decision I'm fond of at the moment. It certainly doesn't make her series easy to read or understand.

I'll see how it goes. My opinion of Harrow changed about 2/3rds of the way through it, so hopefully that will happen with Nona, too.
Book before last was Gideon the Ninth, really loved it by the end. What's stopped me from reading Harrow is brain lock - Gideon the Ninth was available on Kindle Unlimited. The others aren't. And I'm going to be dropping Kindle Unlimited soon. My brain has this thing where if I purchase a series, it's either all physical or all ebook. So I'm going back and forth between buying the books, including the one I just read, on either physical or ebook and not being able to make a decision.

Neurotypical people don't have problems like this. ;)
 

Levistus's_Leviathan

5e Freelancer
Book before last was Gideon the Ninth, really loved it by the end. What's stopped me from reading Harrow is brain lock - Gideon the Ninth was available on Kindle Unlimited. The others aren't. And I'm going to be dropping Kindle Unlimited soon. My brain has this thing where if I purchase a series, it's either all physical or all ebook. So I'm going back and forth between buying the books, including the one I just read, on either physical or ebook and not being able to make a decision.

Neurotypical people don't have problems like this. ;)
Ugh, I have a similar issue. I was waiting on buying Nona the Ninth until a paperback version was released because I have paperback copies of the first two books and I want all of the books of the same series to match. But I got the hardcover version of Nona for Christmas, so now I have the first two books as paperback and the second as the hardcover version. This will bother me every time I look at my bookshelf.
 

Mad_Jack

Legend
Ugh, I have a similar issue. I was waiting on buying Nona the Ninth until a paperback version was released because I have paperback copies of the first two books and I want all of the books of the same series to match. But I got the hardcover version of Nona for Christmas, so now I have the first two books as paperback and the second as the hardcover version. This will bother me every time I look at my bookshelf.

For me, it's been the Jack Reacher novels - because I'm poor I only buy books from used stores or the local Goodwill, which has made trying to get the whole series in the same paperback format really hard.
 

Mercurius

Legend
I just finished Arthur C Clarke's City and the Stars, one of his earlier novels from the 1950s. Very cool and evocative imagery, with his usual big cosmological/historical speculations. Takes place a billion years in the future.
 

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