I’ve put together a collage of some books from last months What are you Reading? post. It’s mostly random, but the more discussion something gets the more it stands out to me. Going forward I’m going to make a new post every month to talk about what people are reading.

Here is last months post. What are you Reading? (July 2023)

At any rate, what are you currently reading or plan to read in August?

37 points

Currently reading 11-22-63. Pretty bloody grim and depressing in places, but good enough to hold my attention.

Finished Locked In by John Scalzi not long prior. Great thought experiment considering it was written long before covid too.

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2 points

I got about half way through 11-22-63 some years back. I think King is just too much bloat for me much of the time or I need to be in a different frame of mind to read him. I’ve always said I’d revisit it, but I haven’t.

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1 point

I find the audiobooks good for long drives when I’ve got time to kill, but can understand you sentiment.

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2 points

I did used to listen to them back when I often had a long commute. I have a harder time focusing on them if I’m not driving though. But that may be a better way to get into some books that aren’t working for me. Especially if the narrator is particularly good.

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9 points

Read Locked In recently and really enjoyed it! Would recommend it to anyone looking for their next adventure. Police procedural meets sci fi and a very satisfying read.

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-2 points

Ooohh I loved 11-22-63. Had to go and read IT as soon as I finished, so I could get some of the references.

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1 point

Read 11-22-63 recently while on a king kick. Love his ideas and was disappointed in the Hulu show, so I went to the source. Illustrates how difficult it would be as a present day man in the sixties. Modern, tolerant ideals clash with the racism, bigotry, ignorance of that era. With some time travel stuff every now and then to remind you this isn’t just a book about the sixties. Still a believable fantasy and compelling read . “The past is obdurate”

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10 points

I was re-reading The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Heinlein, which I read about 15 years ago and really enjoyed (even bought it for a friend as a gift). On the second read through… I found it much less entertaining (though the connection between the computer and the current LLM/AI hype is interesting), got about half-way through and basically stopped. I probably won’t finish it, which is kind of sad. Oh well, tastes change I guess.

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1 point

Is that the one with all the complicated relationships? I found it a little too detailed on that point, but otherwise a good read. I wouldn’t read it again though. I read Rendezvous With Rama around the same time and liked that a lot more.

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4 points

It is about a revolution on the moon, and it had some complicated relationships (a very different society where there “clans” and basically open marriages), but I don’t it was that bad. My current issue is that I can kind of see through libertarian ethos that permeates the book and at some points it’s basically Heinlein pontificating instead of moving the story along… which my younger self enjoyed. Now? not so much.

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14 points
*

I’m currently in the middle of Revelation Space by Alastair Reynolds. I’m only about 15% of the way through so I don’t have a great picture of what is going on or what it is about yet. It seems like the main premise is about an archeologist who has been working on an excavation of an ancient species on a distant planet for an extremely long period of time that likely has far reaching implications about the universe. I’ve definitely never read anything similar to this in the past.

The other book I plan on reading (listening to) is The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet by Becky Chambers of which I know basically nothing about. I tend to listen to a book whenever I can’t read such as when I’m driving or bathing and then read at times that I can like before sleeping. I find it is a good system to get through 2 books at once.

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4 points

I really enjoyed reading TLWtaSAP.

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3 points

It was incredibly refreshing in that it was almost just slice-of-life at times; so much time was dedicated to just getting to know the characters in not necessarily extreme scenarios.

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4 points

Revelation Space, the only book within which I saw the word “triumvirate” used outside of the “Our jimmies are eternal. None can rustle the Triumvirate.” meme.

If you want to get a wider feel more quickly of the Revelation Space worldbuilding, try Galactic North which is a short story collection featuring many varied shippets featuring characters from the main series.

To an ordinary person not interested in sci-fi world building, I would be more inclined to recommend Reynolds’s Pushing Ice or Century Rain which are self-contained.

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3 points

Galactic north really got me deep, after finishing the main trilogy. Id recommend reading it after for the full effect

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1 point

House of Suns is also fantastic. It’s my favorite one-book sci-fi anything ever.

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13 points

Neuromancer, count zero, blade runner (do androids dream…), burning chrome. Lots of cyberpunk stuff lately

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7 points

I really need to read Neuromancer at some point. It seems like one of those classics that every science fiction fan should have already read.

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5 points

I recall reading and enjoying Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep along with Man in the High Castle and A Scanner Darkly a while ago… I should attempt a re-read.

Everyone recommends Neuromancer, but when I tried it a while back… I got stuck in the first third and give up. I vaguely recall it had a lot of world building, which I’m not a huge fan of (at least at the time).

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9 points

Add Snow Crash to that list. One of my favorites

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2 points

I’m only 30-50 pages from finishing but life keeps getting in the way. So close…!

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2 points

I just started reading Neuromancer last week after finishing Asimov’s Foundation trilogy.

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7 points
*

Currently on book 3 of the Bobiverse. Most fun, zany scifi I’ve read in a while.

Edit: Seveneves was fun too, currently also reading Termination Shock. We really need those “earth suits” I think …

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