extrapenguin: Northern lights in blue and purple above black horizon. (Default)
[personal profile] extrapenguin
Since I've read two books already this month and will probably try to keep up the book a weekend habit:

Poll #30778 Reading material
This poll is closed.
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 13


What book(s) should I read next?

View Answers

Stephen Baxter: Xeelee (omnibus edition)
0 (0.0%)

Cixin Liu: The Wandering Earth
3 (23.1%)

Arkady Martine: A Desolation Called Peace
8 (61.5%)

Jane O'Reilly: Blue Shift
1 (7.7%)

Terry Pratchett & Stephen Baxter: The Long Cosmos & The Long Utopia
4 (30.8%)

Alastair Reynolds: Aurora Rising
0 (0.0%)

Alastair Reynolds: Century Rain
0 (0.0%)

Alastair Reynolds: Revenger
1 (7.7%)

Peter Watts: Blindsight
4 (30.8%)



(The Martine and Baxter are sequels; I read the Martine original semi-recently and the first three Baxter books zonks ago. I've enjoyed other stuff by Reynolds. I did read The Three-Body Problem and did not vibe with it at all, but I acknowledge that might've been the translation or just the nature of the book.)

Has anyone read any of the above? Opinions welcome, though please no spoilers.

Date: 2024-02-21 16:06 (UTC)
hamsterwoman: (Default)
From: [personal profile] hamsterwoman
I've read A Desolation Called Peace and quite disliked it / thought it was not a very good book, although in the interests of full disclosure, I was also somewhat disappointed by A Memory Called Empire. But with 'Memory', I thought it was a decent book which I had gone into with overly inflated expectations and that was a big part of my disappointment. I was hoping the sequel would build on the things I enjoyed or was intrigued b in book 1y. The sequel did not build on the things I had enjoyed, and instead convinced me that some things I was willing to accept were just part of the POV in book 1 were writing flaws. Most people do seem to like these books more than I do, but I think everyone on my flist who's read the sequel thought it was less good than the first book.

Date: 2024-02-21 16:35 (UTC)
lannamichaels: Astronaut Dale Gardner holds up For Sale sign after EVA. (Default)
From: [personal profile] lannamichaels
I didn't like the Martine, which I've read, so I voted for the Pratchett, which I haven't read.

Date: 2024-02-21 17:53 (UTC)
satsuma: a whole orange, a halved grapefruit, and two tangerine sections arranged into a still life (bookmobile)
From: [personal profile] satsuma
I've read A Desolation Called Peace, which I enjoyed overall but found quite different from A Memory Called Empire in a way that was initially a bit jarring to adjust to (I read them more or less back to back which presumably exacerbated this).

The Long Earth series is the only Pratchett I've ever DNF'ed, about 3/4ths of the way through Long Utopia (book 4). Really tainted my feelings about the whole series too, which was a shame because I'd enjoyed the first couple.

Date: 2024-02-21 19:16 (UTC)
independence1776: Drawing of Maglor with a harp on right, words "sing of honor lost" and "Noldolantë" on the left and bottom, respectively (Default)
From: [personal profile] independence1776
I've read Blindsight. It turned me off scifi for years. I'm very thankful I regained my love of scifi but I do not recommend that book.

Date: 2024-02-21 19:40 (UTC)
flowersforgraves: Connor MacManus (Boondock Saints), in profile facing right. (Default)
From: [personal profile] flowersforgraves
I have issues with A Memory Called Empire (which I'm willing to discuss privately) and won't be reading more of the author's work. I really enjoyed Wandering Earth when I read it about a year ago.

Date: 2024-02-22 04:52 (UTC)
satsuma: a small cactus with two pink flowers (cactus)
From: [personal profile] satsuma
light spoilers (like, on par with the official book blurbs) inside
It’s been a few years, and I read them all in a row so I may be getting what happens in which book a bit confused, but my broad recollection is that the first book was straightforward but enjoyable “exploring uninhabited alt-earths”, while the second introduced non-human “primitive” humanoids which I was a little ‘hope this doesn’t go in a gross direction 😬’ about but not enough to drop the series. Book four is, by memory, when things did indeed start going in some gross directions, with some extra bonus eugenics coming from a 2nd introduced group—the Next who are ‘hyper-evolved’ humans (as a result of the stepping process i think? forget the exact details). Anyway as a disabled person, my tolerance for sci-fi exploring eugenics as a neat thought experience is….low and I also found it to be quite out of character for Terry

Date: 2024-02-24 21:12 (UTC)
flowersforgraves: Connor MacManus (Boondock Saints), in profile facing right. (Default)
From: [personal profile] flowersforgraves
Yes, I read Three Body Problem probably about six years ago. I think a lot of it went over my head and should probably reread it.

Date: 2024-02-25 00:05 (UTC)
independence1776: Drawing of Maglor with a harp on right, words "sing of honor lost" and "Noldolantë" on the left and bottom, respectively (Default)
From: [personal profile] independence1776
I honestly don't remember exactly why anymore; I read it shortly after its publication.

Date: 2024-02-27 01:29 (UTC)
satsuma: a whole orange, a halved grapefruit, and two tangerine sections arranged into a still life (Default)
From: [personal profile] satsuma
I hope it works better for you then it did for me, haha

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