Started Whispers Underground by Ben Aaronovitch. Book 3 of Rivers of London series.
Just started it, not much to say about it yet.
What about all of you? What have you been reading or listening to lately?
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Unconscious Memory - Terrell Bainbridge.
Dungeon Crawler Karl and The wandering inn.
Ill probably be done never.
Worth it?
For me yes!
I use both when I feel like walking. And DCC (https://soundbooththeater.com/) has replaced a lot of TV shows for my and my wife.
“The Blade Itself” by Joe Abercrombie. It may have been a little overhyped, but I’m enjoying it so far.
I read the series years ago, and recently learned that it’s not just a trilogy! I just re-read the first three, read the second three for the first time, and am planning to start the next three (starting with A Little Hatred) in the next month.
I find the world-building in the first trilogy quite good, and I like having a bit of a darker story.
I just started it today!
I just finished Roadside Picnic for the first time and dove into Robert Anton Wilson’s “Sex and Drugs”.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex,_Drugs_and_Magick
He talks about the difficulty in getting the book published in the early 70s:
"Playboy Press seems not to have published this book in the ordinary sense but to have released it on a need-to-know basis, or something of that sort. There were marvelous advance-of-publication blurbs from heavyweight figures like Alan Watts, William S. Burroughs and Timothy Leary; there were enthusiastic reviews in a dozen counter-culture newspapers and magazines; and then there was a stifled and prolonged silence, as if I had killed a cat in the sacristy. Every place I went to lecture or give seminars, people had heard of Sex and Drugs by word of mouth but complained that they were unable to find it in any bookstores. Very quickly, it went out of print. I have never earned a penny in royalties on it, which event I fully expect to reverse from the Falcon Press edition.
Even more curiously, as years passed and other books by me sold well and were reprinted regularly, no publisher was, for 13 years, willing to reprint Sex and Drugs. This has often puzzled me."
How did you like Roadside Picnic?
It was interesting. There were some narrative jumps that I couldn’t tell if there was a problem in translation or a problem with editing.
Apparently the OG book was heavily censored in Russia and this edition claims to have restored the original, but like I say, there are gaps.
The ending feels a little… unresolved.
How are you finding the rivers of London series?
I’ve just finished ‘The Goldens’ by Lauren Wilson. I’m not sure how I feel about it. I enjoyed it, but can’t work out if I think it was mostly trashy fun or something more than that.
Not OP, but I’ve read the first 4 books in the Rivers of London series. I’ve enjoyed them a decent bit. They’re fun and lighthearted.
As somebody who has read a few of them, I also enjoy it. It’s a good take on urban fantasy and the main protagonist is a lot of fun.
They are pretty fun, kind of police procedural, but with magic.
I’m nearing the end of The Hunt For Red October. I remembered I liked reading Clancy’s Politika when I was a teenager and the recent show of Jack Ryan made me curious about the books.
I found out that there are some major movie titles based on Jack Ryan books, like October but also The Sum of All Fears, Clear and Present Danger and Rainbow Six, which is of course a video game series.
It’s pretty fun to read the books and imagine Jack Ryan played by John Krasinski.
English is not my native language but if at all possible I try to read these kinds of books in the original language. Clancy is a good writer, although sometimes punctuation could provide a bit more readability.
In any event, it’s a book that finds it drive very late, but somehow keeps you engaged through some really boring chapters because you continuously feel something big is going to happen soon. When it does find its drive, it’s a bit anticlimactic. Over the entity of the book (or at least where I’m currently at) especially dialog and character description made it a very lively book. Clancy is also pretty detailed when it comes to army, navy and air force stuffs. It just feels well-researched, even though it’s fully possible it’s all incorrect.
Clancy books realy go deep into the tech of war, so he spends a lot of time describing weapon systems and military processes.
I have read a number of his books and the two I highly recommend are The Hunt for Red October and Red Storm Rising,
The mountain in the sea, Ray Nayler
The butcher’s masquerade, DC #5, Matt Dinniman
Wreck jumpers, Anspach and Cole
Are they good?
Mount in the sea is good, it’s about contacting other intelligent life and what it means to be human
Dungeon crawler Carl books are always very entertaining. #5 is pretty funny, had me laughing out loud in bed last night.
Wreck jumpers is standard anspach/Cole military sci-fi with murderous aliens. Similar to galaxies edge stuff by the same writers
Just read the The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Biggest pile of funny nonsense I’ve read in a while. Don’t understand the hype though, seemed like most of the humor comes from the random anecdotes instead of proper storytelling.
Hyperion by Dan Simmons. A very imaginative book. Which could be considered a backhanded compliment. I dont think he always gets it right but on the balance it’s an engaging read. Best of all its a trilogy so more books to go. Hopefully the quality keeps up.
I just finished all 18 books in The Lost Fleet series by Jack Campbell, and I am now empty inside. I haven’t found anything else yet that has grabbed me.
That good? I should take a look.
Not my favorite space opera, but definitely top 5 at least
Nice, will take a look.
Traumnovelle. I randomly got reminded of the film “Eyes Wide Shut” and discovered it’s actually based on an Austrian story from the 1920s. I’ve been wanting to read more in German, so I figured why not?
It’s decently entertaining, and a nice little look into cultural assumptions in the 1920s, but I have to admit I’m excited to finish it and move on :).
I’m currently reading The Two Lies of Faven Sythe by Megan O’Keefe. I’m digging it so far, I have a trilogy of hers that I’ve wanted to read, I’m just not feeling reading a series at the moment. This was me testing her writing and I will definitely dig into The Protectorate books.
I’m still listening to Cibola Burn by James S.A. Corey. It’s taking me a while to get through it because I paused to listen to a few Murderbot books. But also because I forgot why I disliked one of the characters in this one so much.
I just finished Barbarian Aliens by Ruby Dixon. It’s the second book but I’ve decided to not finish the series. I really enjoy the world, the people, and the romance, but I’m kind of tired of everyone just trying to get knocked up. It’s just not my thing.
“divided states of america” its a Polish book, I don’t think it’s available in English. it’s about how the American society has became insanely divided and polarised over the last 3 decades

I am still listening to this. It is getting more and more insane.
I did six years in the Army and the number of loosers and low lifes I dealt in the Army just blew my mind. I always thought that SF was a different breed, but no.
It is wild how the military’s “elite force” are just more of the same.
From the book, There was this one Delta guy who ran a biker club called Coast to Coast. The Delta guy went by Chris Valley.
His club did a fund raiser for five dead green berets. They raised 450,000, 250,000 he just kept and the rest went to help other SF guys “treatments”, gyro therapy, cryotherapy.
It was all just a scheme to take people’s money. How the hell and active duty delta gu yay did something that public is beyond incredible.
It really is a wild listen/read.
The chapters I am on now focus on an ex NC cop who was an expert at catching drug mules has became one of them after he was kicked off the Police Force.
Hope I don’t know anyone in that book.
Well if you were Delta Force in the second decade of the GWOT, you certainly do.
Not IN Delta Force, but lived around that area. It was kind of an iffy place even besides the military base.
Yeah it is call Fayettenam for a reason
Started down the TrekLit rabbit hole a couple weeks ago. Finished “A Stitch in Time” last week and started the “Star Trek: Destiny” trilogy this past weekend.
I so want to read A Stitch in Time. I borrowed the audiobook to listen to on vacation, but I didn’t have time to actually do that (we had way too much fun). Now it has a really long waitlist again 😭
I bought the ebook for $8.99, DRM-free even :)
https://www.ebooks.com/en-us/book/136175/a-stitch-in-time/andrew-j-robinson/
The only hard copies I could find were used paperbacks for $150. I would love a hard copy, but not that badly lol.
I also got the audiobook (because Andrew Robinson reads it) but haven’t listened to it yet. It’s easier for me to follow a story when I read it, so I usually don’t do audiobooks unless it’s an autobiography (e.g. Stephen Fry) or I’ve already read the book and just want to hear the story (and can space out without missing crucial plot points).
Ooo!
I’m the same, I prefer physical copies over digital, but I know how expensive that one is because it’s out of print. I typically only do audiobooks as rereads because I don’t retain the info as much because I space out often. It was just the quickest way I could get it and I (mistakenly) thought I would have time on vacation.
I’m probably going to go pick up that book now. Thank you for the tip!
Also, I just noticed your username and I love it!










