This is somewhere in length between a novella and a novel. Despite being sold as a standalone, it forms part of the so-called Sunflower cycle which I failed to realize for some time and might be difficult to understand on its own. Conveniently one of my favorite stories from the Reach for Infinity anthology that I read only a few months ago is part of this series. The other two are readily available online. Since this book leaves many questions unanswered even at the end, reading those other stories helps quite a bit.
It occurs to me with this book that I haven’t properly finished reading a traditional trilogy of novels in a long while. I still think it’s ridiculous that every book in the trilogy won the Hugo and I don’t agree that it stands on the same level as the true greats of fantasy and science-fiction. But I would happily agree that this is a rollicking good read and this last book does bring the series to a more or less satisfying conclusion.
We’re back to recommendations from Jo Walton here and it’ll be one of the rare books I read that aren’t science-fiction or fantasy. It’s also really old, being first published in 1935 and apparently is still in print. It’s actually the tenth book in a series of detective novels that mostly feature Lord Peter Wimsey as the main character. But as the foreword here notes most of these books are fairly standard staples of the genre and it isn’t until this book that the author Dorothy Sayers reached for something more.
It’s been more than two years since I read Jo Walton’s What Makes This Book So Great and I’m still mining it for ideas on what to read next. So when a thread on Broken Forum talked about big idea books in science-fiction and multiple commentators cited this as a great example, it felt apt to pick this up. As I only recently noted, big ideas are rather rare even in science-fiction and what could be a bigger and more ambitious than trying to create Plato’s famous Republic.
This is the next book in George Alec Effinger’s Budayeen Cycle chronicling the adventures of his flawed protagonist MarĂ®d Audran. Though the first book didn’t really feel like science-fiction, I loved the cyberpunk noir setting enough to want to read its sequels and so here I am.
It’s been a while since I last read a proper anthology of science-fiction short stories. I came across this book quite by accident while browsing through Amazon Kindle recommendations and discovered that editor Jonathan Strahan has a whole series of these books. I bought this one because it’s first story is by Greg Egan and the last one is by Peter Watts. After finishing this, I wondered why I ever stopped buying anthologies.
This would be the fourth of Andrzej Sapkowski’s Witcher books I’ve read so far and the second novel of the series. While I’ve liked all three of the previous books I’ve read, I have mixed feelings about this one. I complained about how it feels like nothing much seems to happen in Blood of Elves and it’s doubly true here. The book is decently long but covers only a very short span of time as it covers every scene in excruciating detail.