Category Archives: Books

Reach for Infinity

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.

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Time of Contempt

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.

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The Dark Forest

I held off reading this for the longest time because I didn’t like the first one all that much and I’d heard that the English translation, by Joel Martinsen this time instead of Ken Liu, was kind of weak. Still I kept running across references to it such as how even Barack Obama is a big fan and went to meet author Liu Cixin. I also realized that even in the English-speaking world, big idea science-fiction novels are rather rare and this is nothing if not all about big ideas.

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Redshirts

John Scalzi is pretty prominent in science-fiction circles currently and it wasn’t so long ago that he made his debut with the Old Man’s War series which I haven’t read yet. A big part of it is due to his holding the post of president Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America and taking a strong stand on feminist issues and against Gamergate and related alt-right controversies. This particular novel won the Hugo Award in 2013 which brought it to my attention then. But the premise seems so obvious that it’s a wonder no one wrote this novel before this.

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Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell

This is certainly a well-known novel, popular enough to merit its own television series adaptation. I still wouldn’t have read it if it weren’t for the recommendation in Jo Walton’s What Makes This Book So Great who is puzzled over why it hasn’t been more influential. I’d guess that most writers aren’t up to the task of emulating its unique writing style and are put off by the immense amount of research required to pull off something like this. The project seems to have taken a lot out of her as she has yet to produce its long awaited sequel.

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Blood of Elves

This is the first novel of The Witcher series proper as the first two books were collections of short stories. Intriguingly, it feels less like Geralt’s story than that of Ciri and one does feel the stage becoming bigger as we gear up to events that change the fate of nations, including the human-scale stories of the previous books. It also marks the first appearance of Triss Merigold and it’s rather surprising that Triss plays the part of the mother figure to Ciri before Yennefer comes into the picture.

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Six Wakes

This was a finalist for the Hugo and Nebula Awards though it ended up winning neither of them. I was intrigued by a Broken Forum member describing its premise as a science-fiction mystery novel. Unfortunately the premise is the best thing about the novel. Though author Mur Lafferty sets up the mystery beautifully, the way it plays out wasn’t satisfying to me as the plot revolves around a single malefactor whose identity can easily be predicted by the reader but is pieced together by the characters only at the end of the novel.

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