I finished Grave Peril, third book of Dresden Files, by Jim Butcher. The series has start picking up. This book is much higher quality than the first two.
Currently, I am reading two books.
The Bullet Journal Method by Ryder Carroll. I have been using bullet journal for nearly a decade, but never got around to reading the book, so finally got it. While there's nothing new in the method, the "why" are interesting, and should help me be more productive.
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. Man, what a book. I think this is one of the best book I have read recently. I am more than half-way, and loving every moment of it.
What about all of you? What have you been reading?
The Dresden Files is tied with The Dark Tower series as my favorite series. It gets progressively better as it goes along. I hope you'll love it. It's amazing.
Sadly I'm only reading a textbook for class right now. But I'm about to start A Stitch In Time, the Garak/star trek novel.
Yeah, Dresden Files is really good. I have read first 5 books a long time ago. Now plan to read the whole series, just hope the series is finished by the time I reach the ending.
I have never read any Star Trek novel, A Stitch in Time looks interesting. Let us know how you like it, when you get around to it.
And don't worry. Textbooks are very important, you can always read other books later on.
Dresden won't be done anytime soon, sadly. The whole series is currently at 17 books (not counting "Side Jobs" or "Brief Cases" short story collections) and planned for 23 books total, with no idea when #18 is coming yet.
This is my second book I've read by her and the writing is just so freaking wonderful to trot through. She has such a way with words that really makes it comfortable to sit through a massive story. It's also great to see the beginnings of The story that comes after this one (Priory of the orange tree)
Yes, it was written before but story wise Orange Tree takes place after. I may have to reread it after Fallen Night just to have a new appreciation for how the characters came to be even though they are both considered Standalone books.
I just finished Spine of the Dragon by Kevin Anderson. I have very mixed feelings about it. I really liked the worldbuilding, the political conflict, the characters, and the balance between the local viewpoints of individual characters and the grand world-shaking plot.
But.
I really hated the way it was written. All the chapters were too short. I almost felt like I was reading an outline of the story instead of the story.
I'm invested enough to want to read the next one, but I'm not sure I can bear to read more in this style :(
I'm about halfway through Death's End in the Three Body Problem trilogy. The whole series has been fantastic so far. I'm a slow reader and the first book took me only a couple days to get through. The second book fantastic as well. The third book is kind of falling off a cliff for me.
The first two books have excellent main characters that we follow along as the story progresses. The 3rd book's mc is the weakest of the 3. Where the first two had these grand contributions to society and how to handle the aliens, Cheng is more on the lines of being a puppet. She contributed to society but in this book there are bigger, more important characters that would have been more intersting to follow.
It's a good book. I am enjoying it. But I'm 300 pages in and still waiting for that moment to take me back up the cliff. The nice thing is I think I stopped at a point where that's about to happen. So I hope it turns around and elevates itself in the next few readings.
I recently finally started reading the Discworld novels for the first time. I just finished #4 (Mort). I'm not sure every part of each of the four books has been quite as consistently funny as Good Omens (my introduction to Terry Pratchett), but overall they've been great!
Oh, it's just fantastic. The series doesn't need to be so long, but the pay-offs from its length have already been amazing. References to people and places in book one that suddenly come to fruition by book four or five are so satisfying, and watching the characters develop just keeps you hooked.
The Wife and I are both reading it at the same time on our e-readers, so trading notes while we go brings an extra level of enjoyment.
I have tried reading it twice. First time, I started without knowing anything about it, and thought it might be something like Lord of Things or The Hobbit. Gave up very quickly.
Second time I read it knowing what it was, but I got so confused by the names. Fahir Faihr, Faher, I dunno, so many similar names. Gave up, confused. I liked it other than that though. So, have been thinking about reading it while making a big family / relation tree alongside it, so that I can figure out who is who and how they are related to each other.
Going through it in the chronological order of events, I'm currently reading Asimov's The Currents of Space.
Got finished with The Stars, Like Dust the day before, and I must say not many things I've read had me cringing as hard as that book's very ending. That one last paragraph alone took the whole thing down a couple notch for me.
It differs greatly from his "Revelation space" books, but so far it has been a real page turner.
Almost sail-punk with low tech space travel instead of his normal nanomachine shenanigans. And setting it to a very far future amidst whats left of once highly developed string of civilizations has a lot of potential for future world building.