|  07-13-2008, 09:28 AM | #646 | 
| Beepbeep n beebeep, yeah!            Posts: 11,726 Karma: 8255450 Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: La Crosse, Wisconsin, aka America's IceBox Device: iThingie, KmkII, I miss Zelda! | 
			
			"Glory Road" by Heinlein.  Still waiting on "The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress."
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  07-13-2008, 01:10 PM | #647 | 
| Gorosei     Posts: 421 Karma: 334 Join Date: Feb 2008 Device: Microsoft Word | 
			
			will hopefully start "The hounds of Tindalos" soon.
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  07-14-2008, 11:13 AM | #648 | 
| fruminous edugeek            Posts: 6,745 Karma: 551260 Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Northeast US Device: iPad, eBw 1150 | 
			
			Re-reading Steven Brust's Athyra.
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  07-14-2008, 12:05 PM | #649 | 
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 19,832 Karma: 11844413 Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Tampa, FL USA Device: Kindle Touch | 
			
			I finished Four and Twenty Blackbirds. I thought it was a good story. I stayed up a bit late last night finishing it since I knew it must be wrapping up. Wow, you almost need a genealogy chart to follow this one! I'm still not sure I got it all.  However, I don't classify it is SF/Fantasy... more Occult/Horror... although it was very minor. I started YAFTB (yet another free TOR book) The Disunited States of America. BOb | 
|   |   | 
|  07-15-2008, 09:55 PM | #650 | 
| Resident Curmudgeon            Posts: 80,740 Karma: 150249619 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3 | 
			
			I finally finished The Stand and it was really good. I've decided to reread The Puppet Masters by Heinlein. I'm about 1/2 done and I'm finding it better the second time then I did the first time.
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  07-17-2008, 11:05 AM | #651 | |
| Addict            Posts: 300 Karma: 396757 Join Date: Nov 2007 Device: new oasis, paperwhite, ipad, kobo | Quote: 
 Her Cavern of Black Ice series is better written and The Barbed Coil is more interesting. | |
|   |   | 
|  07-17-2008, 02:23 PM | #652 | 
| Hi There!            Posts: 7,473 Karma: 2930523 Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Ft Lauderdale Device: iPad | 
			
			Finished:  Year's Best SF 13 It's good, but I didn't enjoy it as much as usual because of a technical difficulty - it was in secure IMP format with smallish print. As my eyesight worsens, I'm finding that I have to use mobi2imp in order to get really large print. As for the stories themselves, about half had happy endings. The other half ended in doom and gloom. However, they were all truly good scifi, emphasis on the sci. TOC: 
 Last edited by DixieGal; 07-18-2008 at 01:47 PM. Reason: Busy at work now, but I'll try to finish the story reviews later. | 
|   |   | 
|  07-18-2008, 01:48 AM | #653 | |
| New York Editor            Posts: 6,384 Karma: 16540415 Join Date: Aug 2007 Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7 | Quote: 
 Wren is a Talent - someone capable of sensing and controlling Current, a magical energy. She makes her living as a Retriever. A Retriever can find lost objects and get them back for the owner. In Wren's case, this usually means stealing them back from whoever stole them. Her partner Sergei is a Null, an ordinary human being who can't sense magic. He serves as her business manager and sets up her assignments when he's not busy running an art gallery. Wren's life is complicated. For one thing, Current tends to flow along the same paths as electricity, so electronic devices like computers, cellphones and airport security scanners tend to misbehave in Wren's presence. For another, she's a Lonejack - an unaffiliated mage in a magical subculture dominated by the Cosa Nostradamus, a council of powerful mages who want every mage to be part of their organization and play by their rules. For a third, she has strange friends, like PB, a furry demon who looks like a four foot tall polar bear, works as a messenger, and likes cold pizza. For a fourth, she has to deal with the Fatae, a variety of species of magical creatures who are generally treated with fear and hostility by humans who become aware of them. For a fifth, Current is dangerous. It's hard to control, and it's easy to become a Whizzer, a mage who has channeled too much current and gotten lost in it. And last but not least, she has a growing romantic relationship with Sergei, who has his own dark past and secrets that will affect Wren in unexpected ways. In many ways, the theme of the books is communication. It's what Wren and Sergei don't tell each other (for the best of well intentioned reasons) that come back to bite them. The books are gritty contemporary urban fantasy, set in present day New York City, where you might just see a Fatae if you look, since the city has everything else. Available at Fictionwise, in secure Adobe, eReader, MS Lit, and Mobipocket formats. Go here: http://www.fictionwise.com/ebooks/Series606.htm ______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 07-18-2008 at 04:02 PM. | |
|   |   | 
|  07-18-2008, 09:52 AM | #654 | 
| fruminous edugeek            Posts: 6,745 Karma: 551260 Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Northeast US Device: iPad, eBw 1150 | 
			
			I'd say Patricia Briggs' "Mercy" series fall into this category as well. Moon Called is the first title. Available at Fictionwise in a variety of formats.
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  07-19-2008, 12:36 AM | #655 | 
| Guru            Posts: 618 Karma: 493394 Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: Seattle, WA Device: iRex iLiad, Onyx Boox 60 | 
			
			Hi DixieGal.  I just finished reading Year's Best SF 13 about two weeks ago and I really must suggest that you read "Lustration". The story starts out pretty slow, yes, but it has a good lesson in it. The story is about an alien race that over the corse of eons (I wonder why they never developed further) have built a world spanning computer made entirely of wood. But for tens of thousands of years the computer has been throwing fits and breaking down. The priests believe that the computer is conscious and is suffering a mental breakdown because it is trapped living forever. But an average repair guy has a much different idea about the problem. I really loved these stories: How Music Begins End Game Induction A Blue & Cloudless Sky Objective Impermeability in a Closed System (similar to A Blue & Cloudless Sky) Artifice & Intelligence Third Person The Bridge Repeating the Past was very disturbing. It is about a decendent of a Holocaust survivor who joins a neo nazi group, even after his mother and grandfather (or grandmother, not clear) try to teach him to not repeat the horrors of the past. So the grandfather takes matters into his own hands and uses some mind altering equipment, that he and the mother have worked on, on the boy. One wonders, how far should we go to prevent the horrors of the past being repeated? Last edited by CleverClothe; 07-19-2008 at 12:58 AM. | 
|   |   | 
|  07-19-2008, 09:55 AM | #656 | 
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 10,155 Karma: 4632658 Join Date: Nov 2007 Device: none | 
			
			I had started Stand on Zanzibar, but my mind's currently ascendant state isn't taking kindly to Brunner's particular smart-arsery at the moment (and, trust me, having read about 100 pages, my "smart-arsery" descriptor is meant in a complimentary fashion - I do intent to finish Zanzibar and then other Brunner books at some stage in the future...perhaps behind Proust's In Search of Some Missing Little Cakes which is the next seventh wave, about to break - possibly very shortly - over my head. However, right this very minute, I am about to shut down my laptop, go to bed, and start Robert Dessaix's A Mother's Disgrace (since I have not long finished his beautifully melancholic Night Letters - I want to visit Venice, Locarno and Lake Maggiore, and Padua now). Cheers, Marc | 
|   |   | 
|  07-19-2008, 10:12 AM | #657 | |
| zeldinha zippy zeldissima            Posts: 27,827 Karma: 921169 Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Paris, France Device: eb1150 & is that a nook in her pocket, or she just happy to see you? | Quote: 
 | |
|   |   | 
|  07-19-2008, 12:23 PM | #658 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 2,366 Karma: 12000 Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Texas, USA Device: Kindle; Sony PRS 505; Blackberry 8700C | Quote: 
 | |
|   |   | 
|  07-19-2008, 12:27 PM | #659 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 2,366 Karma: 12000 Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Texas, USA Device: Kindle; Sony PRS 505; Blackberry 8700C | Quote: 
 | |
|   |   | 
|  07-19-2008, 05:44 PM | #660 | 
| Away with the Faeries            Posts: 483 Karma: 8459 Join Date: May 2008 Location: Edinburgh, Scotland Device: Sony PRS 650 | 
			
			I'm reading Accelerando by Stross, which happened to come with my Cybook. I'm not really a hard sci-fi kinda girl and I can't help but feel that a lot of it's going over my head, but am persevering nonetheless and particularly enjoyed the bit in Edinburgh because it had landmarks and references I could related to. Then I'm moving onto the Classics I have always meant to read but never gotten round to but now will thanks to the lovely, lovely, lovely uploaders of books here at MRF, who (whom?) I don't think I had due and proper appreciation and respect for prior to getting my Cybook. | 
|   |   | 
|  | 
| 
 | 
|  Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post | 
| Hey hey! I found the first Kindle 3 bug! | WilliamG | Amazon Kindle | 22 | 02-14-2012 05:28 PM | 
| Advice on Action | jaxx6166 | Writers' Corner | 5 | 06-25-2010 12:29 AM | 
| Hey! From Reading - P.A. that is. | GlenBarrington | Introduce Yourself | 3 | 01-01-2010 09:00 PM | 
| Seriously thoughtful Affirmative Action | Jaime_Astorga | Lounge | 39 | 07-07-2009 06:24 PM |