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SubRosa
I remember reading the Anne McCaffrey's dragon books back in the 90s, and I liked them a lot then.
Decrepit
QUOTE(Acadian @ Dec 12 2020, 09:56 AM) *

Decrepit, I read Dragonflight quite some time ago and found it enjoyable.

QUOTE(SubRosa @ Dec 12 2020, 06:09 PM) *

I remember reading the Anne McCaffrey's dragon books back in the 90s, and I liked them a lot then.

Yeah, the Pern books were extremely popular back in the day. It's a shame fantasy is too often a genre that has little respect for its past. Too few younger readers have little interest in reading anything beyond recent releases At least that's what I gather watching BookTube videos.

Speaking of Pern, at 2020 last night, 13 Dec 2020, I finished a fifth read of McCaffrey's Dragonsong, first book of her Harper Hall trilogy. I enjoyed it very much.
Decrepit
At 1656 this evening I concluded a fifth read of Anne McCaffrey's Dragonsinger, book two of her Harper Hall Pern series. I was a bit apprehensive going in, not being the biggest fan of books set in institutions of learning. They tend to follow the same formula: New student arrives, full of hopes and expectations. New student is mistreated by established students and/or certain members of the faculty. New student is befriending by either one or a small group of other 'misfit' students. New student wins out in the end. Dragonsinger adheres to the pattern. What saves it for me is that it takes place in a music school. And a love for music is central to the story, rather than an incidental backdrop. The school itself has the feel of an honest-to-goodness music school.

A solid thumbs-up for me. In fact, this time round I've enjoyed the Harper Hall books more than the initial Dragonriders of Pern series. I hadn't expected to.

I'll of course begin Dragondrums later this evening.
Decrepit
At 1158 this morning, lying on the couch, I finished a fifth read of Anne McCaffrey's Dragondrums, bringing to a close her Harper Hall Pern series. I enjoyed it, and the series as a whole, despite Dragnondrums' somewhat ho-hum ending. Then again, I ought to have read Harper Hall in-between Dragonquest and The White Dragon, that being where it fits chronologically. I've not yet decided whether to continue on with the other McCaffrey Pern novels in my possession or move on to other things. My initial-read TBR pile isn't getting any smaller.
Decrepit
At 2121 Christmas Eve, 24 Dec 2020, I concluded a fourth read of Anne McCaffrey's The Renegades of Pern. Between reads, my most recent prior read ended mid Feb 2012, I misremembered events occurring within its pages as belonging to two separate novels. This led me to initially believe I had somehow misplaced the latter of the two. Opening Renegades to a 'late' page and reading one sentence disproved that assumption.

I'm now some pages into All the Weyrs of Pern, which concludes the tale begun in Dragonflight. Or it did when I bought what I own of the Pern series. I recently discovered that McCaffrey and others went on to publish many more Pern related novels, not in my possession. For all I know, some of them might revisit/extend the initial main storyline.
Uleni Athram
To take a break from the head-busting complexity of my Seleucid books, I copped myself a bunch of Warhammer Age of Sigmar e-books to... refresh my mind back into something easy to digest. For those who aren’t in the know, Warhammer Age of Sigmar (AoS) is miniature wargame where you control armies and battle it out using dice and rules. You probably heard about it’s more popular cousin, Warhammer 40K. Anyway, I got the following:

The Court of the Blind King, the Sea Taketh, and The Learning, all by David Guymer.
They’re not a series, mind you, but they do focus on a race called the Idoneth Deepkin, a savage subset of ocean-dwelling Aelves (that’s how elves are spelled/called in-universe lmao) whose majority population go by without souls. They go on raids to steal the spirits of the setting’s other races, because if they don’t, the afflicted would quickly wither and die.

I finished the Learning and I have to say I’m liking the way Guymer writes. Compact and straight to the point, with just enough tactical ‘oomph’ in his prose and flow to keep it fresh. If that makes sense.
Decrepit
I thought for sure I'd end the year with 46 completed books to my credit. Instead, it's 45. I failed to take into account that All the Weyrs of Pern is not a pager-turner for me. Were it almost any other book in the series (that I own and plan to read this go-round) I might well get through its final 80 pages before falling asleep tonight. (Were it any of those other books, I'd likely have finished it by now.) Forty-five ain't all that bad. In fact, it's a recent high. I suspect I'll never equal it again this lifetime, let alone surpass it.

While buying TurboTax Deluxe 2020 at Amazon.com yesterday I decided to add two Bernard Cornwell Saxon Chronicles novels to my cart; books 2 & 3. I read book 1 just over five years ago. I like it well enough, but don't consider it anything special. However, I own Cornwell's three-volume Arthurian saga and like it quite a lot. Enough so to be willing to take a risk with two further Saxon novels.
Decrepit
At 1532 this afternoon, 2 Jan 2021, I concluded a fourth read of Anne McCaffrey's All the Weyrs of Pern, bringing to an end the storyline begun with Dragonflight. I expected to finish it days ago, making it my 46th novel-length book completed during 2020. I failed to remember between readings that sections of Weyrs are too hi-tech sci-fi for my taste, thus slow-going. The 'good parts' were as engrossing as ever. As usual, I read the close through tears, inner (but not outer) romantic that I at. (I wouldn't mind being an outer romantic, but have never had the equipment for it.)

The Pern series contains many more entries. I own a few of them. I've not yet decide whether to continue on with what I have or more on to other things.
Burnt Sierra
QUOTE(Decrepit @ Dec 31 2020, 06:56 PM) *

Forty-five ain't all that bad. In fact, it's a recent high. I suspect I'll never equal it again this lifetime, let alone surpass it.


After I saw this, I just did a quick adding up of mine from the year, and I didn't even get close tongue.gif

26, or a book every 2 weeks, though 2020 was such a weird year I'm quite surprised I got that high to be honest.

At least I have my target for this year now!
Decrepit
QUOTE(Burnt Sierra @ Jan 2 2021, 09:37 PM) *

QUOTE(Decrepit @ Dec 31 2020, 06:56 PM) *

Forty-five ain't all that bad. In fact, it's a recent high. I suspect I'll never equal it again this lifetime, let alone surpass it.


After I saw this, I just did a quick adding up of mine from the year, and I didn't even get close tongue.gif

26, or a book every 2 weeks, though 2020 was such a weird year I'm quite surprised I got that high to be honest.

At least I have my target for this year now!

Twenty-six ain't bad at all. There are years when I don't reach that number.

At 2035 last night, 13 Jan 2021, I completed a fourth read of Paul O. Williams' The Breaking of Northwall, book one of his Pelbar Cycle. It's another of those sagas set long after 'our' civilization was utterly destroyed due to nuclear conflict. Remnants of survivors exist as hostile tribes (for lack of a better term). Book one's chief protagonist belongs to a peaceful, woman-run, tribe who remain safely isolated within their several well-built fortress-cities. Through his many adventures/misadventures, he manages to instill a fledgling union with several formerly adversarial tribes, capped at book's end by those tribes coming together to defeat a new, cruel, technologically advanced enemy bend on capturing Northwall, one of the Pelbar strongholds. The book is overall well done, with an especially strong closing battle.

My originally intent was to not continue the series but instead move on to something in my initial-read TBR pile. I'm reevaluating that.
Decrepit
At 2105 yesterday evening, 21 Jan 2021, I concluded a fourth reading of Paul O. Williams The Ends of the Circle, book two of his Pelbar Cycle. A fine series entry. This one focuses on two new main protagonists, a husband/wife team, separated early on due to family strife. The book centers on their separate physical journeys until, at the end, they reunite. It's more complicated than that, of course.

I suppose I ought to mention that this is a science-fiction series, rather than fantasy. It takes place in the US, or rather what was the US until nuclear catastrophe over a thousand years before the series begins destroyed our technologically advanced society and reduced population to isolated small clumps of people, who, when the books begin, live a pre-industrial lifestyle. Yeah, it's been done before, and since. It's done quite well here. It's a series I recommend, especially if you can find it used for pocket change.

I need to set Peldar aside and begin whittling down my initial-read TBR list. Will it happen? We shall see.
Decrepit
At 0417 this morning, 30 Jan 2021, I concluded a third read of Paul O. Williams The Dome in the Forest, book three of his Pelbar Cycle. This entry sees new antagonists in the form of survivors of earth's 'time of fire' who have been shut away in a controlled environment, retaining much advanced technology/knowledge. When that sheltered domicile at last begins to crumble they rejoin the outside world, a not altogether seamless merging. (These isolated people are of course descendants of those original survivors, not original survivors with extended lifespans.)

(Had Mr. Williams included me among his antagonists, the book might be titled The Dumb in the Forest.)

As with each series entry, I now debate continuing on or tackling a large initial-read TBR stack.
Decrepit
At 2155 yesterday evening, 07 Nov 2021, I concluded a fourth read of Paul O. Williams The Fall of the Shell, book four of his Pelbar Cycle. This one focus mainly on the separate adventures of two youngish brothers, and the disintegration of the Pelbar city which is their home. For a while I felt this the weakest thus far, a bit to same-old same-old. By its end it had redeemed itself.

As always this series, I now debate continuing on or taking a break for something different.
Decrepit
At 1148 this morning I finished a fourth read of Paul O. Williams' An Ambush of Shadows, book five of his Pelbar Cycle. Having more time to devote to reading due to periodic power outages that kept me off the computer, I'm now some pages into book six, The Song of the Axe.
Decrepit
At 1259 this afternoon, 17 Feb 2021, I concluded a fourth read of Paul O. Williams' The Song of the Axe, book six of The Pelbar Cycle. I'm already decently into the seventh and final book, The Sword of Forbearance.
Decrepit
At 1300 today, 20 Feb 2021, I concluded a fourth read of the seventh and final book in Paul O. Williams' Pelbar Cycle, The Sword of Forbearance. Having last read the series during 2005, I recalled little of each book prior to this reading. With this last entry, I recalled absolutely nothing. I knew who the chief antagonists would be, but that can be figured out without having previously read book seven. Wait. While typing this it dawns on me that I did indeed remember one thing about the book: during its epilogue a character featured in an earlier volume, but absent this volume, reappears, and the gist of what then transpires.

It's a fine series and an easy recommendation. I'm glad to have given it another read. I hope to do so again, should I live long enough, at my age not a given.

Decrepit
A change of pace for me. At 1242 this afternoon, 23 Feb 2021, I concluded an initial read of Gil Culkin's The Mississippi Wrestling Territory, The Untold Story. It's one of two "pro-wrestling" books I bought my brother as Christmas gifts this past holiday season. He read them immediately, then loaned them to me. I have a passing interest in the territorial / kayfabe wrestling era, having attended local matches with my parents during my youth, and watching my share of kayfabe wrestling on TV. The modern product holds no interest for me.

As to the book, it's a good read if you are interested in the subject, as I am, not being familiar with the Mississippi territory. As literature, it leaves much to be desired, as the author himself states. Entirely self-written and published.
Decrepit
At 1524 this afternoon, 25 Feb 2021, I concluded an initial read of Living the Dream, Memphis Wrestling, The Randy Hales Story. This is the second of two books I gave my brother this past Christmas, lent me after he finished them. My own history with Memphis area wrestling goes back a long way, having attended live 'cards' with my parents as a lad during the late 1950s. (Not in Memphis itself, but a non Tennessee town that sometimes hosted wrestling cards.) As to the book, it was an okay read.

Not sure what I'll tackle next. I've a book on order from Amazon I definitely want to read ASAP. But it's just now receiving its first paperback printing. I ordered it only this morning. It'll not get it until Mar 3 or 4.
Decrepit
At 1733 this afternoon, not long after supper, I concluded and initial read of Bernard Cornwell's The Pale Horseman, book two of his Saxon series, historical fiction set in England during the time of King Alfred "The Great" and the Danish invasion. These books inspired The Last Kingdom TV series, which I have not seen. I'll start in on book three, Lords of the North, by bedtime.
TheCheshireKhajiit
QUOTE(Decrepit @ Feb 27 2021, 06:09 PM) *

At 1733 this afternoon, not long after supper, I concluded and initial read of Bernard Cornwell's The Pale Horseman, book two of his Saxon series, historical fiction set in England during the time of King Alfred "The Great" and the Danish invasion. These books inspired The Last Kingdom TV series, which I have not seen. I'll start in on book three, Lords of the North, by bedtime.

I’ve read those up through The Burning Land, and it’s been a long while since I read that. I’ve been meaning to catch up but just don’t have the attention span for reading currently. I can also recommend his Warlord series. It’s a unique take on the Arthurian Legend.
Decrepit
QUOTE(TheCheshireKhajiit @ Feb 28 2021, 06:58 PM) *

QUOTE(Decrepit @ Feb 27 2021, 06:09 PM) *

At 1733 this afternoon, not long after supper, I concluded and initial read of Bernard Cornwell's The Pale Horseman, book two of his Saxon series, historical fiction set in England during the time of King Alfred "The Great" and the Danish invasion. These books inspired The Last Kingdom TV series, which I have not seen. I'll start in on book three, Lords of the North, by bedtime.

I’ve read those up through The Burning Land, and it’s been a long while since I read that. I’ve been meaning to catch up but just don’t have the attention span for reading currently. I can also recommend his Warlord series. It’s a unique take on the Arthurian Legend.

The Warlord series was my introduction to Cornwell. It is indeed a unique take on the Arthurian mythos. I rather like it. For a historically feasible retelling of Arthur I prefer Jack Whyte's very different Camulod series. But that takes nothing away from what Cornwell accomplishes with Warlord. Oddly or not, I DNF'd my most recent re-read attempt of Warlord. Can't recall why.

My only previous experience with Cornwell's Saxon Tales series is book one, The Last Kingdom, read years ago. Not sure why I never thought to continue the series until now.
haute ecole rider
Working my way through a second re-read of Stephen Pressfield's Gates of Fire, about the Spartans at Thermopylae. A fellow Chorrolite introduced me to Pressfield quite a few years ago, when I confessed my enjoyment of ancient military history. Over the past spring I re read his Last of the Amazons. What's next? Probably either The Virtues of War or The Afghan Campaign.
Decrepit
At 1152 this morning I concluded an initial read of Katharine Kerr's Sword of Fire, a Novel of Deverry. A decent read, in line with the series' more mediocre entries. Not sure if I'll return to Lords of the North or settle for something not yet considered.
Decrepit
At 1343 this afternoon, 15 Mar 2021, I concluded an initial read of Bernard Cornwell's Saxon Tales: Lords of the North. An excellent series entry, and a better book than the Kerr that preceded it. (I like the Kerr well enough, but don't consider it top-tear.) I suppose I'll soon order the next few series entries off Amazon.
Decrepit
At 1230 today, 4 Apr 2021, I concluded an initial read of Andrzej Sapkowski's The Tower of Fools, book one of his Hussite Trilogy. It was a slow read for me. Not sure why. I like it well enough. In fact, it falls within a sub-genre I'm particularly fond of, a cross between historical fiction and fantasy with 'naturalistic' magical elements. Somewhat along the lines of what Guy Gavriel Kay produces, though with different emphasis. Added allure, for me, comes from Tower being set in the same general location as Kingdom Come Deliverance, book and game being only a few decades apart. I'll definitely buy book two when it premieres later this year.

I'm not quite sure what I'll dig into next. Likely a return to Cornwell's Saga Tales series.
Decrepit
At 0429 this morning, 9 Apr 2021, I concluded an initial read of Bernard Cornwell's Saxon Tales: Sword Song. I later read the included promo excerpt from Cornwell's Agincourt, which I finished at 0856. I found Sword Song compelling reading, a faster read than Sapkowski's Tower of Fools. I will begin the next Saxon Tales volume, The Burning Land, later today. It being the last unread Cornwell book in my possession, I need to order the next few Saxon Tales off Amazon, along with the stand-alone (?) Agincourt.
Decrepit
At 2247 yesterday evening, 12 April 2021, I concluded an initial read of Bernard Cromwell's Saxon Tales: The Burning Land. Another fine series entry. I found its immediately predecessor more consistently engrossing. This entry, for me, sags a bit during a portion of its first half, until King Alfred's daughter reenters the picture. From that point on, it's totally absorbing. I won't receive my next batch of Cornwell novels until Friday. As a stopgap, I have tentatively decided on a reread of Parke Godwin's take on the Robin Hood legends, Sherwood, last read April/May 1995.
Decrepit
At 0813 this morning, 24 Apr 2021, I concluded an initial read of yet another Bernard Cornwell novel, the standalone Agincourt. I enjoyed it. I'll now either return to his Saxon Tales series or resume Parke Godwin's take on the Robin Hood legend; Sherwood.
Decrepit
At 1650, while chewing my last bite of apple at the tail end of supper, I concluded an initial read of Richard H. Harwell's The Confederate Reader. This 1957 book was given to me by my parents as a Christmas present back in 1989. I only now got around to reading it. I was a big US Civil War buff early on, but by the time I received this had moved on to other things Thus the delay.

It's about what you'd expect it to be, a collection of writings by southern and southern sympathetic eyewitnesses providing first or secondhand accounts of those times. I found it a bland read for the most part, being familiar with the gist of what is presented from my 'buff' days. The section titled "A Plea for the Reliable Gentleman" threw me for a loop at first. I totally misconstrued the title's meaning, causing what followed to make no sense. I had to read the article's first two pages three times before I caught on. Once I did, it became and remains my favorite part of the book.

I've not yet decided what to take up next.
Decrepit
Being in a reading slump, I've not touched bases here for some while. As for now, I'm in the midst of a third read of Brian Jacques' Mossflower. It's a slow read for me. Too cutesy. The characters are all small animals, who to all intents and purposes act like miniature humans. The overall tone is humorous. Not my sort of thing, but it passes time. It has a bit of non-sentimental value in that I completed its initial read Sep 1990 while flying over the Pacific aboard Northwest Airline flight NW12, on my return from a two-year military stay in Japan.
Decrepit
At 1647 this afternoon, chewing my last bite of Fuji apple at supper's end, I concluded a third read of Brian Jacques' Mossflower. As mentioned previously, it's a rather humorous fantasy, with small animals (acting as if they are human) as characters. Not the sort of book I go out of my way to read, but it's enjoyable in its way. This is apparently the second book in a series, Redwall preceding it. I've no recollection of reading Redwall, but find it odd that I wouldn't have. If I did, it's bound to be stashed in one of my many book boxes.

Almost failed to mention that I acquired the book The London, Brighton and South Coast Railway last week. It consists of lots of old photos of the railway, its locos and rolling stock, and so on. One disappointment is that there are no maps of the railway's routes through the years. As to the pictures, the author states that many are 'rare'. The book being published in 2000, I suspect the internet has made most of those photos readily available, if you know where to look. Still, it's good to have them collected in one place. (So far as I know, I've seen none of them before.)

One new tidbit learned from the book; apparently, what we nowadays refer to as Terriers were in their earliest years called rooters. (Terriers are what I drive in TS2021 video episodes 02a, 02b, and the upcoming 06 and 07. The first two feature A1X Terriers, the second two A1s.)
RaderOfTheLostArk
I've gotten sidetracked over the past week or so, but I bought the two Elder Scrolls books off of Amazon, The Infernal City and Lord of Souls. I've read the first 4 or so chapters of TIC and I like it so far. LoS is the sequel to TIC.

For those who don't know about them, they were released between the releases of, and set between the events of, Oblivion and Skyrim. Sometime early on in the 4th Era, a floating city called Umbriel is passing over the land, killing everybody who is under its path and raising them back as undead while stealing their souls to keep it powered.

It's interesting to have this series in a different form of media. I know some of the basics of the books' events, but I forgot a lot of what I read about them before.
treydog
Gardens of the Moon by Steven Erikson. This is the first book of the 10(!) volume "Malazan Book of the Fallen" series. And make no mistake- these are NOT 85 page "books" of the sort some authors have taken to releasing on Amazon. Each one is somewhere in the neighborhood of 500+ (Kindle) pages.

Beyond that, there is a multitude of characters who are fully-realized and ambiguous in a very human way (even the ones who aren't precisely "human." I find myself first rooting for and then disagreeing with many of the people who populate the books. Motivations are obscure, as can be morality (which rather depends on one's point of view, as the author makes clear).

The Malazan Empire of the series title finds itself in the dilemma of many empires- it must wage continuous wars to maintain the income to finance its continuous wars- which are necessary to give the legions something to do- preferably far from the capitol. And the gods and demi-gods decide to involve themselves, sometimes due to the actions of people who should know better.

If you are looking for ""high fantasy" with touches of humor, as well as more than a bit of darkness, I recommend this series. That said- these are not "potato chip" books- you can't just wander in and nibble a bit, then put them aside. They require an investment of time and concentration- which is a good thing.
Decrepit
After several false starts, I've finally settled on an initial read of Raymond Feist's At the Gates of Darkness, book two of The Demonwar Saga. I read book two some years ago, but couldn't bring myself to continue the series, knowing that more of the characters I've grown attached to over Feist's great many Midkemia novels are likely to meet their end. Enough time has passed since then that I suspect I'm now ready to face the worst.

@treydog
I'm an odd-man-out in that I disliked Gardens of the Moon so intensely when read years ago that I fully expect to never continue the series. That said, so many BookTubers are sold on it that I just might give Gardens another go at some point.
Decrepit
At 1338 this afternoon I concluded an initial read of Raymond Feist's At the Gates of Darkness, second and final book of his Demonwar Saga. Considering what happened in book one, I fully expected Darkness to be, well, dark and tragic. It is not. However, anticipation of tragedy, and the unfolding of events during which tragedy might well have occurred, kept the book suspenseful and entertaining. In the end, it seems primarily a setup for what is to come next series.

A glimpse of that series is provided following Darkness' close, in the form of what looks to be the opening pages of Chaoswar Saga: A Kingdom Besieged. Here Feist tricks me to thinking I witness something that, as the chapter progresses, morphs into something both unexpected and revealing. Something that convinces me that Chaoswar Saga is a must-read. I'd do so anyway, it being the last of Feist's Midkemia books. Or so I believe, book three being titled Magicians End. (No spoilers please.)
treydog
Just finished "The Gospel According to Billy the Kid" by Dennis McCarthy (brother of Cormac).

Told in first-person by "Brushy Bill" Roberts, the novel deals with the familiar (to those who grew up watching Westerns- "Chisum" and "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid" especially come to mind) story of the Lincoln County War.

Compelling and lyrical, with reasonable explanations for the "what could have happened" deviations woven in with the documented events. It is not a deep study of the participants or the causes, but nevertheless works well as it is framed- a story told over drinks, some 70 years after the fact.
Decrepit
I neglected to mention last post that, for my next read, I settled on Bernard Cornwell's Death of Kings, book six of his Saxon Tales. I'm roughly halfway through it. Early this afternoon I ordered book seven plus the next unread Raymond Feist Midkemia novel.

On the subject of reading, I subscribe to a small number of booktube channels. All but one are the usual suspects; young readers interested primarily in fantasy. That one exception is the booktuber I consider far and away the best of the lot. An older gentleman. Extraordinarily well read. Professional book critic. Has taught literature at university level. And so on. Eccentric. Rants at time. (Which I don't mind, as I tend to agree with his stances 'most' of the time.)

I want to highlight a couple of his videos. The first is taken from a long series of videos showcasing his Penguin Classics library, his Homer episode:

(video) Steve Donoghue: Your Daily Penguin: Homer (video)


On a lighter (?) note, here's one of his "Has Steve read it?" episodes, in which other booktubers scour their shelves for books they suspect he might not have read. Here is one such episode:

(video) Has Steve Read it? Season Two - The Cozy Reading with Quaker Cats (video)

(The above is a relatively tame HSRI? episode. The episode I wanted to link contains two rants, one of which, sad to say, might be deemed too political for these forums.
Decrepit
At 1226 this afternoon, 16 Jun 2016, I concluded an initial read of Bernard Cornwell's Death of Kings, book seven of his Saxon Tales series. A worthy series entry. As mentioned elsewhere, book eight is on ordered. It should arrive either Saturday or Monday. In the meantime, I'll likely pass time reading one of two 'pro' wrestling books my brother lent me this past weekend.

Fourteen of the twenty-two books read thus-far this year are initial reads! I've not read so many new-to-me books in decades. My norm is closer to two to five initial reads during an entire year. I suspect I've had a few years with no initial reads.
Acadian
Wow, Decrepit, you are quite the voracious reader! smile.gif
Decrepit
At 1700 this afternoon, at the tail end of supper, I concluded an initial read of Jonathan Snowden's Shooters: The Toughest Men in Professional Wrestling. I found it quite enjoyable. I'm going to hold off reading the second wrestling related book my brother lent me, and concentrate on a few books in my own initial-read TBR pile. Maybe Feist's A Kingdom Besieged. Maybe Cornwell's The Pagan Lord. Maybe something else.

QUOTE(Acadian @ Jun 16 2021, 02:49 PM) *

Wow, Decrepit, you are quite the voracious reader! smile.gif

Hardly that. A great many people wipe the floor with me, reading wise. But reading is my oldest still consistently practiced pastime, occasional reading slumps aside. I put in more hours gaming, as a general rule, but gaming is a decades newer pastime.
Decrepit
I settled on A Kingdom Besieged, and am over three-fourths done with it. Early this evening I ordered the remaining two Chaoswars books. (Along with more CPAP mask wipes.) I'll likely be done with Kingdom tomorrow or the day after so will need an interim read.
treydog
As has been my habit (which drives the Mrs. to distraction), I have been rotating between multiple books.

In no particular order:

"Star Forged" Justin Sloan. Billed as "space opera," which is a genre I enjoy (Lois McMaster Bujold and David Weber, particularly). Free on Amazon, so I gave it a try. So-so writing, with characters that MIGHT be engaging if given a chance. Suffers (for me) from trying to introduce too many folks too quickly, while also feeling the need to have action at a breakneck pace.

"Memories of Ice" Steven Erikson. Book 3 of the Malazan Book of the Fallen. This series is not everyone's cup of fantasy. While there are admirable characters, their virtues do not always insulate them from harsh fates. Requires a good bit of effort on the reader's part to keep up, but that is rewarded. No hobbits, no elves, lots of violence and chaos and darkness.

"Manufactured Witches" Michelle Rene. Downloaded the free sample and was intrigued enough to purchase the full book. Dust Bowl Texas, as told (in first person, my favorite) by a teen boy who rides a box car into a town where witches are not only believed to exist, but (apparently) placed on public display.
Decrepit
I finished Chaoswar: A Kingdom Besieged at 0328 this morning, appreciably sooner than anticipated. It contains several quite interesting, unexpected plot developments. All make me look forward to book two. All save one, which materializes during the book's last several pages. That development likely bodes ill for one of Midkemia original mainstays. Considering this series ends Feist's Midkemia saga, I expect the worst. This particular demise, should it come to pass, will be hard to take.

Chaoswar book two not arriving until Wed/Thu, I've begun reading The Pagan Lord, another of Bernard Cornwell's many Saxon Tales novels.
Decrepit
I spent much of yesterday late-afternoon & evening on a long-neglected project: Converting ancient .SAM (Ami Pro files) yearly reading logs to .ODT (LibreOfficieWriter files). It was quite a chore. I've not had a program that recognizes .SAM in ages. They thus contain tons of formatting code that must be manually removed. Unlike past attempts, I stuck to my guns and converted every remaining .SAM yearly log, deleting originals afterward.

During those conversions, I came upon a year when I read so many books it amazes me: 1993. The beginning of that year was me several months into military retirement, and less than a month in my current home. Having a small but steady retirement income, and a paid-off home and car, I decided to take the year off before seeking new employment. Ergo, I had ample time to read. Still, as slow a reader as I've always been ... but faster back then than now, and better able to concentrate for long periods of time ... I find it hard to believe I read so much. All that aside, the proof is in the pudding, as they say. Here's my 1993 reading log:

1. 1/01/93: 2319 The Farthest Shore by Ursula K. LeGuin (second reading)
2. 1/05/93: 0011 Tehana by U.K. LeGuin (second reading)
3. 1/25/93: 0039 The Sword of Shannara by Terry Brooks (second reading)
4. 1/27/93: 2040 The Elfstones of Shannara by Terry Brooks (second reading
5. 2/02/93: 2317 The Wishsong of Shannara by Terry Brooks (second reading)
6. 2/07/93: 2043 The Scions of Shannara by Terry Brooks (second reading)
7. 2/09/93: 1953 The Elf Queen of Shannara by Terry Brooks
8. 2/10/93: 1613 The Druid of Shannara by Terry Brooks (second reading)
9. 2/11/93: 1437 The Riddle-Master of Hed by Patricia A. McKillip (second read)
10. 2/12/93: 0844 Heir of Sea and Fire by P.A. McKillip (second reading)
11. 2/13/93: 0742 Harpist in the Wind by P.A. McKillip (second reading)
12. 2/14/93: 1737 The Initiate by Louise Cooper (second reading)
13. 2/15/93: 2222 The Outcast by L. Cooper (second reading)
14. 2/16/93: 1804 The Master by L. Cooper (second reading)
15. 2/17/93: 2220 Mirage by L. Cooper (second reading)
16. 2/19/93: 0545 The Iron Lords by Andrew J. Offutt (second reading)
17. 2/20/93: 2016 Shadows out of Hell by A.J. Offutt (second reading)
18. 2/22/93: 0947 The Lady of the Snowmist by A.J. Offutt (second reading)
19. 2/23/93: 1526 The Jewel in the Skull by Michael Moorcock (second reading)
20. 2/23/93: 2057 The Mad God’s Amulet by M. Moorcock (second reading)
21. 2/24/93: 2156 The Sword of the Dawn by M. Moorcock (second reading)
22. 2/25/93: 0936 The Runestaff by M. Moorcock (second reading)
23. 2/25/93: 2128 Count Brass by M. Moorcock (second reading)
24. 2/26/93: 0133 The Champion of Garathorm by M. Moorcock (second reading)
25. 2/26/93: 1619 The Quest for Tanelorn by M. Moorcock (secong reading)
26. 2/27/93: 2344 The Eternal Champion by M. Moorcock (second reading)
27. 3/01/93: 0707 The Silver Warrior by M. Moorcock (second reading)
28. 3/04/93: 1648 The Dragon in the Sword by M. Moorcock (second reading)
29. 3/06/93: 1937 The City in the Autumn Stars by M. Moorcock
30. 3/09/93: 2332 Elric of Melnibone by M. Moorcock (second reading)
31. 3/11/93: 0910 The Sailor on the Seas of Fate by M. Moorcock (second read)
32. 3/17/93: 0625 The Weird of the White Wolf by M. Moorcock (second reading)
33. 3/18/93: 2246 The Vanishing Tower by M. Moorcock (second reading)
34. 3/24/93: 0801 The Bane of the Black Sword by M. Moorcock (second reading)
35. 4/18/93: 1824 Storm Bringer by M. Moorcock (second reading)
36. 4/21/93: 0344 The Fortress of the Pearl by M. Moorcock (second reading)
37. 4/21/93: 1929 Elric at the End of Time by M. Moorcock (second reading)
38. 4/25/93: 1503 The Swords Trilogy by M. Moorcock (third reading)
39. 4/29/93: 2254 The Chronicles of Corum by M. Moorcock (third reading)
40. 5/02/93: 2319 An Alien Heat by M. Moorcock (second reading)
41. 5/03/93: 1993 The Hollow Lands by M. Moorcock (second reading)
42. 5/05/93: 2156 The End of All Songs by M. Moorcock (second reading)
43. 5/07/93: 2139 Legends form the End of Time by M. Moorcock
44. 5/10/93: 1152 A Messiah at the End of Time by M. Moorcock
45. 5/25/93: 1958 The Shadow of the Torturer by Gene Wolfe (second reading)
46. 6/04/93: 2225 The Claw of the Conciliator by G. Wolfe (second reading)
47. 6/13/93: 2050 The Sword of the Lictor by G. Wolfe (second reading)
48. 6/18/93: 0953 The Citadel of the Autarch by G. Wolfe (second reading)
49. 6/30/93: 0903 The Urth of the New Sun by G. Wolfe (second reading)
50. 7/07/93: 2135 The Time of the Dark by Barbara Hambly (second reading)
51. 7/14/93: 0135 The Walls of Air by B. Hambly (second reading)
52. 7/15/93: 2219 The Armies of Daylight by B. Hambly (second reading)
53. 7/19/93: 0558 Sheepfarmer’s Daughter by Elizabeth Moon (second reading)
54. 7/22/93: 2253 Divided Allegiance by E. Moon (second reading)
55. 7/27/93: 0116 Oath of Gold by E. Moon (second reading)
56. 8/02/93: 2136 The Summer Tree by Guy Gavriel Kay (second reading)
57. 8/08/93: 1304 The Wandering Fire by G.G. Kay (second reading)
58. 8/18/93: 1104 The Darkest Road by G.G. Kay (second reading)
59. 8/24/93: 2044 Magician: Apprentice by Raymond E. Feist (second reading)
60. 8/26/93: 0058 Magician: Master by R.E. Feist (second reading)
61. 8/28/93: 2215 Silverthorn by R.E. Feist (second reading)
62. 9/04/93: 1521 A Darkness at Sethanon by R.E. Feist (second reading)
63. 9/06/93: 1932 Prince of the Blood by R.E. Feist
64. 9/11/93: a.m. Tales from the One Eyes Crow: The Vulgmaster by Dennis McKiernan
65. 9/21/93: 0006 Dragon Prince by Melanie Rawn
66. 10/02/93: 1610 The Star Scroll by M. Rawn
67. 10/07/93: 2129 Sun-Runners Fire by M. Rawn
68. 10/19/93: 0925 Stronghold by M. Rawn
69. 10/20/93: 2132 The Dragon Token by M. Rawn
70. 10/26/93: 0659 The Conquering Family by Thomas B. Costain (second reading)
71. 11/02/93: 0727 The Magnificent Century by T.B. Costain (second reading)
72. 11/07/93: 1923 The Three Edwards by T.B. Costain (second reading)
73. 11/11/93: 2010 The Last Plantagenets by T.B. Costain (second reading)
74. 11/21/93: 2234 The Last of the Renshai by Mickey Zucker Reichert
75. 11/30/93: 0659 The Shattered Horse by S.P. Somtow (second reading)
76. 12/03/93: 0010 Gate of Ivrel by C.J. Cherryh (second reading)
77. 12/05/93: 1926 Well of Shiuan by Cherryh (second reading)
78. 12/07/93: 0746 Fires of Azeroth by Cherryh (second reading)
79. 12/09/93: 0323 Exile’s Gate by Cherryh (second reading)
80. 12/13/93: 1405 The King’s Buccaneer by R.E. Feist
81. 12/19/93: 0153 The Sword and the Lion by Roberta Cray
82. 12/26/93: 0737 The Riddle of the Wren by Charles de Lint (second reading)
83. 12/28/93: 1921 The Western Wizard by M.Z. Reichert

(Dates/times refer to when each book was finished)
Pseron Wyrd
You must have graduated from Evelyn Wood's Speed Reading course with honors, Decrepit. That is seriously amazing.
Renee
Jeez, I thought I was a prolific reader!

I also notice the military regiment, with all those dates and times. That's a habit you must have been deep into since you were just out of the army.

Well lately I've been reading books by Janet Evanovich. She's written a whole series of books about a terrible bounty hunter named Stephanie Plum. They're just silly stories, but a lot of laughs.
treydog
Finished "Memories of Ice" by Steven Erikson. Now on to Book 4 "House of Chains".

Near the end of "Memories" are a number of deeply moving scenes about what it means to be... "human" seems too chauvinistic a term, but will have to suffice.

Abandoned "Star Forged" at some 70%. Despite giving it a chance, I just was unable to become engaged with the plot or the characters. Too- it feels very much like a "preface," rather than a complete novel in its own right.

Continuing "Manufactured Witches" by Michele Rene. The narrator is more than a bit annoying, but the same could be said of me, so....
Decrepit
At 0418 this morning, 11 Jul 2021, I concluded an initial read of Bernard Cornwell's The Pagan Lord, book seven of his Saxon Chronicles/Tales series. Another fine entry. It is, alas, the final Chronicle in my possession. Due to an unexpected large expenditure, brought about by my own stupidity/senility, I have to be careful with spending for a while, so will order no further Chronicles this month, possibly next. That's okay. I've plenty of books in my initial-read TBR pile, and of course lots of re-read material at hand.

Came across a recent YT video of Guy Gavriel Kay, giving an online lecture for the 2021 "Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature", with short Q&A at its conclusion. (Online due to C19 not allowing a live event.) As I'm sure I've mentioned before, Kay is pound-for-pound my favorite active author whose work is published as fantasy. For me, Kay at his best is rarely equalled. (My prime Kay recommendations are Lions of Al Rassan and the two-book Sarantine Mosaic.)

Kay is a fine speaker. His talk shares much in common with his writing. Well worth a watch / listen, especially for those who write as well as read. (I am most emphatically NOT among your number, much as I occasionally wish otherwise.)

(video) Guy Gavriel Kay, 'Just Enough Line: Some Thoughts on Fantasy and Literature,' Tolkien Lecture 2021 (video)

treydog
Went back to "The Lincoln Lawyer" after seeing the movie version. I had tried it in paperback years ago, but had trouble with the main character's extreme moral ambiguity. This time, I read more for the story.

Was good enough that I continued with (and finished) "The Brass Verdict".

Now on book 4 of Steven Erikson "House of Chains".

Still making progress with "Manufactured Witches".
Lena Wolf
Well, I am reading "Blood on the Moon" by Treydog! What a fantastic story, professionally written. Makes me want to go to Solstheim again... even with Miraak around. ohmy.gif
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