Books
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I’m a huge Chelsea Handler fan although,I’ve never read one of her books. She started out doing stand up,slept with someone to get a late night talk show on E,then went to Netflix,where she,currently, is. Has a new book out This Life Will be the Death of Me,and is coming out with her own line of marijuana products.
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@Seul if you haven’t already, put Martin Eden on the list. It is my favorite Jack London for sure, though I have not read all of those. The Sea Wolf is great. Of course, The Call of the Wild is a classic. Enjoy!
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I just ordered People of the Abyss.
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Bought some travel literature, to enjoy the places it's now hard to get to!
The Classic In Patagonia by Bruce Chatwin, and the more recent Kings of the Yukon: An Alaskan River Journey by Adam Weymouth.
Anyone wants any sci-fi and fantasy recommendations, give me a shout. It's what I do for the day job.
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Anyone wants any sci-fi and fantasy recommendations, give me a shout. It's what I do for the day job.
Oh really? Always… i’m a fan of N. Asher, and A. Reynolds. R. K. Morgan too. I’ve dropped out of the scene a bit recently though. As far as fantasy goes I dropped out a looooong time ago. The last thing I really enjoyed was the S. Eriksen series and Morgan’s fantasy trilogy. Although he flybase the ending of that sadly (imho). Any tips are greatly appreciated.
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Recently started reading the "Rivers Of London" books by Ben Aaronovitch and have found them quite enjoyable. "Artemis" by Andy Weir (author of "The Martian") is a fun read. I'd also strongly recommend "Trail Of Lightning" and "Storm Of Locusts" by Rebecca Roanhorse. And though I'm waiting for the final book, The Daevabad Trilogy by S.A. Chakraborty is also worthwhile.
Just realized these skew more toward urban fantasy than Science Fiction, though.
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Recently started reading the "Rivers Of London" books by Ben Aaronovitch and have found them quite enjoyable. "Artemis" by Andy Weir (author of "The Martian") is a fun read. I'd also strongly recommend "Trail Of Lightning" and "Storm Of Locusts" by Rebecca Roanhorse. And though I'm waiting for the final book, The Daevabad Trilogy by S.A. Chakraborty is also worthwhile.
Just realized these skew more toward urban fantasy than Science Fiction, though.
Ha! I was Andy Weir’s UK editor for The Martian. I did the deal for Artemis, but was gone before it came out. Actually, it was a different book at first, he then swapped to that one.
Rebecca Rowanhorse is great - good call.
Derek Kunsken is great but it’s a shameless plug as we publish him.
Martha Wells’ Murder Bot books are great fun, Adrian Tchaikovsky’s recent sci-fi novels are good.
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Anyone wants any sci-fi and fantasy recommendations, give me a shout. It's what I do for the day job.
I like dystopian, end of the world type genres as well as time travel. Anything recent worth checking out? Not sure if horror is in your wheelhouse but any recommendations similar to Poe or Lovecraft would be appreciated too [emoji120]
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Not sure if horror is in your wheelhouse but any recommendations similar to Poe or Lovecraft would be appreciated too [emoji120]
Check out Charles Stross' Laundry novels.
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Not really a fantasy fan usually, but I was recommended Robin Hobb's "The Assassin's Apprentice" recently and it's excellent.
If you like Heinlein-style space opera, I recommend Elliott Kay's "Poor Man's Fight" series. He also has an excellent series of urban fantasy X (light) eroticism novels…
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Robin Hobb is good, but she's written an awful lot of books in that series! I'm halfway through the third part of the third trilogy. (And there are two more trilogies set in the same world and time period.
The Vlad Taltos books by Steven Brust feature an assassin with a telepathic familiar, which isn't an entirely dissimilar setup to Hobb's. They're more tongue in cheek, though.
The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch is another good series. He's up to book three of seven, I think that four is pretty close.
The Year of Our War by Steph Swainston feels a bit like Starship Troopers in a Michael Moorcock fantasy world. I really enjoyed the books, but I think that it took me the first half of the first one to gel with it.
The Red Wolf Conspiracy by Robert VS Reddick was a good read too. It's set on a gigantic sailing ship that's on a diplomatic mission, before everything goes Pete Tong.
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My favorite time travel book is called Up the Line by Robert Silverberg. Check it out.
Thx, I’ll have to check it out. I love a good story filled with paradoxes
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Robert Silverberg has done some blinders down the years. Didn’t he have a retelling if the Gilgamesh legends?
I’ve read some of the Hobbs books and they were good, but possibly not good enough to commit to the number released. Tbh though I haven’t found a series exceeding a three or four books that is, since my youth. The closest was Steven Eriksen’s but even that, ambitious as it was, peaked halfway.
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Tbh though I haven’t found a series exceeding a three or four books that is, since my youth.
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Robert Silverberg has done some blinders down the years. Didn’t he have a retelling if the Gilgamesh legends?
I Had to look it up as I’ve been out of the sci-fi scene since the early 80s. He wrote something called Gilgamesh in the Outback,which he won an award for. Otherwise I know nothing about it. Happy to find out he’s 85 and living in San Francisco.