What I'm Reading Now...
My 2004 Reading List
Bolded items are what I'm currently reading... or intend to get back to, someday.
- 57. A heartbreaking work of staggering genius, Dave Eggers
- 56. Topless, D. Keith Mano
- 55. The Bible as history, Werner Keller
- 54. Talon of the silver hawk, Raymond Feist
- 53. Liquor, Poppy Z. Brite
- 52. Always have, always will, Quinn Brockton [Discussed here.]
- 51. Hidden warrior, Lynn Flewelling [This is book 2 in the Hidden Warrior trilogy. Waiting on book three... Here's the author's website.]
- 50. Delusion, G. H. Ephron
- 49. Hot spot, Michael Craft
- 48. Name game, Michael Craft
- 47. Reckless abandon, Stuart Woods
- 46. The bone doll's twin, Lynn Flewelling [Discussed here. This is book 1 in the Hidden Warrior trilogy.]
- 45. Watch me, A. J. Holt
- 44. Ghost writer, Rene Gutteridge
- 43. Slave to fashion, Rebecca Campbell
- 42. Clanbook: Malkavian, Daniel Greenberg, Andrew Greenberg [RESEARCH for PA]
- 41. Flight dreams, Michael Craft
- 40. Sunshine, Robin McKinley
- 39. Never kill a witch, M. R. Sellars
- 38. Elf defense, Esther Freisner (reread)
- 37. The fall of the kings, Ellen Kushner and Delia Sherma
- 36. The fellowship of the ring, JRR Tolkein
- 35. Laws of the night, White Wolf pub. (simultaneous with 28, 29, 32 & 33) [RESEARCH for PA]
- 34. If looks could kill, Kate White (simultaneous with 28, 29, 32 & 33)
- 33. New York minutes, Richard Jeter (simultaneous with 28, 29 & 32)
- 32. Angels A to Z, Matthew Bunson (simultaneous with 28 & 29) color="blue">[RESEARCH!]
- 31. Eric, Terry Prattchett (simultaneous with 28 & 29)
- 30. An acceptable time, Madeleine L'Engle (simultaneous with 28 & 29)
- 29. The most common errors in English usage and how to avoid them,
Elaine Bender (simultaneous with 27 & 29)
- 28. Book of shadows, James Reese (simultaneous with 27 & 29)
- 27. Kushiel's dart, Jacqueline Carey (re-read) (simultaneous with 28 & 29)
- 26. Small gods, Terry Pratchett
- 25. Never tear us apart (Queer as Folk Novel), Quinn Brockton [SHUT UP] (simultaneous with 21)
- 24. Worst fears realized, Stuart Woods (re-read) (simultaneous with 21)
- 23. Dirty work, Stuart Woods (simultaneous with 21)
- 22. Seduced by moonlight, Laurell K. Hamilton (simultaneous with 21)
- 21. Dragon's kin, Anne McCaffrey & Todd McCaffrey [Read the first chapter, then put it aside. Is it possible I've out-grown Pern?]
- 20. Good boys, Paul Redinger
- 19. Blitz, or, Brant hits the blues, Ken Bruen
- 18. A forever death, Michael Farren
- 17. Underland, Michael Farren
- 16. More than mortal, Michael Farren
- 15. Blood orchid, Stuart Woods
- 14. Birmingham noir, Joel Lane and Steve Bishop (anthology)
- 13. Zandru's forge, Marion Zimmer Bradley & Deborah J. Ross
- 12. The fall of Neskaya, Marion Zimmer Bradley & Deborah J. Ross
- 11. Traitor's sun, Marion Zimmer Bradley (reread)
- 10. The shadow matrix, Marion Zimmer Bradley (reread)
- 9. Exile's song, Marion Zimmer Bradley (reread)
- 8. Louisiana breakdown, Lucius Shepard [Read a few chapters, then decided it sucked too much to continue]
- 7. Abide with me, E. Lynn Harris [I like trash. Like you don't.]
- 6. The snow garden, Christopher Rice
- 5. Kushiel's avatar, Jacqueline Carey
- 4. A density of souls, Christopher Rice
- 3. Darklost, Michael Farren
- 2. The conspiracy club, Jonathan Kellerman
- 1. The time of feasting, Michael Farren (started in 2003)
Old Favorites
PHILIP K. DICK is an institution in SF. Never heard of him? Ever hear of the film Blade Runner? The movie is based on DICK’s novel Do Androids Dream of Electric
Sheep. Weird title? You don’t know the half of it! DICK is an alternate historian and here he spins a
tale of a space-faring society that encourages its citizens to leave the radiation-poisoned Earth for the colony worlds
before they themselves are "altered." The radiation has already claimed almost all animal life and it slowly but surely
is eradicating the humans. Non radiation- altered individuals are called "normals." To bribe, er,
encourage them to leave Earth, servile robots are provided as family servants—read, "slaves." The robots
were androids, human in appearance. To meet the demands of the customers, the androids were made continually more
"human" until the questions arose, like: have they achieved true AI? and if these are intelligences, albeit artificial
ones, they’re people and doesn’t that make the enforced servitude slavery? The androids themselves
certainly think so and so they flee to Earth, where they can blend in without fear, since everyone knows there are no
androids on Earth, right? Rick Deckard (HARRISON FORD’s character for the Philistines) "deactivates" these
runaways (he blows them away). Society doesn’t consider it murder, since androids aren’t officially people. Deckard is
chosen to track down the latest group of runaways, one of whom has the most complex matrix ever built—almost impossible
to distinguish from a human brain prior to autopsy. Which means Deckard can’t afford to be wrong. Here Deckard is
human, completely, and the novel doesn’t degenerate into a mindless love story between the human and the android, Rachel
(SEAN YOUNG’s character). A very good read.
If you’d like to see how Merlin would fair in the post-apocalyptic age, check out SIMON HAWK’s The Wizard of Camelot. Here, Merlin is freed from the tree in which Morgan Le Fey imprisioned
him. It’s a thousand years later and society is collapsing in the face of a global shortage of fossil fuels. Cities are
in chaos, inflation is so bad that enough firewood to cook dinner costs more than a person can make in a week. So Tom
Malory, "a soldier, a man who both battles urban rioters and steals wood to keep his children warm", goes into a
protected forest and takes an axe to a big ol’ grand-daddy of an oak, freeing Merlin to inaugerate the Second Age of
Magic.
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This one’s more than a little dry, but the other books in The Wizard of West 4th
Street series are a lot of fun! They tell of the Avatars of the Runestones, people descended from the Old
Ones, a race of magic users that florished before humanity discovered fire. Back then, they dined on life-force, the
life-force released in the ritual sacrifice of lower animals—namely, humans. A war happened when some of the Old Ones
hatched a conscience and decided to abandon balck magic for white—magic that "borrowed" life-force from others, but
didn’t kill. The ones who refused to give up the power one can only gain from ritual slaughter were dubbed the Dark
Ones. The good guys won the war but they couldn’t slay their foes, so they imprisoned them using a spell called the
Living Triangle. The keys to the
spell, three gemstones inscribed with mystic runes, were removed by an unscrupulous human mage in present times. The
runestones were imbued with the essences of the Old Ones and they found their way to three of their descendants,
Wyrdrune, a failed magic student, Kira, a thief, and Modred, the last survivor of Camelot. The three became the Avatars
and their job is to hunt down and destroy the Dark Ones. And a grand old time they have of it too!
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ROBERT HEINLEIN is the author who first seduced me into reading science fiction. Sure, I saw Star Wars in it's many incarnations but
that was mind candy; I was astonished to learn that there were Star Wars books! The anthology The Green Hills of
Earth is perhaps the best way to start reading Heinlein. My all time faves are The Moon is a Harsh Mistress; Citizen of the Galaxy; Time Enough for Love (Lazarus Long's
autobiography!) and, of course,
Stranger in a Strange Land.
From Amazon.com:
Synopsis
One of the greatest science fiction novels ever published, Stranger in a Strange Land's original manuscript had 50,000
words cut. Now they have been reinstated for this special 30th anniversary trade edition. A Mars-born earthling arrives
on this planet for the first time as an adult, and the sensation he creates teaches Earth some unforgettable lessons. "A
brilliant mind-bender."--Kurt Vonnegut.