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   Elite Veteran
  Posts: 1067
   Location: UK | Another month,another pile of books  
  
Dusty's Tbr for July.   
Eric Frank Russell - Sentinels from Space  
Edgar Rice Burroughs - Pirates of Venus  
Robert A Heinlein - The Man Who Sold the Moon/Requiem  
E E Doc Smith - Grey Lensman  
Maureen MacHugh - China Mountain Zhang  
Erin Morgenstern - The Night Circus  
Larry Niven - Lucifer's Hammer  
Anne McCaffrey - The Coelura | 
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   Extreme Veteran
  Posts: 591
   Location: Great Lakes, USA | My July reading goal is going to be finishing all the books I started in June: The Ministry For the Future, A Desolation Called Peace, Freedom, A Friend of the Earth.  I also have A Call to Vengence and Project Hail Mary.    
  
Not sure how I managed to start so many books (there are two other non-scifi books as well). | 
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   Uber User
  Posts: 372
   Location: Beaverton, Oregon, USA | Hey dusty, I loved China Mountain Zhang!  I really loved the form of intertwining short stories.  
  
I started The Relentless Moon by Mary Robinette Kowal, who I just saw was named the chair of the next WorldCon after it had a bunch of resignations.  That's the last of the Hugo/Nebula nominees I have to read.  
  
I will also be reading Freedom's Landing by Anne McCaffery for my book club.  We're having an outdoor gathering on the 13th just to meet up with all the members in person again after almost a year and a half.  Then we're going to have our regular online discussion on the 15th, for which we only get about 12-15 participants. | 
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   Elite Veteran
  Posts: 1067
   Location: UK | I had gotten mixed up,thought it was a Mythopoeic winner from 1972. So instead of Joy Chant's book Red Moon and Black Mountain set in ancient china I found myself in a future where China has financial,cultural and political power over the world. ! lol. I am enjoying it a lot though. Impressive worldbuilding and tech, which dont overshadow the snapshots of everyday life of the young protagonist.  .This form reminds me somewhat of C J Cherryh's Alliance Universe where we do a close scrutiny of the intense lives of often flawed and lonely people looking for a home..They may not change the world on a high scale,they not superheroes,but we are happy at the end because they are satisfied at where they have arrived. I'm only 30% through Zhang's tale but I hope he does succeed! | 
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   New User
  Posts: 1
   Location: Michigan | My TBR for July:   
  
Children of Dune (Finished)   
Our Lady of Darkness (Finished)  
The Island of Doctor Death and Other Stories and Other Stories (Finished)  
Doctor Rat (Currently Reading)  
The Farthest Shore   
Lord Foul's Bane   
Gloriana  
  
Might add some more if I manage to finish all of these! | 
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   Extreme Veteran
  Posts: 591
   Location: Great Lakes, USA | I finished the following so far this month:  
Freedom - Daniel Suarez (good, but a little scary)  
A Call to Vengeance - David Weber, Timothy Zahn, Thomas Pope (excellent end to the trilogy.  Need to read the first Honor Harrigton book.)  
Strange Dogs - James SA Corey (very good - need to read the novels)  
A Friend of the Earth - TC Boyle (ok only for the climate change part.  Really didn't like the characters.)  
Not Less Than Gods - Kage Baker (Good even though the main character in this one was not my favorite character in the main series.)  
  
I am almost done with A Desolation Called Peace which I am really liking so far.    
  
I miss all the time I had to read at the beginning of the year.  Oh well.  I am enjoying the hot, wet climate as I spend a lot more time outside now (vs the cold, wet climate I moved from.)
  Edited by daxxh 2021-07-25  1:46 PM 
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   Veteran
  Posts: 116
   Location: Las Vegas, NV | here's what i've finished so far this month:  
  
novels  
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman  
Star Wars - The High Republic: Light of the Jedi by Charles Soule  
Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer  
The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells  
Star Wars - The High Republic: The Rising Storm by Cavan Scott  
Steal the Sky by Megan E. O'Keefe  
The First Men in the Moon by H. G. Wells  
  
short fiction/novellas  
Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell  
Farewell to the Master by Harry Bates  
The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka  
Animal Farm by George Orwell  
Wylding Hall by Elizabeth Hand  
Ring Shout by P. Djeli Clark  
  
anthologies  
Tau Ceti by Kevin J. Anderson & Steven Savile  
New Suns: Original Speculative Fiction by People of Color edited by Nisi Shawl  
  
here's what's still on deck for this month or heading into August:  
  
novels  
Circe by Madeline Miller  
Foundation by Isaac Asimov  
The Invisible Man by H. G. Wells  
The Stars Change by Mary Anne Mohanraj  
The Island of Dr. Moreau by H. G. Wells  
  
short fiction/novellas  
Binti by Nnedi Okorafor  
Beaneath the Sugar Sky	Seanan McGuire  
A Meeting with Medusa by Arthur C. Clarke  
Sailing to Byzantium by Robert Silverberg | 
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   Elite Veteran
  Posts: 1067
   Location: UK | So many reallife issues this month that I decided to leave heavy stuff,or long books,till next month. Had a nice nostalgic return to Pern. I read all the full length McCaffrey tales long ago,but my library never got short stuff,novella setc. I found the Open Library had quite a few books I hadnt read,so I plugged some gaps.  
I also read some Heinlein short stuff too..I know it is the norm to bash RAH for sexism,authoritarianism,and lots of other isms,these days,and he certainly became a creepy old man,but I still find his 40s and 50s stuff readable and fun.The pendulum swung so far away from his great fame and iconic status to a rather unfair assessment IMO. Maybe someday the pendulum will swing back to somewhere in the middle.But you cant take away his importance and influence.Just decide to reaad nothing of his written after 1970 and things will be fine!  
hmm......I just checked out the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction article on RAH and was pleased to see a very fair assessment of RAHs work.  
I have also enjoyed some 30s and 40s SF pulp novels. Such fun! Slide rules? check.  
 Cigarettes? check. EVERYBODY smoked in space back then!  
 Welding equipment for those pesky meteorite holes? check.Everyone seemed to cobble together their own spaceship and whizzed around the solar system quite nonchalantly.Apart from the odd mad scientist,most scientists,and especially enginers were so respected in SF back then. Nasty contrast with today  
Actually,I recently read Neal Stephenson's Seveneves,and loved the first section of the book where they built the space station etc. Yep,the welding kit was still prominently in use!Mankind wouldnt have survived without it  
Anyway my reads helped to soothe my troubled mind.I suppose I should get back to heavier stuff in August. | 
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   Uber User
  Posts: 372
   Location: Beaverton, Oregon, USA | Wow, I missed updating in July.    
  
It was a good month for book selections.  Almost everything I read I gave 4 or 5 stars.  
  
The 5 star books were:    
Who Fears Death - Nnedi Okorafor  
The Galaxy, and the Ground Within - Becky Chambers  
Midnight Robber - Nalo Hopkinson  
  
The 4 star books were:  
All You Need is Kill - Hiroshi Sakurazaka (the novel not the manga)  
Devolution - Max Brooks  
The Only Good Indians - Stephen Graham Jones  
The Relentless Moon - Mary Robinette Kowal  
  
The only other book I read was Freedom's Landing by Anne McCaffrey, one of the rare books by her I didn't care for.  
  
Onto August! | 
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