ultranos: kino standing, staring ahead (Default)
One thing I'd like to do this year is get back to doing things I really enjoyed when I was younger. I started writing for pleasure beyond LARPs, and rediscovered how much I enjoy it and why I would stay up until the wee hours of the morning just typing away on Notepad on the old 1992 Dell machine in my room when I was in high school. (Which is why this journal now exists.)

One other trend I dislike is how much my reading novels has decreased. When I was younger, I'd take out 8 novels from the library and be begging my mother to take me back to get more by the middle of Week Two. Nowadays, I'm lucky if I finish one novel in a month. And I really hate that.

My brother must be psychic, because for Christmas, he got me a gift card to Barnes and Nobel (he's awesome like that). I also got a gift card to Borders, because I'm an equal-opportunity consumer whore in terms of bookstores. Alas, I cannot fling myself at the shelves, and thus must be a little more judicious in my choosing of how to use these gift cards.

So, Obi-wan Flist, you're my only hope. Are there any books out there that are OMG-get-thee-to-a-bookstore-you-must-read-this-RIGHT-NOW? I have to admit to a certain fondness right now for science-fiction and fantasy, specifically:

  • post-apocalyptic
  • urban fantasy (world of magic coinciding with Real World. Examples: Neverwhere and American Gods by Neil Gaiman, Drinking Midnight Wine by Simon R Green)
  • "science fantasy" (magic and spaceships)
  • near-future cybertech
  • actually, anything cybertech, information tech, etc (from Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson to Matrix-esque type stories)

but, I'll take recommendations for almost anything. Really. I'm desperate.
◾ Tags:
Date/Time: 2008-01-02 17:19 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] seborn.livejournal.com
==kihou on Vinge.

Urban fantasy: War for the Oaks by Emma Bull. Anything by Bull, really.
Sergei Lukyanenko's Night Watch trilogy.
I'm not sure if Charlie Stross's Atrocity Archive counts as urban fantasy, but it's totally in eye-poking distance. I liked Toast (short stories) by him for cybertech etc. more, though.

Cybertech etc.: Axiomatic by Greg Egan, more short stories. Not his novels so much, but I hear his later ones are better.
When Gravity Fails by George Alec Effinger. It's not information tech, it's noir cyberpunk.

Almost anything: I am seriously digging the Ash four-book series by Mary Gentle right now, first book A Secret History. Yes, you must read them in order. 15th century female mercenary captain, interspersed with email between modern historians talking about her, starts off in the normal universe and then things start going weird about two-thirds through the first book.
Also Glen Cook's new series, first book Tyranny of the Night, politics, war, and spying in medieval Europe with the serial numbers filed off and more weirdshit. And if you haven't read any of his Black Company series you should.
Date/Time: 2008-01-02 17:33 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] ultranos-fic.livejournal.com
Okay, you're the second person who has told me to read Ash, so I suppose I should, namespace collisions be damned. :)

Hm. That series by Cook sounds interesting. And, um, I don't recall if I've read anything by him before. *shame*

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ultranos: kino standing, staring ahead (Default)
ultranos

Memoranda from the Usual Suspects

Media List:

Currently Watching:
-- She-Ra(in theory)

Currently Playing:)
--Fire Emblem: Awakening (3DS)
--Astral Chain (Switch)
--itch.io bundle (PC)

Currently Reading:
Fiction
-The Silence of Bones, June Hur

Nonfiction
-none

------------------

"So she's good cop, he's bad cop, you're morally-questionable cop, and I'm set-things-on-fire cop."

"Sounds about right."

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"WARNING: When attempting to be clever, make sure you not actually just being stupid."

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"Did you remember to sacrifice the goat before burning the ISO to the DVD-R?"

"Crap! Um, I've got a charred piece of meat here."

"That's called a steak. That's dinner. What about the sacrifices?"

--------

"I escape through quantum-tunneling. What do I need to roll for that?"

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"Why is it called a 'Monkeylord'?"

"Because it looks like a spider."

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"I have a moral objection to this problem. It implies microwaving a steak."

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"Did you eat the crazy cookies this morning?"

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"The GPU goes 4 by 4, hurrah, hurrah."

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