I'm gonna go throw up now. Unrelated to my novel, I've got about ~five hours left in Fires of Heaven and basically I'm head over heels in love with Wheel of Time all over again.
I think I answered the email but I got it! I have quite a lot left of Fires of Heaven. I'm also reading Priory of the Orange Tree.
My goal this summer is to finish my re-read of Wheel of Time before Labor Day. This'll get a little tricky in-part because I am listening to a racial justice nonfiction work between each book now. I've also paused for the new Hunger Games, will be pausing for the new Max Brooks' novel, and the new Hank Green novel out next month. But, when you're marathon training and have a long commute, audiobooks tend to fly. Priory is in my audible wishlist, but I'm on a bit of a buying freeze until I can cut through a decent chunk of my TBR list. Unless too good of a deal pops up.
I want to be able to finish at least another 2 books of Wheel of Time, Priory of the Orange Tree and hopefully something else before the new Evan Winters and Sanderson novels in November. I did try audiobooks but I found myself waaaaay too distracted because the book wasn't in front of me.
Right!? Just more to add on. Tor have a great recap on Heralds and the whole last few books and it actually helped refresh a lot of things I thought I had forgotten.
I'm about to spam a few threads with this, but this is how important/good this novel is. This book just won the Hugo and Nebula Awards for best novel. (Side-Note: DO NOT SLEEP ON THE TOR EBOOK CLUB. Also - DO NOT SLEEP ON THIS SERIES.) This book is free for the next three days, so do this quick. It's an alternate history where an asteroid impact in the 1950s accelerates the space race. SO, so, so, so GOOD. Written by a woman, with a Jewish female protagonist, and challenging stereotypes of the genre and time period wonderfully. Sign-Up for the Tor eBook Club here to get the free book. (The third book comes out next month.) Also: Giveaway of the paperback version of the entire Wheel of Time series can be entered here.
Oh she wrote The Bone Season series? I never read it, but man, critics hated it. She got a massive advance for that one.
I’m always hesitant to read standalone fantasy novels for some reason, I like series, the more overly long the better
I do feel a spurt where nothing happens in Priory. Then something massive happens. Then nothing again. I am only around 200 pages though and really enjoying it.
Yeah I don't think I've ever read one, now that you mention it. I'm always mired in some multi volume series or another.
I love long series, but some are are too daunting to begin. I love that Warbreaker is just a standalone novel whereas I'm intimidated by Stephen King's Dark Tower saga. Trilogies feel like the best fit.
I just finished who fears death by Nnedi Okorafor. It’s very good. Beautifully written and heartbreaking in places. Really interesting and different uses of magic and a different take on the hero and master teaches prodigy set against post apocalyptic Africa. A lot of race and gender agendas are tackled as well. Highly recommended but I would give trigger warnings for rape especially which is a theme of the book and which is described in some detail. I think it is being made into a tv series (HBO maybe) with Nnedi herself and George R R Martin
I also love The Ocean at the End of the Lane, another novel written by Neil Gaiman, albeit a shortish one.
Took a second run at Fifth Season and lasted quite a bit longer. But ultimately I just couldn’t get into it. Moved on to Foundryside. Can’t say I really like it. But it’s caught enough of my attention that I’ll probably finish it.
I really liked Foundryside. It didn't get going until it delved into the lore and character-building but when it got going it was endlessly great. Clef is such a brilliant invention of a character. The second book, Shorefall, was on par - if not better.
I only have like 2 hours left in the audiobook so I am basically finished with it. Don't really have anything positive to say about it. I won't be going on to book 2.