What have you been reading lately?

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Posted by Surtac
12/02/2025 4:30 pm
#531

I'm finding myself reading more lately rather than less, but it's increasingly skewed away from SF at the moment.

However, having said that, I am looking forward to new books from Paul MacAuley, Ian McDonald, Richard Morgan and China Mieville in 2026.  
 


It's a strange world.  Let's keep it that way.
 
Posted by starexplorer
12/02/2025 10:37 pm
#532

I am always intrigued by anything new from IM or RM. I have not read PMac.


One world -- or none
 
Posted by Surtac
12/02/2025 11:30 pm
#533

starexplorer wrote:

I am always intrigued by anything new from IM or RM. I have not read PMac.

I think the first of his that I read was Cowboy Angels and I've been happy with all of his work since, particularly Austral and War of the Maps. (which i thought was outstanding, just quietly).  Stylistically and thematically, his books would fit well in a group with Ken MacLeod, Iain Banks, Justina Robson and M John Harrison.

And I notice i left Adrian Tchaikovsky's Children of Strife out of my 2026 wishlist. Almost unforgiveable of me.


 


It's a strange world.  Let's keep it that way.
 
Posted by Kroyd
12/12/2025 4:54 pm
#534

John Varley has passed on

 
Posted by Surtac
12/12/2025 5:18 pm
#535

Kroyd wrote:

John Varley has passed on

Yes, I saw that.  It's quite sad.

I was quite a fan of his earlier work in the Eight Worlds stories and I enjoyed the Gaia novels. I think I'll pull out some of his story collections for the re-read portion of my 2026 reading plan. 

 


It's a strange world.  Let's keep it that way.
 
Posted by Aja Jin
Yesterday 10:24 am
#536

I'm re-reading some Al Reynolds shorts. It occurs to me that "Galactic North" might well be inspired by Larry Niven's "The Ethics of Madness", in which two ships chase each other across the universe. Larry was at his peak of popularity in the '70's and early '80's, the perfect age for Al (born 1966) to be reading him. 

 
Posted by Surtac
Yesterday 3:38 pm
#537

Aja Jin wrote:

I'm re-reading some Al Reynolds shorts. It occurs to me that "Galactic North" might well be inspired by Larry Niven's "The Ethics of Madness", in which two ships chase each other across the universe. Larry was at his peak of popularity in the '70's and early '80's, the perfect age for Al (born 1966) to be reading him. 

I concur. I've often thought that the lighthuggers in Al's Revelation Space universe were inspired by the ramships in Niven's Known Space stories.  And the setting and events in Halcyon Years, whilst not Revelation Space, also reinforce that impression.

The other aspect of Revelation Space I was again reminded of by Halcyon Years was whether the triumvirate of captains concept might be a sly reference to the aggregate ship Minds in Banks' Culture novels.

 


It's a strange world.  Let's keep it that way.
 


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