acemuzzy wrote:currently on Children of Time (which is pretty good, but not for DJR)
acemuzzy wrote:acemuzzy wrote:currently on Children of Time (which is pretty good, but not for DJR)
Now finished. Very interesting read, sci-fi fans will enjoy. Recommended.
(Winner of the Arthur C Clarke award or something, if you don't want to take just my weird on it. )
Anyone else read?
Skade wrote:Yeah I enjoyed it very much, haven't read much sci fi incorporating so much ecology.acemuzzy wrote:Now finished. Very interesting read, sci-fi fans will enjoy. Recommended. (Winner of the Arthur C Clarke award or something, if you don't want to take just my weird on it. ) Anyone else read?acemuzzy wrote:currently on Children of Time (which is pretty good, but not for DJR)
TheBoyRoberts wrote:The Girl Before - Anthony Capella. Murder mystery thriller. The author mixes two different timelines. Sometimes it's a little difficult to keep track of which timeline is being described, but its well worth sticking with it.
TheBoyRoberts wrote:Couple of recommendations for you all:
The Themis Files - trilogy by Sylvan Neuvel. The format is reminiscent of World War Z however the story couldn't be farther removed from WWZ. To say that they are page tuners is an understatement and can't recommend enough.
Paul the sparky wrote:Where do I start with Iain M. Banks then? Steam through the lot chronologically?
Stopharage wrote:Funnily enough I’m reading Sleeping Giants at the moment. Enjoying it so far; I’d describe it as ‘entry level sci-fi’. That’s not doing it a disservice, as it’s accessible in a way that the Three Body Problem isn’t.TheBoyRoberts wrote:Couple of recommendations for you all: The Themis Files - trilogy by Sylvan Neuvel. The format is reminiscent of World War Z however the story couldn't be farther removed from WWZ. To say that they are page tuners is an understatement and can't recommend enough.
Bob wrote:It was ok... seemed a bit forumularic and kind of far fetched to me.TheBoyRoberts wrote:The Girl Before - Anthony Capella. Murder mystery thriller. The author mixes two different timelines. Sometimes it's a little difficult to keep track of which timeline is being described, but its well worth sticking with it.
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