Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, February 23, 2025?

Still reading Resident Alien, The Graphic Novel, a unique science-fiction/murder-mystery mashup, written by Peter Hogan. The story is great and the art by Steve Parkhouse is wonderful.
Listening to the "absurdly funny and devastatingly tender" The Wedding People by Alison Espach. A story about one unexpected wedding guest and the surprising people who help her start anew. It's given me lots of laughs.
What books are you enjoying these days?


roscoeroscoe
(1,709 posts)Stands alone, but it is actually the sequel to Delta-V. These lay out a science fiction tale of asteroid mining, lunar surface mining, building solar panels in space to send clean energy to Earth. Simply the best books I've run across in a long time. Highly Recommended!
hermetic
(8,815 posts)Thanks for sharing.
sinkingfeeling
(54,788 posts)hermetic
(8,815 posts)with white-knuckle tension and jaw-dropping surprises."
Yep, that's my kind of story. Thanks.
cbabe
(4,813 posts)Story flips between characters and time. Baffled me until I caught up half way through.
The end was completely whaaat!?
Powers is a brilliant writer. But I wish he had a better editor.
Plot follows two male friends, poor black poet and rich white techie (cringe). They discover the game Go, also black and white. Becomes their intricate life metaphor.
And then Evie, French Canadian famous best ever oceanographer. And her dives with all the sea creatures. Best poetic parts of the book.
And the South Pacific Island and its people trying to stay above water, literally.
And the sentient ai.
Book is one big near future mishmash metaphor.
It could have been a masterpiece but not.
hermetic
(8,815 posts)cbabe
(4,813 posts)challenging. Where exactly do humans fit in the rocks and clouds.
One of the best is Desert Solitaire/Edward Abbey.
cbabe
(4,813 posts)about snow and skiing and avalanches. Cant remember the title, of course.
Fascinating how snow flakes form and fall and compress into different banks and fields and turn to ice and glaciers.
Maybe someone knows the title?
txwhitedove
(4,096 posts)cbabe
(4,813 posts)txwhitedove
(4,096 posts)Now found Backcountry, or Dragons in the Snow, or Snowstruck? There's a lot.
cbabe
(4,813 posts)Dragons in the Snow
Avalanche Detectives and the Race to Beat Death in the Mountains
by Ed Power
2020 National Outdoor Book Award Winner - Outdoor Literature
Bayard
(24,620 posts)Half-way through, "Thunderhead," by Lincoln Childs and Douglas Preston. Liking it a lot, especially the Native aspects. Thank you for introducing me to these authors.
hermetic
(8,815 posts)It's at my library, though, so I'll probably be reading it soon. I do love those guys' writing.
Thunderhead is also a book I read when I was around 12 I'd guess. Great story about a horse by Mary O'Hara. Who also wrote My Friend, Fliicka, another of my faves. Thunderhead was a foal of Flicka's.
Speaking of faves, I go to that Reddit page of beautiful photos you posted the other day, every morning, to see the new posts. It's a nice way to start the day. So, thank you.
japple
(10,459 posts)Am leaning towards reading Anne Tyler's A Spool of Blue Thread, but I might go for Meagan Church's The Girls We Sent Away. Decisions, decisions.
hermetic
(8,815 posts)Hope you are all better now. Or at least mostly. I've seen you've had some pretty wild weather, with ice and stuff. Take care.
MIButterfly
(185 posts)hermetic
(8,815 posts)Complex, satisfying, and full of dexterous twists, The Waiting demonstrates once more that you can't do better than Michael Connelly --Forbes
mentalsolstice
(4,566 posts)I just finished Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult, about a high school shooting. I love her books, however, this wasnt one of my favorites.
Next book up is Daughter of Molokai by Alan Brennert. Its the sequel to Molokai, which I read several years ago, excellent book about a Hansens disease colony in Hawaii.
Have a great week everyone!
txwhitedove
(4,096 posts)Currently reading Up on the Woof Top by Spencer Quinn, with my old friend Chet up to mischief again. "Chet discovers that he is not fond of reindeer. But the case turns out to be about much more than reindeer after Dame Ariadne's personal assistant takes a long fall into Devil's Purse, a deep mountain gorge."
yellowdogintexas
(23,152 posts)It was a long book and I kept getting interrupted
So then I ran across the prequel to the "The Forgotten Coast" series that I have been working through. It was a short byt satisfying read I learned a few things about a couple of the characters that are not in the later books.
the Liberal Ladies Bookclub is reading Humans: A Brief History of How We Fucked It All Up by Tom Phillips as our March choice. I think this is the book Katy Porter was reading during a house session back before Christmas.
Before I dive into that I need to read something light so that will be this week's goal.
question everything
(49,929 posts)Yes, the First Son. A White House staffer is found dead, poisoned by cyanide at the apartment of a personal secretary to first lady Eleanor Roosevelt. Mrs. Roosevelt refuses to believe the charges and starts her own investigation.
The President enjoys his wife involvement as he prepares for a possible war in Europe. Neither can stand J. Edgar Hoover but dare not antagonize him.
Easy enjoying reading.
dwayneb
(972 posts)It's been a long time so I don't recall most of this book. Since it was written in the late 80's there are no references to cell phones or computers so it's a bit of a time warp.