Monday, March 30, 2015

Reading List - 2014

Year #5 !!! Again - anything listed as [re-read] is either in preparation for the next book in a series or for my own pleasure 'cause it was a good read. So, my reading list for 2014. Truth is - I read more books than are listed below. There was a brief period where I went through a bunch of re-reads and didn't remember to update this listing. I didn't average a book a week, but the final tally is more than indicated.And so ...

Currently Reading
  • Unnatural History by Jonathan Green
  • Promise of Blood by Brian McClellan (Powder Mage, #1)

Started but On-hold
  • Empire State by Adam Christopher
  • House of Chains by Steve Erikson (The Malazan Book of the Fallen, #4)
  • Use of Weapons by Iain M. Banks (The Culture, #4)

Started and Abandoned (either I didn't like it or found something more interesting)

    Completed
    1. Ancilliary Justice by Ann Leckie
    2. Anchorwick by Jeffrey E. Barlough (Western Lights, #4)
    3. Sherlock Holmes: The Stuff of Nightmares by James Lovegrove
    4. A Study in Ashes by Emma Jane Holloway (Baskerville Affair, #3)
    5. re-read The Cobra Trilogy by Timothy Zahn
    6. Fiddlehead by Cherie M. Priest (The Clockwork Century, #6)
    7. One Second After by William Forstchen
    8. Black Feathers by Joseph D'Lacey (Black Dawn, #1)
    9. Like A Mighty Army by David Weber (Safehold, #7)
    10. Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl by David Barnett
    11. The Book of the Crowman by Joseph D'Lacey (Black Dawn, #2)
    12. Shadow Ops: Control Point by Myke Cole (Shadow Ops, #1)
    13. re-read Sixty-one Nails by Mike Shevdon (The Courts of Feyre, #1)
    14. re-read Thieftaker by D.B. Jackson (Thieftaker Chronicles, #1)
    15. re-read The Road to Bedlam by Mike Shevdon (The Courts of Feyre, #2)
    16. Strangeness and Charm by Mike Shevdon (The Courts of Feyre, #3)
    17. re-read Leviathan Wakes by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #1)
    18. At the Queen's Command by Michael Stackpole (The Crown Colonies, #1)
    19. The Eighth Court by Mike Shevdon (The Courts of Feyre, #4)
    20. Of Limited Loyaty by Michael Stackpole (The Crown Colonies, #2)
    21. A Natural History of Dragons by Marie Brennan (Lady Trent, #1)
    22. The Long Earth by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter (The Long Earth, #1)
    23. New Earth by Ben Bova
    24. Existance by David Brin
    25. Caliban's War by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #2)
    26. re-read The Daedalus Incident by Michael J. Martinez
    27. re-read Thieftaker by D.B. Jackson
    28. Thieves' Quarry by D.B. Jackson
    29. The Forever War by Joe Haldeman
    30. Abbadon's Gate by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #3)
    31. The Hum and the Shiver by Alex Bledsoe (Tufa, #1)
    32. The Enceladus Crisis by Michael J. Martinez (Daedalus, #2)
    33. re-read The Iron Wyrm Affair by Lilith Saintcrow (Bannon & Clare, #1)
    34. Hooded Man: An Omnibus of Post-Apocalyptic Novels by Paul Kane (The Afterblight Chronicles)
    35. re-read The Red Plague Affair by Lilith Saintcrow (Bannon & Clare, #2)
    36. The Ripper Affair by Lilith Saintcrow (Bannon & Clare, #3)

    Outstanding (& Very Highly Recommended) Reads from 2014
    My top pick for the 2013 year of reading is: The Black Dawn Series by Joseph D'Lacey
    1. Black Feathers
    2. The Book of the Crowman
    Good storyline, very nice premise. A number of blurbs on the back cover and the first few interior pages tout D'Lacey as an author of horror. Personally, I really didn't find anything particularly horrific in this first volume. However, I have a sneaking suspicion that D'Lacey is a big Neil Gaiman fan. There were numerous times throughout the novel where instead of seeing Gordon Black, Megan, Skelton & Pike, I was seeing Richard Mayhew, Door, and Croup & Vandemar. So, if you are a fan of Gaiman's Neverwhere, you should like this novel. Best I can describe it - it's an apocalyptic/post-apocalyptic novel with an ecological bent. Instead of London Below, we wander Britain above with Gordon and Megan as Richard and Door with their roles sort of reversed.

    2014 Honorable Mention: The Bannon & Clare Series by Lilith Saintcrow
    1. The Iron Wyrm Affair
    2. The Red Plague Affair
    3. The Ripper Affair
    An excellent blend of steampunk, magic, and Holmesian fantasy starring Emma Bannon as a sorceress in service to Britain's queen, and Archibald Clare, a mentath or human logic engine. Excellent secondary and tertiary characters with plenty of unrevealed stories that leave plenty of room for more books in the series. While the third volume could mark an ending, I sincerely hope Ms. Saintcrow revisits this world often ... and soon.

    Outstanding (& Very Highly Recommended) Reads from 2013: The Daedalus Series by Michael J. Martinez
    1. The Daedalus Incident
    2. The Enceladus Crisis
    In what appears to be the first 2 of at least three(3) novels, this series is an intriguing mix of science fiction/fantasy and seafaring derring-do. Half of the books are along the lines of something like a Horatio Hornblower in Space while the other half is a contemporary space exploration story of Mars and Saturn. The two story lines progress well individually and inevitably converge in the final chapters. While I would not necessarily call the one half of this steampunk, it has that kind of flavor to it. While the first is a brilliant stand-alone, you really need the first to understand what's happening in the second and any subsequent novels.

    2013 Honorable mentions:
    • Leviathan Wakes by James S.A. Corey (The Expanse, #1) - excellent straight SF/Space Opera novel.
    • Thieftaker by D.B. Jackson (Thieftaker Chronicles, #1) - captivating alternate history/fantasy.
    Outstanding (& Very Highly Recommended) Reads from 2012: The "Mrs. Quent" trilogy by Galen Beckett
    1. The Magicians and Mrs. Quent
    2. The House on Durrow Street
    3. The Master of Heathcrest Hall
    I have to admit that I am not a huge fan of literature the likes of Emily Bronte or Jane Austen. The closest I ever got to this is probably Little Women and Little Men by Louisa May Alcott, The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett, or Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery. Now I can sit and watch things like "Sense and Sensibility", "Pride and Prejudice", "Great Expectations", or "Downton Abbey", as well as those listed above, all day on television or in a movie theater but I would not crack the book to save my life. Galen Beckett, a.k.a. Mark Anthony, has added a fantastical element to the Austen/Bronte-ish genre with his Mrs. Quent series. Basically, he has placed a whole Austen-type story in the land of Altania, which the current characters' ancestors literally carved out of a forest wilderness - a sentient forest known as the Wyrdwood. This sentient forest and a group of ancestral magicians were instrumental in the defense of the realm against an earlier alien/demonic invasion. Following this historical war, magic and magicians have fallen out of favor over succeeding generations, while the forests have been deemed dangerous and all but destroyed. At the time of this trilogy the forests have been reduced to a scattering of walled-up enclaves and preserves, magicians are basically stylish fops or an affectation for the amusement of polite society, and witches are hunted down and burned. However, hundreds of years have passed, wandering planets are beginning to re-align, and the threat of invasion is returning. The above is a rather condensed overview of the fantasy elements of the story. In fact, Beckett has basically taken an Austen-type trilogy, ground up the above fantastical elements, and applied a very light dusting of this across the entire trilogy of novels. I have really enjoyed this series, both the main characters and the three main story lines we are following (even though I am just beginning the final book in the series.) The only thing, so far, that has eluded me is the part the Illusionists play. Mrs. Quent, the Wyrdwood, and the magicians have, so far, been instrumental in coming out ahead in the several skirmishes so far, but I have yet to see the Illusionists role in the the final confrontation.
    Outstanding (& Very Highly Recommended) Reads from 2011 - TIE
    The "Tales of the Ketty Jay" series by Chris Wooding
    1. Retribution Falls
    2. The Black Lung Captain
    3. The Iron Jackal
    4. The Ace of Skulls
    This series has been pure fun to read. Lots of action and intrigue, plenty of mystery as we learn bits and pieces of the past of the Ketty Jay's crew, sliding under and around the authorities, and a little bit of a steampunk flavor. I'll tell you what this series is ... it's Joss Whedon's "Firefly" meets Microsoft's "Crimson Skies". I was a little leery at first, but found it to be an excellent series. Time for me to pick up book #3.
    The "Vampire Earth" series by Clay and Susan Griffith
    1. The Greyfriar
    2. The Rift Walker
    3. The Kingmakers
    What Cherie M. Priest's "Clockwork Century" did for zombies, Clay and Susan have done for vampires. While it seems that just everybody has to do something about vampiric (even David Weber and Out of the Dark, I found this series quite refreshing, from the conflict between the tropical-dwelling humans and northern-dwelling vampires to the politics of the vampire hierarchy. I could probably live without Senator Clarke of the American Republic, but I understand the alliance required to accomplish the Reconquest of the north, taking the fight back to the vampires who drove the surviving humans out during The Great Killing. The Greyfriar himself makes for a great hero.
    Outstanding (& Very Highly Recommended) Reads from 2010
    The "Clockwork Century" series by Cherie M. Priest
    1. Boneshaker
    2. Clementine
    3. Dreadnought
    4. Ganymede
    5. Inexplicables
    6. Fiddlehead
    7. Jacaranda (forthcoming Spring 2015)
    In a year that has seen a flood of "steampunk" novels hitting the market (thanks to Tor's Oct. 2009 Steampunk month), Cherie M. Priest's new Clockwork Century series stand out. The series excels, as evidenced by the fact that the first novel in the series, Boneshaker, was a Hugo and Nebula award nominee this year. One of the more interesting aspects of this series is the fact that we have supporting characters playing major roles in the subsequent novels. Although I was hesitant to delve into this series, primarily due to the whole "zombie" thing (she calls them rotters), Ms. Priest's explanation of their coming into existence was quite plausible and they did not play a major role in the initial novel. The second novel, Clementine is a bit more difficult to acquire as it was only offered through the (thrice-damned) Subterranean Press. Even so, it was an enjoyable read as one of the side characters from novel #1 played a more substantial role here as the action shifts from the west coast to the east and the on-going Civil War. The third (so far) novel in the series, Dreadnought sees the action shift, yet again, from the Civil War in the east back toward the west coast. This was an even more exciting book than the previous two. Truth to tell, I was physically drained by the time I got through the chapter where the "Dreadnought" finally meets it's Northern equivalent outside Salt Lake City. I highly recommend this series, and while each stands well on its own I found that you really need to have read Boneshaker to understand the interconnecting thread of the gas and "rotters" introduced in the first book.
    Outstanding (& Very Highly Recommended) Reads from 2009
    The "Western Lights" series by Jeffrey Barlough
    1. Dark Sleeper
    2. The House in the High Wood
    3. Strange Cargo
    4. Anchorwick
    5. Bertram of Butter Cross
    6. A Tangle in Slops
    7. What I Found at Hoole
    Jeffrey Barlough's "Western Lights" series was a pleasure and a surprise. Although the setting was intriguing enough to cause me to acquire these novels, the characters are what really drives them home. Barlough has a wonderful way of portraying both his main characters as well as incidental sub-characters. You end up caring about every one of them as if they were old friends and acquaintances and the descriptive settings make you feel like you'd actually been there.