I
thought I’d share the status of my current book haul, the novels that I’m
currently reading at the moment, and the next few on my TBR pile to give you an
idea as to what to expect with reviews in the upcoming month or so. As well as
these books I’ll be working my way through the Self Published Fantasy Blog-Off,
and you can probably expect the next status update either late July or early
August with the next round of books that I’ve cut. So without further ado, if
you want to know what's in store, keep reading.
What I’m Currently Reading:
GO SET A WATCHMAN by Harper
Lee (Harper Collins)
From Harper Lee comes a
landmark new novel set two decades after her beloved Pulitzer Prize-winning
masterpiece, To Kill A Mockinbird.
Maycomb, Alabama.
Twenty-six-year-old Jean Louise Finch – ‘Scout’ – returns home from New York
City to visit her ageing father, Atticus. Set against the backdrop of the civil
rights tensions and political turmoil that were transforming the South, Jean
Louise’s homecoming turns bittersweet when she learns disturbing truths about
her close-knit family, the town and the people dearest to her. Memories from
her childhood flood back, and her values and assumptions are thrown into doubt.
Featuring many of the iconic characters from To Kill a Mockingbird, Go Set A Watcman perfectly captures a
young woman, and a world, in painful yet necessary transition out of the
illusions of the past – a journey that can be guided only by one’s own
conscience.
Written in the mid-1950s Go Set A Watchman, imparts a fuller, richer understanding and
appreciation of Harper Lee. Here is an unforgettable novel of wisdom, humanity,
passion, humour and effortless precision – a profoundly affecting work of art
that is both wonderfully evocative of another era and relevant to our own
times. It not only confirms the enduring brilliance of To Kill a Mockingbird, but
also serves as its essential companion, adding depth, context and new meaning
to a classic.
STAR WARS: DARK DISCIPLE
by Christie Golden (Lucas Books)
When the Jedi decide to
target Count Dooku-Darth Tryanus- himself, they turn to his ex-apprentice,
Asajj Ventress, for help in getting close to the slippery Sith Lord. But when
unexpected sparks fly between Ventress and Quinlan Vos, the unorthodox Jedi
sent to work with her, the mission becomes a web of betrayal, alliances,
secrets, and dark plotting that might just be the undoing of both Jedi and Sith
- and everything in between!
What’s Next:
DEPTH by Lev Ac Rosen (Titan Books)
In a post-apocalyptic flooded New York City, a private
investigator’s routine surveillance case leads to a treasure everyone wants to
find—and someone is willing to kill for.
Depth combines
hardboiled mystery and dystopian science fiction in a future where the rising
ocean levels have left New York twenty-one stories under water and cut off from
the rest of the United States. But the city survives, and Simone Pierce is one
of its best private investigators. Her latest case, running surveillance on a
potentially unfaithful husband, was supposed to be easy. Then her target is
murdered, and the search for his killer points Simone towards a secret from the
past that can’t possibly be real—but that won’t stop the city’s most powerful
men and women from trying to acquire it for themselves, with Simone caught in
the middle.
THE CHILD EATER by
Rachel Pollack (Jo Fletcher Books)
Two boys, worlds and
centuries apart.
In a time of magic, a penniless boy named Matyas runs away to the Academy of Wizards to pursue his dream - to discover the secret of flying. Along the way he will become the greatest Master of his age, only to lose everything.
Is the modern day, Simon Wisdom struggles to hide his psychic abilities while his father Jack lives in fear that those powers will destroy his son. But nothing can stop Simon from hearing the cries of dead children pleading for his help.
Matyas and Simon will never meet. But they are bound together, for only their combined strength can hope to overcome the monster that haunts existence itself - the Child Eater.
REGENERATION by
Stephanie Saulter (Jo Fletcher Books)
The gillungs -
waterbreathing, genetically modified humans - are thriving. They've colonised
riverbanks and ports long since abandoned to the rising seas and the demand for
their high-efficiency technologies is growing fast.
But as demand grows, so do fears about their impact on both norm businesses and the natural environment.
Then, a biohazard scare at Sinkat, their colony on the Thames, fuels the opposition and threatens to derail the gillungs' progress. But was it an accident, or was it sabotage?
DCI Sharon Varsi has her suspicions, but her investigations are compromised by family ties. And now there is a new threat: Zavcka Klist is about to be released from prison - and she wants her company back.
MORIARTY by Anthony
Horowitz (Orion Books)
Sherlock Holmes is dead.
Days after Holmes and
his arch-enemy Moriarty fall to their doom at the Reichenbach Falls, Pinkerton
agent Frederick Chase arrives from New York. The death of Moriarty has created
a poisonous vacuum which has been swiftly filled by a fiendish new criminal
mastermind. Ably assisted by Inspector Athelney Jones, a devoted student of
Holmes's methods of investigation and deduction, Chase must hunt down this
shadowy figure, a man much feared but seldom seen, a man determined to engulf
London in a tide of murder and menace.
The game is afoot . .
JOYLAND by Steven King (Titan Books)
College student Devin
Jones took the summer job at Joyland hoping to forget the girl who broke his
heart. But he wound up facing something far more terrible: the legacy of a
vicious murder, the fate of a dying child, and dark truths about life and what
comes after that would change his world forever. A riveting story about love
and loss, about growing up and growing old and about those who don't get to do
either because death comes for them before their time JOYLAND is Stephen King
at the peak of his storytelling powers. With all the emotional impact of King
masterpieces such as The Green Mile and The Shawshank Redemption, JOYLAND is at
once a mystery, a horror story, and a bittersweet coming-of-age novel, one that
will leave even the most hard-boiled of readers profoundly moved.
THE GHOSTS OF HEAVEN by
Marcus Sedgewick (Roaring Book Press)
A cleverly interlinked
novel written in four parts by PRINTZ AWARD-winning author, Marcus Sedgwick,
about survival and discovery, and about the effect of the spiral, a symbol that
has no end, on all our lives.
The spiral has existed
as long as time has existed. Follow the ways of infinity to discover its
meaning.
It's there when a girl
walks through the forest, the moist green air clinging to her skin.
There centuries later in
a pleasant green dale, hiding the treacherous waters of Golden Beck that take
Anna, who they call a witch.
There on the other side
of the world, where a mad poet watches the waves and knows the horrors they
hide, and far into the future as Keir Bowman realises his destiny.
Each takes their next
step in life. None will ever go back to the same place.
And so their journeys
begin...
ALL THE LIGHT WE CANNOT
SEE by Anthony Doeer (Simon & Schuster)
WINNER OF THE 2015
PULITZER PRIZE FOR FICTION
NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FINALIST
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
WINNER OF THE CARNEGIE MEDAL FOR FICTION
NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FINALIST
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
WINNER OF THE CARNEGIE MEDAL FOR FICTION
A beautiful, stunningly
ambitious novel about a blind French girl and a German boy whose paths collide
in occupied France as both try to survive the devastation of World War II
When Marie Laure goes
blind, aged six, her father builds her a model of their Paris neighborhood, so
she can memorize it with her fingers and then navigate the real streets. But
when the Germans occupy Paris, father and daughter flee to Saint-Malo on the
Brittany coast, where Marie-Laure’s agoraphobic great uncle lives in a tall,
narrow house by the sea wall.
In another world in
Germany, an orphan boy, Werner, is enchanted by a crude radio. He becomes a
master at building and fixing radios, a talent ultimately makes him a highly
specialized tracker of the Resistance. Werner travels through the heart of
Hitler Youth to the far-flung outskirts of Russia, and finally into Saint-Malo,
where his path converges with Marie-Laure.
Deftly interweaving the
lives of Marie-Laure and Werner, Doerr illuminates the ways, against all odds,
people try to be good to one another. Ten years in the writing, ALL THE LIGHT
WE CANNOT SEE is his most ambitious and dazzling work.
THE TABIT GENESIS by
Toby Gonzalez (Gollancz)
They left Sol in two
great ships, carrying with them the last hope for humankind. Destined for
different stars, their mission was to ensure the survival of our species. One
ship was never heard from again. Decades later, the other arrived at a lifeless
world, where the survivors learned that Earth was lost not to famine, but to an
alien species determined to eradicate humans from existence.
Man is not alone in the universe, and the last of us are hunted. Driven by strong characters facing tremendous odds, Tony Gonzales delivers SF in the grandest tradition: an epic adventure full of colossal ships, vast battles and unimaginable challenges.
ROBOTEER by Alex Lamb (Gollancz)
The starship Ariel is on a mission of the
utmost secrecy, upon which the fate of thousands of lives depend. Though the
ship is a mile long, its six crew are crammed into a space barely large enough
for them to stand. Five are officers, geniuses in their field. The other is
Will Kuno-Monet, the man responsible for single-handedly running a ship
comprised of the most dangerous and delicate technology that mankind has ever
devised. He is the Roboteer.
Roboteer is a hard-SF
novel set in a future in which the colonization of the stars has turned out to
be anything but easy, and civilization on Earth has collapsed under the
pressure of relentless mutual terrorism. Small human settlements cling to
barely habitable planets. Without support from a home-world they have had to
develop ways of life heavily dependent on robotics and genetic engineering.
Then out of the ruins of Earth's once great empire, a new force arises - a
world-spanning religion bent on the conversion of all mankind to its creed. It
sends fleets of starships to reclaim the colonies. But the colonies don't want
to be reclaimed. Mankind's first interstellar war begins. It is dirty,
dangerous and hideously costly.
Will is a man bred to
interface with the robots that his home-world Galatea desperately needs to
survive. He finds himself sent behind enemy lines to discover the secret of
their newest weapon. What he discovers will transform their understanding of
both science and civilization forever... but at a cost.
So we
have a lot of interesting stuff there. A bit of literary fiction, science
fiction, history, young adult and horror that should make each of these books nice experiences, and as
usual, I’ll try to review as many as possible for this blog, so you can probably expect to see reviews when I finish them. I'll have one for James Patterson's Cross My Heart up by the end of the weekend, though.
I really want to read "Regeneration." Loving that series so very much!
ReplyDeleteI have a copy of "The Child Eater." Haven't read it yet, but I keep hearing a lot of good things about it, so I'm hoping that when I do read it, I'll find it lives up to the hype!
The first two books in the Revolution series were awesome, should be interesting to see what happens with Regeneration, and yeah, I've heard a lot of good things about the Child Eater as well so it should be interesting to read.
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