OMG, I haven’t posted on this thread in a while. I borrowed the Percy Jackson series by Rick Riordan from my stepson. I enjoyed it. A modern setting where the Greek gods are real and continue to have children with mortals. Fun light reading. The first book is now a series on Disney+.
Now I’m reading the Magnus Chase series also by Rick Riordan. It’s set in the same universe as Percy Jackson, but focuses on the Norse gods.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
What Are You Reading?
Collapse
X
-
I get my monthly bundle fix from the baen of all budgets... (7 ebooks for $20, 4 of them new) and sometimes some other purchases.
I just finished reading the Monster Hunter International series by Larry Correia ... Presently 9 books + 4 collections/offshoots.
One irritating set of "Old Sarge's Tales" in them is about silver bullets compared to lead: A) Lighter weight B) Harder metal C) Expensive
A) Pure silver is 92.5% the density of lead => damn close
B) Relevant to blackpowder shooting. Since the 1880s anything useful is jacketed, usually brass or copper, which are also much harder than lead.
A1) Factoring in the necessary jacket, a solid silver bullet will weigh *more* than a jacketed lead bullet.
C) These good old boys shoot mostly 45 ACP, 7.62x51, 12.7x99 & 5.56x45. Now a 168 grain 7.62 silver bullet will be about $7 of silver. Steep for plunking crows, WOW-somever, they also deploy a Mi-24 Hind copter for maximum giggles. The silver in the ammo is going to be a minor expense!
Other Old Sarge's Tales I've run across:
1960s: tin foil in yer hubcaps will protect you from cop radar!
1990s: (old tunnel rat SCIF supervisor) Depleted Uranium is not radioactive!
Leave a comment:
-
I started reading "On A Sea of Glass". It's a book about the Titanic. I'm really enjoying it so far.
Leave a comment:
-
Finally got ahold of "With The Lightnings" by David Drake. (RIP.) I've read many of the other books in this series, but apparently I started with the second book. So now I finally get to read how our intrepid protagonists meet in the first place, and where their starship comes from.
Leave a comment:
-
I am now reading "The Journals of Major-Gen. C. G. Gordon, C. B. At Kartoum". This book was published in 1885. I purchased it from a used book store around 1970, and finally decided I should read it. It is an interesting account of Gen. Gordon's last months during the siege of Khartoum, Sudan, by Islamic extremists. He died there in January 1885.
Leave a comment:
-
I have started reading "Indian Givers: How the Indians of the Americas Transformed the World" by Jack Weatherford. An excellent book.
Leave a comment:
-
I just finished "The Flavors of Other Worlds" by Alan Dean Foster. This is a collection of 13 science fiction tales.
Leave a comment:
-
Time for my yearly meander though LOTR - today is the 22nd of September, so happy birthday to Bilbo and Frodo Baggins.
Leave a comment:
-
I'm hurtling through Jodi Taylor's Chronicles of St.Mary's series. Lots of timehopping about so you have to keep track of what happened in each book,especially when you get to multiple timelines,with multiple versions of St.Mary's in past present and future with people who are either dead,maybe dead,aren't dead here but everybody thinks they are because they are dead in an alternate version....
But the main character Max is a feisty little sod* and there's lots of fun hopping to scenes from history,not just from major events but everyday life,even the gory bits(anyone fancy dealing with a fellow traveller who has caught the plague in 14th century England?).
* Yes I'd do her.in fact she gets done several times.Over the bonnet of a car sometimes.Lucky sod*
Leave a comment:
-
Most recent book is, I believe, Amongst Our Weapons. I've also read the three novellas and the short story collection (Tales from the Folly), but I need to get my hands on the comic books, since they are also canon. I got the first comic book, Body Work, for Christmas, and I've seen references to it in at least one of the novels. (Peter mentions "the most haunted car in England," which featured in the comic.)
Leave a comment:
-
Oh, I loved the Rivers of London books. Not sure if there's another one that has come out since I read the last one; I'll have to check my library again.
I think I'll re-read the Murderbot Diaries again soon. Gonna hit Powell's City of Books today or tomorrow!!!
Leave a comment:
-
Finished off the Rivers of London series, then started bringing in some of my D&D books to bone up on lore and knowledge and such for future tabletop play.
Also recently acquired the Binging with Babish cookbook after starting to get into Babish's YouTube channel. I don't know that I'll ever actually make anything from the cookbook, but I like his channel and want to support it.
Similarly, I've pre-ordered B. Dylan Hollis's Baking Yesteryear cookbook, as I like Dylan's short videos (originally on TikTok, but as I don't use TikTok, I follow him on YouTube) and have actually made one of the recipes he featured-- Ice Cream Bread. (Which is delightful. Partway bread, partway cake, a little bit sweet without being overpowering. Gave some to my diabetic Mom, who loved it.) Looking forward to seeing what other recipes Dylan put in the cookbookk.
Leave a comment:
-
Lots of Mercedes Lackey. I've gotten through three of the "500 Kingdoms" books, which offer an interesting take on fairy tales, and just finished off "Joust", which is a sort of ancient-Egypt-meets-jousting-on-dragons thing. With two sequels of the latter to go. Most of the above were checked out of the local library.
They're great mental popcorn!!
Leave a comment:
-
I am reading "If You Shoot The Breeze, Are You Murdering The Weather?" by Alan Dean Foster. A collection of 100 short essays he wrote for a local newspaper.
Leave a comment:
-
I'm currently reading 1001 Great Ideas for Teaching & Raising Children with Autism or Asperger's [an outdated designation - we are now encouraged to say Autism Spectrum Disorder] by Ellen Notbohm and Veronica Zysk. I had bought it a while back, but lent it to my partner's mom, who is raising his son who has ASD. Although a lot of the suggestion are focused more on children who are more neurodivergent than my stepson, I'm still finding a lot of things that are helpful. They had suggestions for homemade fidget toys, which is great. They also suggested getting a chew necklace for a child of any age, if that's a comfort for them. I've seen my stepson chew on his shirts or regular necklaces, so I asked him if he'd like me to get him some silicone chew necklaces. He said yes, so they're on their way.
Leave a comment:

Leave a comment: