Last week I finished When the Moon Hits Your Eye by John Scalzi, and I am currently working on the fourth book in the Chequey Series by Daniel O’Malley, Royal Gambit.
The Chequey Series started with The Rook, and I’ve been reading every book as it comes out. I enjoy the whole series, but it can be controversial because not everybody agrees with its structure, as each book doesn’t directly follow the characters of the one before, but instead tells another story with different characters who interact in the same world. They slightly overlap at some point.
What about all of you? What have you been reading or listening to lately??
With regards to Bingo, I’m provisionally planning to use When the Moon Hits Your Eye for the square New Release and Royal Gambit for the square Political, but they may drop off or be changed as time goes on.
For details on the c/Books bingo challenge that just restarted for the year, you can checkout the initial Book Bingo, and its Recommendation Post. Links are also present in our community sidebar.
Dungeon Crawler Carl
Welcome Crawlers!
This is the correct answer. Currently relistening to the audiobook series; book 4 atm. Enjoy your adventure. This is the one series that I would want to experience fresh again if possible.
Kill, kill, kill!
“Between the World and Me” Ta-Nehisi Coates 2015
Such a great book. Really upset he no longer writes for the Atlantic. Their long form journalism has taken such a huge hit since he left. I had really hoped he and Michelle Alexander would inspire a new civil rights movement. Here we are.
The case of Charles Dexter Ward by H.P. Lovecraft.
Doctor Thorne, by the infamous Trollope! It’s exceedingly funny, I can highly recommend it. Like 19th century Terry Pratchett…
I’m reading The Overstory by Richard Powers. I find it a slow read. A very good read too. I would recommend it specifically to those who are restless.
I’m wrapping up with the Silo seeies by Hugh Howey. I finished Dust and have one short story left in Silo Stories.
I’ve enjoyed the series more than I expected to based on reviews I read. It wasn’t perfect but the ending of the main novels left me mostly satisfied. There was one sequence that I think should have been left out and one thread I wish we had gotten a more in depth look at (staying vague to avoid spoilers).
Coming back after reading the last short story to say that it was awful and put a bad taste in my mouth overall. If you’re reading this series, do yourself a favor and ignore In the Woods. It didn’t make sense from a story/logic perspective AND was deeply unsatisfying.
Wow, I wonder if I happened to miss that last one. I really liked the series and didn’t remember reading something past the third book. Thanks for the tip!
It’s a collection of 3 short stories called Silo Stories. It came with the box set of the books I got. The first two are fine, but honestly, I don’t you’re missing anything by skipping them altogether.
Fiction: The Borrowed, by Chan Ho-Kei (a hard-boiled detective novel set in Hong Kong)
Non-fiction: A New Illustrated History of Taiwan, by Chao Wan-Yai

Wow this is an unreal listen…
It is about the madness that is the special forces particularly the ones stationed at Fort Bragg.
The first chapter is about how two Special Forces guys took their families to Disney World. They spend the trip snorting coke, dropping Molly and shoving speedballs (coke and Herion) up their asses.
When they got back, the wives went shopping and left thier children with the fathers.
One of them fathers (SF guys) got uber paranoid and became convinced there were listening and tracking devices in the car, so he began to dissemble the car in the driveway. The two starting fighting and things escalated and one shot the other 7 times.
The shooting was ruled self defense and by ruled I mean swept under the rug.
The story gets more intense and delves into the GWOT and the madness that caused globally and the role that the Delta Force and SF played in that.
It lays out the insanity of afghanistan, Iraq, the Arab spring and all the fucked up shit that we caused.
It lays out the culture and world of the SF world…
It is an intense read/listen.
Reading Peter Straub/Stephen King “Black House”. Bit of a slow start but is it ever good!
- White sand, volume 3 by Brandon Sanderson
- Reaper’s gale by Steven Erikson
- Mindful eating by Jan Chozen Bays
I’d like to know in 6 months how you liked that last book :)
RemindMe! 6 months
Kangaroo Chronicles
Currently reading/listening to Wizard’s First Rule by Terry Goodkind. I’ve tried diving into earlier fantasy authors like Moorcock and Le Guin, but their writing styles never quite clicked with me. This one, though, I’m really enjoying so far.
I’m rereading The Baroque Cycle by Neil Stevenson. I don’t know what madness came over me to cause me to finally finish that marathon and then start it over right away. I’ve never done that before.
Just finished Horns by Joe Hill.
How did you like the When the Moon Hits Your Eye?
Finished The Sunlit Man by Brandon Sanderson. The last half went by pretty quickly.
Anyone who hasn’t read it yet, I would recommend reading it after reading couple of Stormlight Archive books. You can still read it without that, but some of the thing probably won’t be clear.
Bingo Squares: 5E Jerk with a Heart of Gold maybe. Not sure if it qualifies.
It was a struggle for me. I really generally like his stuff quite a lot. The cast of characters is quite big and you get chapters from each of their perspectives. So it reads like a series of short stories.
I have issues with short story anthologies because I didn’t build up any momentum. I enjoy them, it’s just more of a slog for me to get through.








