OT: Sci-Fi and Fantasy Thread - SPOILERS Part Three

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Recently directed Nosferatu and is also doing a Werwulf movie next. Is there desire for a SEQUEL to labyrinth? Which wasn't really a good movie at all, had some very interesting and cool effects in it and David Bowie was memorable.
 
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Recently directed Nosferatu and is also doing a Werwulf movie next. Is there desire for a SEQUEL to labyrinth? Which wasn't really a good movie at all, had some very interesting and cool effects in it and David Bowie was memorable.
was a solid movie..but not sequel-worthy IMO
 
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Like I said, I was looking for something a bit lighter for my next read, so I picked up A Natural History of Dragons by Marie Brennan. It's a fictional memoir of a Lady from a Victorian era-ish world that also happens to have dragons (duh).

It's pretty good. The main character has to navigate the social expectations of being part of high society while also pursuing her true passion of being a naturalist focusing on dragons.
 
Like I said, I was looking for something a bit lighter for my next read, so I picked up A Natural History of Dragons by Marie Brennan. It's a fictional memoir of a Lady from a Victorian era-ish world that also happens to have dragons (duh).

It's pretty good. The main character has to navigate the social expectations of being part of high society while also pursuing her true passion of being a naturalist focusing on dragons.
I finished this on Sunday. It was a nice change of pace. The fact that it dealt with pretty small stakes was refreshing. The majority of the book focuses on an expedition that is studying dragons in a foreign country, with some local intrigue mixed in (smugglers, missing villagers, mysterious dragon attacks). It's the first book in a series of 5, but I think I'll wait and see if I can snag them on sale.


My next read was much less comforting. Tender is the Flesh pissed me off, disgruntled me, and I absolutely could not put it down. It's set in the near future where a virus has wiped out most animal life and rendered their meat inedible. The obvious solution here is cannibalism, and humans are bred as livestock. It was fantastic and had me absolutely livid. One of the best books I'll likely never recommend to anybody.
 
Finally finished Wind and Truth. Like most of Stormlight, I thought it was fine. Not really looking forward to another 5 books set on Roshar, but the completionist in me will read them.

Picked up Scalzi's Starter Villain. Only a few chapters in, but I typically enjoy his writing.
Loved Red Shirts and Kaiju Preservation Society
 
I just finished Eyes of the Void by Adrian Tchaikovsky. It's the second of a trilogy and it was so much f***ing fun. It's a lot like the Expanse once it gets going. A rag tag ship crew of varying backgrounds try to find their way while dealing with they're pursued by various powers for various reasons, with all sorts of spy shit and back-stabbing, all the while they're dealing with artifacts left by a mysterious precursor race that is all sorts of dangerous.

I probably knocked out the last third of the book in one sitting, and it was not a short book, I was just so hooked into finding out what happens next. Highly recommend. I can't wait to read more of his stuff.
 
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