I'm making my Xmas list -- anybody have any good reading material to recommend?
The only book I've got on there so far is The Revolution Business, by Charlie Stross. It's volume 5 of a 6-volume "hard fantasy" series: the classic fantasy "modern-day person falls into a medieval world" trope, cleverly concealing a solid SF what-if premise and a
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The Quintaglio Ascension trilogy by Robert J. Sawyer is also a great set of books to read. Can't go wrong reading about a bunch of amusing evolved dinosaurs.
And if you can find them; Anonymous Rex, Casual Rex, & Hot and Sweaty Rex are funny reads from Eric Garcia. More amusing dinosaurs and whatnot, filled with witty humor and a very film-noir feel to the books.
Also, when in doubt, anything by Robert A. Heinlein. ^..^
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Yes. THIS. Both titles are fantastic, though I prefer Dragons Luck. As I recall, however, Dragons Luck was the last one he had mostly finished. If the woman picking up his M.Y.T.H. Inc. series is going to continue this one, I'm pretty happy, since she definitely has his style incorporated in her own.
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Fault Diagnosis of Analog Integrated Circuits
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For older SciFi, if you haven't read the Matador series by Steve Perry
Happy Kinetic has me going back to read Colossus - D F Jones
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Vacuum Diagrams? About the only place that phrase is used is on vacuum-powered accessories (aircraft & auto). Vacuum Systems however...
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How about a few essential refereces in your proffered profession?
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Mr. Holliday started with a very good diary kept by one of the participants in the gold rush. He then padded it out to include things his primary writer didn't mention by adding excerpts from other diaries, letters, and printed accounts of the day. It really made me feel I was in touch with people who had Been There.
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Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn is the first of a trilogy, but also a good standalone. Sanderson is my favourite new fantasy author.
I'm a fan of Scottish author Iain Banks. I particularly recommend his first novel, The Wasp Factory. Among his SF novels my favorite is probably Use of Weapons.
In nonfiction, I recently read James Galbraith's The Predator State, which helped me understand how the Great Recession came about.
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