It's an ongoing thing: I nearly always have a book and I'm nearly always looking for more.
Recently under the Bobbiscope:
Monster Hunter Legion, Larry Correia: You should realize that if this was 1933, Monster Hunter would be a magazine and Correia would be destroying typewriters keeping the pages filled, probably under some bland whitebread pseudonym the publisher chose for him. As it is, he gets to keep his name but there's a year or more between books -- and the long wait is well-rewarded!
Legion brings us back to the main cast of MH, after the solo working-vacation (!) in
Alpha, with a few of his characteristically-askew retouchings on old tropes (it's a tightrope walk and he never slips, though I always worry when he steps out -- gnomes? Trolls?
...That hoary old mythical creature?). He's still the best writer of action scenes in the business, bar none, and gets in some nice X-Files-ish images and byplay this go-round. It was especially pleasurable to encounter Agent Franks again, possibly the last honest man employed in the Federal bureaucracy. I won't ruin it for you, but you should buy this book! Justice prevails, but only just, and the meta-plot still hangs over our the heads of our heros. I can't wait to read what happens next.
In The Garden Of Iden, Kage Baker: The first of her "Company" novels, in which a one-way time-travelling company from the far future has set up a network of post-human immortals to very covertly raid all of history. The immortals are only too human and Baker's evocation of, in this case, 16th-Century Spain and England is on-point. Handled with a surprisingly light hand despite a theme and plot that could have been quite heavy, I recommend this; if you liked Stephenson's "Baroque Cycle," you'll find this book a bittersweet confection.
Redshirts, John Scalzi: Starts as a romp though a staggeringly bad SF TV series and goes meta when the characters realize they're being written. Poorly. By the time its over, it's gone meta on its own meta-ness and you'll have realized what it was bugged you about that TV show you watched in reruns. While one of the "Codas" struck me a little self-indulgent, overall it is both a good book and a painless lesson in how not to suck at writing episodic SF/Adventure -- principles Scalzi himself had to struggle with as a creative consultant on
Stargate: Universe (which didn't suck and bears no resemblance to the series in the book). If you ever wondered why TV writing tends to slide off into the ditch, you should read this book; if you ever found yourself having to play the redshirt, you
must read this book.
Wireless, Charles Stross: An enjoyable short-story collection spanning all of his worlds, including some that never made it out of the short-story stage. Via Kindle and money well spent.
Hide Me Among The Graves, Tim Powers, picking up the threads of his earlier, terrifyingly-coherent take on what vampires really are in
The Stress Of Her Regard, this book is something of a long, lucid and terribly dark dream. I liked it but you might have nightmares. Powers has a really original slant on the supernatural, IMO the first genuinely new thing since the Cthulhu Mythos.
The Bible Repairman, Tim Powers -- I didn't know he wrote short fiction; it turns out his dagger is, if anything, sharper and more deftly-weilded than his sword.
Declare, Tim Powers: this is what set me to catching up on his work. Charles Stross mentions it as the book he was warned not to read before finishing his own first novel of the The Laundry. I can see why; though the differences are many, the essential notions are very similar. If you like Stross but wish he'd written more in the tone of
A Colder War, this book is for you. If you like the bleaker sort of British spy novel, this book's for you. As always, Powers is one of SF's finest stylists; his prose never struggles or stumbles and never, ever occludes the story.
I am presently nearly through Sir Terry Pratchett's
Dodger, which isn't set on the Discworld though I swear sometimes you can see it from there. It is Pratchett at the top of his form, a delight to read. Review to follow.
(As ever, what you should do if you want to buy any of these books is hie yourself over to Tam's and use her Amazon link to order them. Costs you not one red cent extra and she gets a commission -- thereby freeing her from having to exist on the dry crusts and dessicated vegetables I, as a thrifty landlady, would otherwise feed her. Thus,
henceward.)