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Sunday Morning Book Thread - 6-28-2026 ["Perfessor" Squirrel]
Welcome to the prestigious, internationally acclaimed, stately, and illustrious Sunday Morning Book Thread! The place where all readers are welcome, regardless of whatever guilty pleasure we feel like reading. Here is where we can discuss, argue, bicker, quibble, consider, debate, confabulate, converse, and jaw about our latest fancy in reading material. As always, pants are required, unless you are wearing these pants...
So relax, find yourself a warm kitty (or warm puppy--I won't judge) to curl up in your lap, and dive into a new book. What are YOU reading this fine morning?
PIC NOTE
It's the end of June so we all know what that means--PUBLIC LIBRARY BOOK SALE!
These books represent my haul this year. Not too shabby.
Galactic Empires Volume Two edited by Brian Aldiss -- An anthology of short stories about galactic civilizations.
Saucer: Savage Planet by Stephen Coonts
The Lost World by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle -- A classic adventure story about dinosaurs and exploration.
Willful Child by Steven Erikson -- The creator of the Malazan world has written a few parodies of Star Trek. This is the first entry in that series.
Dune: House Atreides by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson -- I'll give this a shot though I don't have high hopes for it.
Cold Fire by Dean Koontz
Dark Rivers of the Heart by Dean Koontz
Mr. Murder by Dean Koontz
I Am Legend by Richard Matheson -- A classic of the horror genre.
Parsival, or A Knight's Tale by Richard Monaco
Fleet of Worlds by Larry Niven and Edward M. Lerner -- This takes place in Niven's Known Space future history series.
Inverted World by Christopher Priest -- He also wrote The Prestige, which was made into a movie by Christopher Nolan.
The Mask of the Sun by Fred Saberhagen
Why Call Them Back From Heaven? by Clifford D. Simak -- I'm a sucker for all things Simak.
The Worlds of Clifford Simak by Clifford D. Simak -- I said I'm a sucker for all things Simak.
The Fifth Heart by Dan Simmons -- A Sherlock Holmes mystery where the main character suspects he's fictional.
I also found three issues of Weird Tales magazine. My boss was a bit upset with me for that find, but I read them and decided to give them to her. They only cost $2.50 for the three of them.
CHILDREN'S BOOKS THAT INSPIRE US
What books inspired YOU as a child?
I was surprised by just how much I had in common with his selections. I did not read all of the same books, but he and I clearly had the same tastes when we were children.
I gravitated early towards the mystery genre in the form of The Hardy Boys and The Three Investigators.
I also dabbled in the supernatural and suspense genres by reading a number of Alfred Hitchcock anthologies.
In nonfiction, I enjoyed reading about science and nature (and dinosaurs, of course!). I also enjoyed reading some histories and biographies that were aimed at children. I bet I would have really enjoyed Rush Limbaugh's Rush Revere series.
Sadly, far too many libraries have rid themselves of timeless classics in favor of "modern" stories, which will end up being very dated over time.
What did YOU like to read when you were growing up? Have you passed on these books to your children or grandchildren? We moved around a lot so my parents got rid of most of their books that they enjoyed when they were younger, though I did have an opportunity to read many of them at one point. My grandparents also had a lot of great books that I was able to read. In recent years I have collected a few of my childhood favorites such as the Louis Barnavelt stories by John Bellairs and The Chronicles of Prydain by Lloyd Alexander. They still hold up for me after all these decades.
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BOOKS BY MORONS
Moron Author James Cambias has a new book out in his Billion Worlds series:
It's called The Ishtar Deception and it's part of a series I've been writing since 2022, called "The Billion Worlds."
At the end of the Tenth Millennium, Sabbath Okada, agent of a nameless branch of Deimos' labyrinthine government comes to the vast city of Ishtar on Venus to investigate the suspicious death of an undercover agent. His companion, Daslakh, is an old and cunning AI with its own self-imposed mission: to act as Okada's conscience.
Searching for the truth takes Sabbath and Daslakh to the glittering towers of Ishtar's elite, a brutal combat sport arena, and the unforgiving, wind-lashed face of the highest peak on Venus. Along the way they face ruthless Lunar Republic spies, double agents, and sadistic Ishtar police, but Sabbath's greatest challenge comes from Meili Tewa, his deadliest enemy—and his only love.
Each twist in the case reveals a new layer of deception, another betrayal. Hunted and on the run, with no one he can trust and no help from home—it's time for Sabbath Okada to remind everyone why he's the greatest spy in the Billion Worlds of the Solar System.
I've been reading Anthony Horowitz' A Deadly Episode, the latest in his Hawthorne and Horowitz series. The series is surreal in that the author himself is a character and he skillfully mixes fiction and fact. The premise is that Horowitz is drafted into chronicling disgraced and rather disagreeable detective Hawthorne's investigation despite preferring to do almost anything else. The latest book takes it one step further in that the murder occurs during the production of a movie about the first H&H book so there's real Horowitz, the character Horowitz, the movie Horowitz, and the actor Horowitz and, of course, there are similar Hawthornes. It's like Into the Spider-Verse.
It's interesting that Horowitz, in this and other books and series, does not present writers, including himself, in a very good light. The character Horowitz allows himself to be bullied into into Watsoning to Hawthorne's Sherlock, has his book butchered by a woke young radical feminist vegan global warmist (who's friends with Greta Thunberg) screenwriter, and is treated by everyone as Hawthorne's servant, and is again bullied into shadowing Hawthorne's investigation of the murder of the actor portraying Hawt
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Fat, Dumb, and Happy at June 14, 2026 09:11 AM (ndZc7)
Comment: This actually sounds pretty neat! I may have to give it a whirl. I enjoy surrealistic meta-fiction, when you, the reader, aren't quite sure what's going on because of an unreliable narrator or the layers of the story get more and more complex as you dive deeper into the book. Also, from what I can tell, the publishing world is not as glamorous as we might have been led to expect. Any number of authors have horror stories about what it's like inside that meat grinder.
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I just finished Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus by Nabeel Qureshi. I recommend it to anyone who's interested in watching the progression of a very devout Muslim who starts to -- over a period of years -- unravel the lies he was brought up to believe about the Bible, Jesus, his Koran, and Mohammed. An extremely intelligent man who used to relish taking on anyone of the Christian faith in a test of historical facts and the entire basis for Christianity. He did so not combatively, but was so firm in his belief in Islam that he welcomed the challenge to "debunk the lies" of the Bible. He became true friends with a few notable Christians who ultimately pushed back and gave him a vastly different view of Jesus, as well as the Old and New Testaments. As a true truth seeker, he spent years trying to come to terms with what he started seeing as problematic with all he'd been taught to believe. He accepted Christ as his savior and became a minister for Christianity. His transformation was profound, and he suffered deeply when his family was torn apart from his decision. He died in 2017 at age 34 from cancer. You can find him on YouTube and hear his testimony.
Posted by: Lady in Black at June 14, 2026 09:36 AM (qBdHI)
Comment: We don't hear about it much, but Christianity is very much on the move in the Islamic world. The Powers That Be over there do not want the word getting out. Being a Christian can be a death sentence. However, that doesn't change the fact that many Muslims are converting to Christianity, even in the face of persecution from their government and their own family members. From what I've heard, many, many Muslims have encountered Jesus Christ in their dreams, which has led them to accept Jesus as their Savior.
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A very interesting fantasy/scify/horror universe is Hodgson's The Night Land. I don't know if I can recommend the book as it is difficult, in many cases tedious to read. It's set at the twilight end of the earth, and this section of the universe. All the light is dying out, the whole world is shrouded in eternal darkness, no sun, moon or stars. There are many evil malevolent spirits in complete dominance over most of the planet. Humanity is gathered in these giant fortresses he calls redoubts. The main character is a citizen of one of the last redoubts trying to find his love which he believes is in danger so he has to go out into "the night land" to find her. Also she was his wife he lost in a past life, occult stuff popular in Hodgson's time.
His story universe really intrigues me. There have been a few authors that have revisited it since, for a modern audience. Not too many. But I think it is a fertile ground for ideas and adventures.
Posted by: banana Dream at June 14, 2026 11:05 AM (3uBP9)
Comment: I read John C. Wright's Awake in the Night Land and was captivated by the horrific setting. Hodgson is one one of those relatively unknown authors that nevertheless had a huge influence on later authors such as H.P. Lovecraft. I have a copy of The Night Land and I agree it's a challenging book to read. Very archaic language and speech patterns. James Stoddard is one of the authors that has attempted to repackage the story in a form that's a bit easier to read. Although the Night Land is full of terrors, it's also full of hope, even as darkness encircles the Earth.
The Medusa Chronicles by Stephen Baxter and Alastair Reynolds
This is a sequel of sorts to Arthur C. Clarke's short story "A Meeting with Medusa." Due to a horrific accident, astronaut Howard Falcon has become a cyborg, mostly machine with only a few remaining organic components. However, he's now effectively immortal and uniquely qualified to explore the interior of Jupiter's harsh environment. The Medusa Chronicles is about his continuing journey through time and space as Machines rise to take over the solar system and kick us off our own planet because they need the resources of Earth. Because this is written by Stephen Baxter and Alastair Reynolds, this story gets very, very wild as both authors love to probe the limits of our understanding of science and technology.
Death on the Nile by Agatha Christie
This was the first Agatha Christie novel I've read. What I find most interesting about it is that it seems to be filled with cliches. But that's because this is where the cliches began. The Agatha Christie-style mystery has been imitated and parodied in countless stories and television shows. It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia even mocked this style of mystery with their classic episode "Who Pooped the Bed?"
I was surprised that the actual murder doesn't take place until halfway through the novel. Until then, Christie spends a great deal of time setting up the possible motives from each of the suspects so that the reader is not quite sure who could have done it. Naturally, Poirot sorts everything out at the end, though it really wasn't too much of a surprise to me. Total body count is about five or so by the end of the book.
Mister B. Gone by Clive Barker
This is the first book I've read where it commanded me to burn the book before reading it. That's because it's not a book at all. It's a demon that's trapped in book form. It wants to be freed from its prison and it believes that burning the book will finally kill it forever. It's a humorous dark fantasy about the demon's life that led it to be trapped in a book for all time.
Seveneves by Neal Stephenson
Technobabble: The Novel
Seriously. This book is approximately 80% technical mumbo-jumbo and 20% plot. Stephenson spends page after page explaining what's happened to the Earth-Moon system after the Moon simply blew up for no reason. There's a loose plot about humans surviving the end of the world, but there's a massive time skip about 2/3 through the book (5000 years) where humans go from just a handful of survivors to a thriving civilization in space. No real explanation of how that happened other than the desperate plan of the final seven survivors just worked.
Why Call Them Back From Heaven by Clifford D. Simak
In the indefinite future, humans are promised immortality by the global megacorporation Forever Center. Everyone works to buy shares in Forever Center because they believe that they will emerge into their "second life" richer than ever thanks to the magic of compound interest.
As near as I can tell, Forever Center really can't deliver on their promises, only stating that they are working on the problem of immortality, the solution of which is just a few years away.
This is one of Simak's darker stories. Most of his stories are pretty optimistic in the end, but not this one. Still a pretty good read, as Simak explores issues surrounding the ideas of physical immortality vs. the spiritual immortality promised by Christianity.
Tips, suggestions, recommendations, etc., can all be directed to perfessor -dot- squirrel -at- gmail -dot- com.
Disclaimer: I see your billion worlds and raise you two trillion galaxies...