Been meaning to bump this one myself.
Last 3 months:
Latest Harry Dresden (
Proven Guilty)- Good, but running into that problem of getting too big in scope. A little too many mysteries that aren't being addressed, and will need a lot of books to really deal with. But definitely enjoyable reads.
Lastest Anita Blake (Don't remember the name) - Nothing but Porn now. She isn't even trying to throw a detective story into the mix. I wouldn't mind as much it being just porn, but it's now Gay Porn as well.
Spin by Robert Charles Wilson - Just won the Hugo award (Best SF/Fant novel of the year), and was a very deserving winner. Starting in the near future, the stars go out one night. Ends up there is a field put around the Earth slowing down time massively on Earth, to the tune of millions of years to one year. I was surprised I liked it as much as I did, since I didn't care from one of his previous award winners, The Chronoliths. This fixed the problem I had with that, as he has much improved his character writing skills. Big
Magic Study, sequel to Poison Study, by Maria Snyder - Enjoyable, but nothing groundbreaking. The former Poison Taster goes off to Magic School. She is of course the long lost uber-powerful magician that will probably be destined to save the world in some future book. Like I said, nothing new, but good for light reading - Mild
Up next include;
Blind Lake, by Wilson (I figured I'd give him another shot based on the strength of Spin).
John Ringo's Council Series (There Will be Dragons, Emerald Sea, and Against the Tide) - Far future with super computers/nano that get shut off during a war. Humanity has to go back to Low-Tech survival, in a world with a lot of Fantasy Troupes come to life (Elves, Mermaids, etc thanx to genetic manip). Read the first one and it was decent, hitting the next 2.
and
The Sharing Knife - Bujold's latest. The worst of her stuff is still very good, so this should be a worthy read in HardBack