I'm glad the storms/tornados blew out of here yesterday afternoon, so I could go to my f2f book club last night, since for once I'd read both the fantasy and sci-fi selections. (Fantasy at 6:30, with a small audience, sci-fi following at 7:30 with many more coming in.)
Fantasy was Emma Bull's War for the Oaks, about a band in Minneapolis that gets caught up in a war among fairies. It's a type of music that's totally outside my comprehension, but she does a good job of explaining what the singer/ protagonist is trying to do with her songs, so it made sense to me. And I'm not that much into fairies either, but Bull spins a pretty good yarn, and I read the book with pleasure.
Sci-fi was Hyperion, by Dan Simmons. I had heard good things of his classical Greek themed books, but hadn't checked them out yet. I automatically distrust a universe with a Hegemony in charge, and we've got that here. Now the wide-flung universe is facing a possible Armageddon, and the solution may lie in one of the seven pilgrims hoping to get their wish granted by the toxic being on planet Hyperion. At this point the book takes on the structure of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, and we have the Soldier's tale, the Scholar's tale, etc, all of them more or less sympathetic. The book ends, unresolved, just before they get to present their cases. Several people had read the next book, but carefully avoided revealing anything.
Next month we get Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell for fantasy--I own it, on my TBR pile, so that's good--and Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues under the Sea for sci-fi. I think I may have read it in my youth, but I'll be pleased enough to read it again.