Descendant Machine - Gareth L. Powell
Second book in his series about the human race turned into a nomadic, shipborne species (by a deus ex machina, unusually at the start not the end); not a direct sequel to the first. This is better than the first, but... Quick summary of the set-up, a human pilot / scout ship interact with an alien race that are examining a megastructure they believe are part of their origin, causing political ructions in their society. Adventure ensues. It works, but the plot is perhaps too implausibly high impact for the story to sustain, and it contains more than a few niggles. For instance, the author makes the case that humans are particularly good for endurance because they have very good heat removal capabilities where other creatures (basically with fur) can only sustain short periods of intense exertion. I don't know how this squares with a species that humans bioengineered to be workers being covered with fur. Surely it would be better if they could work for long periods? Oh well. Move along.
The Empire's Ruin - Brian Staveley
New series in Staveley's existing universe. The Annurian Empire is crumbling, and a disgraced elite soldier is sent on a quest to capture some giant birds to resurrect their special forces unit. There's also a new threat to civilisation arising, as an ancient enemy from afar mobilises against them. So, standard epic fantasy fare. Spare a thought for poor Staveley, who says his editor canned his last manuscript (a totally different story) wholesale for being not good enough and told him to go back to the drawing board, which Staveley ruefully agrees was the right thing for his editor to have done.
War Bodies - Neal Asher
Asher at his worst. Teen in an oppressive cyborg society is rescued from an accident and promoted to be leader of his society's revolution against the regime. He does of course have special powers, to the degree it almost renders the plot boring, as Asher ploughs through multiple, by-the-numbers action sequences will little sense of threat or drama. It perhaps has something interesting to say about the ills that previous generations inflict on the new and becoming a responsible individual, although not well executed. Asher starts this book with a preface ranting his frustration about how much media is politicised. The hypocrisy of this is staggering, as Asher is himself clearly political, and in fact ten or so years back wrote a whole trilogy about a hero individualist who overthrows and evil socialist world government. (Incidentally that trilogy is quite possibly his nadir, although just because it was over-the-top garbage with a dull protagonist, rather than the politics.) Utterly forgettable.
The Traitor - Anthony Ryan
Third and final installment of the saga of Alwyn Scribe, bandit-turned-scribe-turned-soldier, who is continuing to follow his increasingly piously-unhinged innamorata Evadine Courlaine's crusade against evil. Although by now, Alwyn's beginning to get a little uncomfortable about how things are going. Obviously, this is going to end in a lot of bloodshed and a battle of... not exactly good and evil exactly, but close enough. Anthony Ryan is definitely one of the top fantasy authors working these days, and this is right up there in terms in quality and a fitting conclusion to a high standard trilogy.
Saevus Corax Deals With The Dead - K.J. Parker
Fantasy comedy. Saevus Corax runs a team of battlefield scavengers in a world where scavengers are contracted teams to clear up after wars and make money selling the gear on. Like many Parker heroes, Corax is a rogueish double-dealer, who is far more cunning, smart and skilled than he ever gets the rewards for, who both does awful things and yet retains enough of a moral core to keep our sympathies, tossed around by the waves of fate and in many ways just working to keep his head above water. He has some (improbable) connections to powerful people, and they do insist on dragging him unwillingly into their political disputes and plots...
The Book That Wouldn't Burn - Mark Lawrence
Adventure / romance story about a girl and a boy stuck in an immeasurably vast, eternal library that carries on going whilst civilisations rise and fall around it. Except they're in different time periods. Wild, eh? Wonder how they're going to make that work. Usual quest, peril, derring-do. It's on the verge of YA, probably is YA. But maybe it's not quite YA enough such that I was able to tolerate it.
The Tyranny of Faith - Richard Swan
Highly superior fantasy, second in series, about an empire wracked by political and religious discontent. Our protagonist is Helena, assistant to a judge called Vonvalt, with it written as a sort of story of his life. Here, the justices have some magical powers that they use to investigate and try crimes. Vonvalt is investigating a threat to the throne and empire posed by a rising priest, Claver. The characters are well written - full of personality, balanced and flaws: Vonvalt for instance may be in many ways heroic, but is also smug, arrogant, inflexible. Helena is likewise moral, but often naive, short-tempered and bratty.
The Saints of Salvation - Peter F. Hamilton
Third and final book about a human diaspora, driven from Earth by enslaving aliens fulfilling some obscure religious crusade, attempting to turn the tables and fight back. The book, as per the previous two, is split across two time points - Earth during the fall and the culture of the far future as the two intertwine to a conclusion. If I'm honest, the way that it resolves the fightback is... kind of implausible. Nevertheless, otherwise it's an entertaining space opera ride from one of SF's best known and reliable names, and it's certainly a decent end to a decent series.