http://www.humblebundle.com/
ebook bundle 2
Cory Doctorow Little Brother
Cherie Priest Boneshaker
Robert Charles Wilson Spin
Lois McMaster Bujold Shards of Honor
it's worth paying whatever the minimum is for Spin. If you pay more than $10 (good lord why?) you get a Wil Wheaton book and The Last Unicorn
I quite enjoyed Little Brother, and I normally can't stand Cory Doctorow's schtick. BTW, don't bother following up on the Spin sequels.
Eric, did you read The Chronoliths? That's my fave Robert Charles Wilson book. I read a lot of his stuff after Spin came out ... most of it's quite skippable. Darwinia may be the biggest "starts out a 5, ends up a 1" of all time however.
I just finished two books from the library (!). A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny and Alif the Unseen by G. Willow Wilson.

A Night in the Lonesome October is a cute and slight book. It's basically League of Extraordinary Gentlemen style fanfic (though with all the names removed, even those in the public domain). So you have The Good Doctor (Frankenstein), The Mad Monk (Rasputin), etc. They all gather once every 50 years or so as participants in "The Game" to aid or stop the Lovecraftian Old Ones from passing through into our universe. Allegiances are not known until The Game is almost over. Oh, and each of them has an animal familiar, and the story is told entirely from their perspective, with the (actually important) human characters almost incidental. The main character is Snuff, faithful hound of Jack the Ripper. It's also illustrated? I dunno, if it sounds like something you'd enjoy, you probably would. As with all Zelazny, it feels like something Gaiman would write with more humor and less pretension.

Alif the Unseen was okay. It's better than Air (which COMPLETELY fizzled out), but it still has the great premise that never quite gets delivered on. G. Willow Wilson enjoys writing about characters relationships and interior lives, which is fine but I just wish the characters were more interesting! Gaiman has the cover blurb, which is fitting - like his work, the book feels like a pastiche of modern day and classical elements, filtered through Wikipedia and dropped in at a superficial level. It's Arabic fantasy, though, and overtly brings in the Arab Spring in the last third, so at least it's unique.
Minor character spoiler:
spoiler (click to show/hide)
I couldn't help but see the character of "the convert" as a stand in for the author, who is herself an American who semi-famously converted to Islam. That might be unfair, but I just couldn't separate the two.
Now that I'm all caught up on my library books, I can finally start The Shining Girls. CAN'T WAIT.
