Show your first hatch of NotN!
Acencia's Clan
Be excellent to each other.
Clan Info
FR+3 She/Her
Constantly buying and and selling. Open to private breeding requests. All auction house dragons will be on the Auction tab. Please buy my dragons.
If I have requested to borrow your dragon for a breeding project, you will receive it back immediately after the hatching along with compensation for their time.
I accept any friend requests offered, answer all DMs, and respond to all pings.
References:
A special thank you to all those who have trusted me with their dragons for my projects. I haven't kept track of everyone in the years I've been playing, but I'm starting a list as of 10/22/16:
LittleMissy, OrionAssante623, DreamyNightmare, Kaohgumy, Xiraaa, NightwingStar, Leetah43, Anstacy, MsHeather, Achri, Chandrian, DrowsyDreamer, Snapcracklepop, Addertooth, Dreamers, Kiraage, AnalogRomeo, Ivysaurs, LordMaroo, HCL, CalicoHalo, Sounddrive, Mari143, Verma, Marmol, ChunderousFritz, Eerie, Cabbagegoat, Hazeledpoppy, MikaiiZaakh, NitrogenousBaes; Muninn, Mskaime, RenatoUlbov, oneirodrakon, Nortony, Cosmogyra1
Wishlist:
-Accent: Chickenclaw
-Deep Space Scene
-Unhatched eggs
-Double or triple G1s (xxx, xxy, xyy, xyx etc.)
-6 digit or below oldies
-tricolor scatter scrolls
-Apparel, skins, and familiars from 2013-2014 festivals. These, above all, I crave.
-Archivists Spellscroll
-Illuminated armband
-Sunchaser Jewelry
-Art for my gen1s and oldies
Hib Den Items Needed:
Breed Change scrolls- Snapper, Skydance, Gaoler, Banescale, Aberrant, Aether
Gene Scrolls: Stitched, Eyespots, Mosaic, Blend, Keel, Cinder, Blaze, Stripes
Since you're still reading my boring profile, you must like to read. As such, here are some book recommendations. If you read any of them, report back. I love talking about books with people.
-Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells. All Systems Red tackles questions of the ethics of sentient robotics. The main character is a deadly security droid that has bucked its restrictive programming and is balanced between contemplative self-discovery and an idle instinct to kill all humans.
On a distant planet, a team of scientists are conducting surface tests, shadowed by their Company-supplied 'droid - a self-aware SecUnit that has hacked its own governor module, and refers to itself (though never out loud) as "Murderbot." Scornful of humans, all it really wants is to be left alone long enough to figure out who it is. But when a neighboring mission goes dark, it's up to the scientists and their Murderbot to get to the truth.
-Zombie Road: Convoy of Carnage by David A. Simpson. In the high desert on the outskirts of Reno, there is an old truck stop frequented by a mix of hard caliber truckers, day tourists, musicians, and travelers. They have survived the chaotic first hours of contact with the undead and now must make their way across the country to a location they believe is safe. Zombies are only the beginning of their troubles as they try to cover the thousands of miles of open road with their hastily armored 18-wheelers. Gunny, a long haul trucker doing one of the few jobs available to him as a disgraced soldier, is unwillingly saddled with the job of getting these survivors to the safe zone. With a motley crew of truck drivers, college kids, veterans, a drug dealer, and a rock star, they are racing the clock to make it before time runs out. NOTE: The only thing I disliked about this book is the Islamaphobia. Not cool.
-A Gift of Time by Jerry Merritt. When Micajah "Cager" Fenton discovers a crater in his front yard with a broken time glider in the bottom and a naked, virtual woman on his lawn, he delays his plans to kill himself. While helping repair the marooned time traveler's glider, Cager realizes it can return him to his past to correct a mistake that had haunted him his entire life. As payment for his help, the virtual creature living in the circuitry of the marooned glider, sends Cager back in time as his 10-year-old self, knowing everything he'd known at 80 and gives him access to advanced equations of space and time.
-Kindred by Octavia E. Butler. Having just celebrated her 26th birthday in 1976 California, Dana, an African-American woman, is suddenly and inexplicably wrenched through time into antebellum Maryland. After saving a drowning White boy there, she finds herself staring into the barrel of a shotgun and is transported back to the present just in time to save her life. During numerous such time-defying episodes with the same young man, she realizes the challenge she's been given: to protect this young slaveholder until he can father her own great-grandmother.
-Columbus Day by Craig Alanson. Great story of a young soldier from rural Maine whose life is changed radically when aliens show up in his little home town. The story becomes a little ridiculous when he meets an super-intelligent alien AI but its well written and fun so it's easily forgiven.
-Lost Valley by Walt Browning. John Eric Carver and Shrek are a retired Navy SEAL war dog team, now living in the mountains outside of San Diego. Both man and dog thought their life was now settled, finding peace on the 40-acre ranch they had moved to. But life, and a mutated virus, changed all that. Now, they have to survive a worldwide pandemic. Taking refuge in a nearby Boy Scout camp, he leads a group of teens and their parents as they are forced to deal with infected creatures that are rapidly consuming the world. Will John and Shrek survive another war, or will this be the end of the line for the SEAL team?
-The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson. Unfinished series, epic, high fantasy series. Roshar is a world of stone and storms. Uncanny tempests of incredible power sweep across the rocky terrain so frequently that they have shaped ecology and civilization alike. It has been centuries since the fall of the ten consecrated orders known as the Knights Radiant, but their Shardblades and Shardplate remain: mystical swords and suits of armor that transform ordinary men into near-invincible warriors. Men trade kingdoms for Shardblades. Wars were fought for them, and won by them. One such war rages on a ruined landscape called the Shattered Plains. There, Kaladin, who traded his medical apprenticeship for a spear to protect his little brother, has been reduced to slavery. In a war that makes no sense, where ten armies fight separately against a single foe, he struggles to save his men and to fathom the leaders who consider them expendable.
-Beware of Chicken by CasualFarmer. Unfiished series, books 1-3 published, with the rest of it available for free online (royalroad.com) with weekly new chapter releases. Jin Rou wanted to be a cultivator who defied the heavens, and surpassed all limits. Unfortunately for him, he died, and now I’m stuck here. Arrogant young masters? Heavenly tribulations? Cultivating for days on end, then getting into life or death battles? Yeah, no thanks. I'm getting out of here. In which a transmigrator decides that the only winning move is not to play.
-Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinimann. Hilarious, absurd, heartbreaking, LITRPG genre. Carl and his cat, Princess Donut the Queen Anne Chonk, survive the end of the world, only to be subjected to the horrors of a world wide dungeon. It's the apocalypse, and it's televised. Viewers across the universe watch dungeon crawlers fight, die, or grow stronger.
-The Luster of Lost Things by Sophie Chen Keller. A fablelike debut novel in which a boy with an uncanny ability to find lost objects must embark on his most important search yet in order to save his mother's enchanted dessert shop, the only place he's ever called home.
-We Are Legion; We Are Bob by Dennis E. Taylor . Near future sci fi that celebrates all our favorite tropes and a lot of Star Trek/Star Wars references. A sci fi nerd wakes up in the future as an AI. He's loaded into a rocket and shot into space. Earth blows itself to hell and he has to try and find a way to save the scraps of humanity from itself while having awesome space adventures.
-Stormfront by Jim Butcher. Lots of books in this series and it's one of those rare gems that get better as it goes. In fact, Stormfront is the weakest of the series in my opinion. It's about Harry Dresden, the only wizard in the phone book in Chicago. He gets his butt kicked a lot, but he returns the favor just as often. Even though the books are funny, you get real attached to the characters real fast. Lots of character development, magic and humor. Easy reads.
-Furies of Caulderon by Jim Butcher. Not as good as Dresden Files, but it's a finished series at least. Farm boy is a freak with no magic powers. Survives on wit and strength of character when sucked into royal politics.
-The Sword Itself by Joe Abercrombie. Great character development and interesting characters. You follow several men that are varying degrees of wonderfully wretched. A northern barbarian that is sweet as pie when he's not in a berserker killing fugue. A crippled jerk of an inquisitor who was once a bright young star until his fall from grace. A loyal soldier with a nasty temper on a hopeless mission. I love Glokta the inquisitor, and he's such a magnificent, gross little twerp.
-Dragonsdawn by Anne McCaffrey. Oldie but a goodie. If you like both sci fi and telepathic dragons and MAAANY books set in the same world this series is for you. Colonists arrive on Pern and settle, only to discover horrible corrosive organisms rain down from space in erractic intervals. Dragons are bred to fight it.
-Dies the Fire by SM Stirling. Post apocalypse fiction that turns into fantasy as the series progresses. You can put it down after book 1 with no regrets, but book 1 is AMAZING. A strange event causes a change in the laws of physics. No combustion reactions (guns) and no electricity. The world collapses. Magic returns.
-Dragonlance by Margaret Wiess and Tracy Hickman. LotR lite. A group of intrepid companions set out to save the realm from evil Gods. Funny, heartwarming, the very essence of sword and sorcery genre.
-A Soldier's Duty by Jean Johnson. Hardcore military sci fi with super unique premise. You follow a prophet setting up events to bring forth a future hero. To do so she has become a great military leader and set the right people on paths to greatness around her.
-Into the Storm by Taylor Anderson. Military sci fi, WWII. Japanese and American ships get sucked into an alternate dimension with non human sentient life. Get caught up in an interspecies war.
-Dead Witch Walking by Kim Harrison. Definition of urban fantasy. Funny, and gets better as the series goes on. Bounty hunting witch teams up with a smartass pixie and a living vampire. Fight's bad guys in Cinncinnati.
-Fuzzy Nation by John Scalzi. Stand alone remake of a classic sci fi novel. A contractor discovers sentient life and has to protect it from developers.
-Kushiel's Dart by Jacqueline Carrey. Fantasy, little erotic, lots of character development, great travel epic. Slow burn though, need patience, totally worth it. A youg woman serving a cruel god becomes the tool of powerful people. Lot's of political intrigue.
-Wildside by Steven Gould. Stand alone sci fi. Coming of age for a young man with access to an alternate earth where humans never evolved.
-Through Wolf's Eyes by Jane Lynskold. A girl who can speak with animals is raised by wolves with human intelligence. When sent to find her own kind (wolf brother at her side), she becomes embroiled in a royal battle for succession to the throne.
-Www.wake by Robert Sawyer - about the spontaneous emergence of an intelligence on the World Wide Web, called Webmind, and its friendship with a blind teenager named Caitlin. Mild sexual content.
-Hominids by Robert J. Sawyer. Hominids examines two unique species of people. We are one of those species; the other is the Neanderthals of a parallel world where they became the dominant intelligence. The Neanderthal civilization has reached heights of culture and science comparable to our own, but with radically different history, society and philosophy.
-The Magic and the Healing by Nick Nick O'Donohoe. About to give up veterinary school because of a family crisis, BJ Vaughan is chosen to join a special group of healers who venture into the mystical world of Crossroads, where unicorns, centaurs, and other magical creatures live.
-Homeland by RA Salvatore follows the life of a moral being born into a world of evil.
-Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky. It's a stand alone novel about a generational arcship carrying the last of humanity fleeing a destroyed earth. They're heading for a terraformed planet guarded by an insane AI/human scientist. The planet also has its own unique inhabitants.
-Grimspace by Anne Aguirre. As the carrier of a rare gene, Sirantha Jax has the ability to jump ships through grimspace-a talent which makes her a highly prized navigator for the Corp. Then a crash landing kills everyone on board, leaving Jax in a jail cell with no memory of the crash. But her fun's not over. A group of rogue fighters frees her...for a price: her help in overthrowing the established order.
-Robin Hobb's works are hard to describe. Dark, twisty fantasy novels where magic takes a back seat to the characters and their development. Challenging reads full of royal politics, skullduggery, hardship and truimph:
Farseer Trilogy
Tawny Man Trilogy
Fitz and the Fool Trilogy
The Liveship Traders
The Rain Wild Chronicles
-The Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean M. Auel. A child of the "Others" is found and raised by Neanderthals. This series is prehistoric fiction, a classic.
-Everything ever written by Anne McCafferey. All of it. Here's a link: https://www.bookseriesinorder.com/anne-mccaffrey/
Especially these:
Dragonriders of Pern
Crystal Singer
Powers That Be
Brain and Brawn Ship
Freedom
-Vampire Winter by Lois tilton. Vampire Winter is a book about a vamp that wakes up after the bombs are dropped. He's like, sweet, nuclear winter, no sun. Then he realizes he can't drink blood tainted with radiation contamination. He has to find a way to preserve the few untainted humans, from all manner of dangers, including other humans, while not killing them himself.
-Grunts! by Mary Gentle. A group of Orcs raid a dragon's lair full of military grade weaponry. The Orcs slowly turn into the equivalent of US Marines in a fantasy world setting. Raunchy, unique, violent, hilarious.
You're still reading? Well bless your heart. That's all I got.
Constantly buying and and selling. Open to private breeding requests. All auction house dragons will be on the Auction tab. Please buy my dragons.
If I have requested to borrow your dragon for a breeding project, you will receive it back immediately after the hatching along with compensation for their time.
I accept any friend requests offered, answer all DMs, and respond to all pings.
References:
A special thank you to all those who have trusted me with their dragons for my projects. I haven't kept track of everyone in the years I've been playing, but I'm starting a list as of 10/22/16:
LittleMissy, OrionAssante623, DreamyNightmare, Kaohgumy, Xiraaa, NightwingStar, Leetah43, Anstacy, MsHeather, Achri, Chandrian, DrowsyDreamer, Snapcracklepop, Addertooth, Dreamers, Kiraage, AnalogRomeo, Ivysaurs, LordMaroo, HCL, CalicoHalo, Sounddrive, Mari143, Verma, Marmol, ChunderousFritz, Eerie, Cabbagegoat, Hazeledpoppy, MikaiiZaakh, NitrogenousBaes; Muninn, Mskaime, RenatoUlbov, oneirodrakon, Nortony, Cosmogyra1
Wishlist:
-Accent: Chickenclaw
-Deep Space Scene
-Unhatched eggs
-Double or triple G1s (xxx, xxy, xyy, xyx etc.)
-6 digit or below oldies
-tricolor scatter scrolls
-Apparel, skins, and familiars from 2013-2014 festivals. These, above all, I crave.
-Archivists Spellscroll
-Illuminated armband
-Sunchaser Jewelry
-Art for my gen1s and oldies
Hib Den Items Needed:
Breed Change scrolls- Snapper, Skydance, Gaoler, Banescale, Aberrant, Aether
Gene Scrolls: Stitched, Eyespots, Mosaic, Blend, Keel, Cinder, Blaze, Stripes
Since you're still reading my boring profile, you must like to read. As such, here are some book recommendations. If you read any of them, report back. I love talking about books with people.
-Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells. All Systems Red tackles questions of the ethics of sentient robotics. The main character is a deadly security droid that has bucked its restrictive programming and is balanced between contemplative self-discovery and an idle instinct to kill all humans.
On a distant planet, a team of scientists are conducting surface tests, shadowed by their Company-supplied 'droid - a self-aware SecUnit that has hacked its own governor module, and refers to itself (though never out loud) as "Murderbot." Scornful of humans, all it really wants is to be left alone long enough to figure out who it is. But when a neighboring mission goes dark, it's up to the scientists and their Murderbot to get to the truth.
-Zombie Road: Convoy of Carnage by David A. Simpson. In the high desert on the outskirts of Reno, there is an old truck stop frequented by a mix of hard caliber truckers, day tourists, musicians, and travelers. They have survived the chaotic first hours of contact with the undead and now must make their way across the country to a location they believe is safe. Zombies are only the beginning of their troubles as they try to cover the thousands of miles of open road with their hastily armored 18-wheelers. Gunny, a long haul trucker doing one of the few jobs available to him as a disgraced soldier, is unwillingly saddled with the job of getting these survivors to the safe zone. With a motley crew of truck drivers, college kids, veterans, a drug dealer, and a rock star, they are racing the clock to make it before time runs out. NOTE: The only thing I disliked about this book is the Islamaphobia. Not cool.
-A Gift of Time by Jerry Merritt. When Micajah "Cager" Fenton discovers a crater in his front yard with a broken time glider in the bottom and a naked, virtual woman on his lawn, he delays his plans to kill himself. While helping repair the marooned time traveler's glider, Cager realizes it can return him to his past to correct a mistake that had haunted him his entire life. As payment for his help, the virtual creature living in the circuitry of the marooned glider, sends Cager back in time as his 10-year-old self, knowing everything he'd known at 80 and gives him access to advanced equations of space and time.
-Kindred by Octavia E. Butler. Having just celebrated her 26th birthday in 1976 California, Dana, an African-American woman, is suddenly and inexplicably wrenched through time into antebellum Maryland. After saving a drowning White boy there, she finds herself staring into the barrel of a shotgun and is transported back to the present just in time to save her life. During numerous such time-defying episodes with the same young man, she realizes the challenge she's been given: to protect this young slaveholder until he can father her own great-grandmother.
-Columbus Day by Craig Alanson. Great story of a young soldier from rural Maine whose life is changed radically when aliens show up in his little home town. The story becomes a little ridiculous when he meets an super-intelligent alien AI but its well written and fun so it's easily forgiven.
-Lost Valley by Walt Browning. John Eric Carver and Shrek are a retired Navy SEAL war dog team, now living in the mountains outside of San Diego. Both man and dog thought their life was now settled, finding peace on the 40-acre ranch they had moved to. But life, and a mutated virus, changed all that. Now, they have to survive a worldwide pandemic. Taking refuge in a nearby Boy Scout camp, he leads a group of teens and their parents as they are forced to deal with infected creatures that are rapidly consuming the world. Will John and Shrek survive another war, or will this be the end of the line for the SEAL team?
-The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson. Unfinished series, epic, high fantasy series. Roshar is a world of stone and storms. Uncanny tempests of incredible power sweep across the rocky terrain so frequently that they have shaped ecology and civilization alike. It has been centuries since the fall of the ten consecrated orders known as the Knights Radiant, but their Shardblades and Shardplate remain: mystical swords and suits of armor that transform ordinary men into near-invincible warriors. Men trade kingdoms for Shardblades. Wars were fought for them, and won by them. One such war rages on a ruined landscape called the Shattered Plains. There, Kaladin, who traded his medical apprenticeship for a spear to protect his little brother, has been reduced to slavery. In a war that makes no sense, where ten armies fight separately against a single foe, he struggles to save his men and to fathom the leaders who consider them expendable.
-Beware of Chicken by CasualFarmer. Unfiished series, books 1-3 published, with the rest of it available for free online (royalroad.com) with weekly new chapter releases. Jin Rou wanted to be a cultivator who defied the heavens, and surpassed all limits. Unfortunately for him, he died, and now I’m stuck here. Arrogant young masters? Heavenly tribulations? Cultivating for days on end, then getting into life or death battles? Yeah, no thanks. I'm getting out of here. In which a transmigrator decides that the only winning move is not to play.
-Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinimann. Hilarious, absurd, heartbreaking, LITRPG genre. Carl and his cat, Princess Donut the Queen Anne Chonk, survive the end of the world, only to be subjected to the horrors of a world wide dungeon. It's the apocalypse, and it's televised. Viewers across the universe watch dungeon crawlers fight, die, or grow stronger.
-The Luster of Lost Things by Sophie Chen Keller. A fablelike debut novel in which a boy with an uncanny ability to find lost objects must embark on his most important search yet in order to save his mother's enchanted dessert shop, the only place he's ever called home.
-We Are Legion; We Are Bob by Dennis E. Taylor . Near future sci fi that celebrates all our favorite tropes and a lot of Star Trek/Star Wars references. A sci fi nerd wakes up in the future as an AI. He's loaded into a rocket and shot into space. Earth blows itself to hell and he has to try and find a way to save the scraps of humanity from itself while having awesome space adventures.
-Stormfront by Jim Butcher. Lots of books in this series and it's one of those rare gems that get better as it goes. In fact, Stormfront is the weakest of the series in my opinion. It's about Harry Dresden, the only wizard in the phone book in Chicago. He gets his butt kicked a lot, but he returns the favor just as often. Even though the books are funny, you get real attached to the characters real fast. Lots of character development, magic and humor. Easy reads.
-Furies of Caulderon by Jim Butcher. Not as good as Dresden Files, but it's a finished series at least. Farm boy is a freak with no magic powers. Survives on wit and strength of character when sucked into royal politics.
-The Sword Itself by Joe Abercrombie. Great character development and interesting characters. You follow several men that are varying degrees of wonderfully wretched. A northern barbarian that is sweet as pie when he's not in a berserker killing fugue. A crippled jerk of an inquisitor who was once a bright young star until his fall from grace. A loyal soldier with a nasty temper on a hopeless mission. I love Glokta the inquisitor, and he's such a magnificent, gross little twerp.
-Dragonsdawn by Anne McCaffrey. Oldie but a goodie. If you like both sci fi and telepathic dragons and MAAANY books set in the same world this series is for you. Colonists arrive on Pern and settle, only to discover horrible corrosive organisms rain down from space in erractic intervals. Dragons are bred to fight it.
-Dies the Fire by SM Stirling. Post apocalypse fiction that turns into fantasy as the series progresses. You can put it down after book 1 with no regrets, but book 1 is AMAZING. A strange event causes a change in the laws of physics. No combustion reactions (guns) and no electricity. The world collapses. Magic returns.
-Dragonlance by Margaret Wiess and Tracy Hickman. LotR lite. A group of intrepid companions set out to save the realm from evil Gods. Funny, heartwarming, the very essence of sword and sorcery genre.
-A Soldier's Duty by Jean Johnson. Hardcore military sci fi with super unique premise. You follow a prophet setting up events to bring forth a future hero. To do so she has become a great military leader and set the right people on paths to greatness around her.
-Into the Storm by Taylor Anderson. Military sci fi, WWII. Japanese and American ships get sucked into an alternate dimension with non human sentient life. Get caught up in an interspecies war.
-Dead Witch Walking by Kim Harrison. Definition of urban fantasy. Funny, and gets better as the series goes on. Bounty hunting witch teams up with a smartass pixie and a living vampire. Fight's bad guys in Cinncinnati.
-Fuzzy Nation by John Scalzi. Stand alone remake of a classic sci fi novel. A contractor discovers sentient life and has to protect it from developers.
-Kushiel's Dart by Jacqueline Carrey. Fantasy, little erotic, lots of character development, great travel epic. Slow burn though, need patience, totally worth it. A youg woman serving a cruel god becomes the tool of powerful people. Lot's of political intrigue.
-Wildside by Steven Gould. Stand alone sci fi. Coming of age for a young man with access to an alternate earth where humans never evolved.
-Through Wolf's Eyes by Jane Lynskold. A girl who can speak with animals is raised by wolves with human intelligence. When sent to find her own kind (wolf brother at her side), she becomes embroiled in a royal battle for succession to the throne.
-Www.wake by Robert Sawyer - about the spontaneous emergence of an intelligence on the World Wide Web, called Webmind, and its friendship with a blind teenager named Caitlin. Mild sexual content.
-Hominids by Robert J. Sawyer. Hominids examines two unique species of people. We are one of those species; the other is the Neanderthals of a parallel world where they became the dominant intelligence. The Neanderthal civilization has reached heights of culture and science comparable to our own, but with radically different history, society and philosophy.
-The Magic and the Healing by Nick Nick O'Donohoe. About to give up veterinary school because of a family crisis, BJ Vaughan is chosen to join a special group of healers who venture into the mystical world of Crossroads, where unicorns, centaurs, and other magical creatures live.
-Homeland by RA Salvatore follows the life of a moral being born into a world of evil.
-Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky. It's a stand alone novel about a generational arcship carrying the last of humanity fleeing a destroyed earth. They're heading for a terraformed planet guarded by an insane AI/human scientist. The planet also has its own unique inhabitants.
-Grimspace by Anne Aguirre. As the carrier of a rare gene, Sirantha Jax has the ability to jump ships through grimspace-a talent which makes her a highly prized navigator for the Corp. Then a crash landing kills everyone on board, leaving Jax in a jail cell with no memory of the crash. But her fun's not over. A group of rogue fighters frees her...for a price: her help in overthrowing the established order.
-Robin Hobb's works are hard to describe. Dark, twisty fantasy novels where magic takes a back seat to the characters and their development. Challenging reads full of royal politics, skullduggery, hardship and truimph:
Farseer Trilogy
Tawny Man Trilogy
Fitz and the Fool Trilogy
The Liveship Traders
The Rain Wild Chronicles
-The Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean M. Auel. A child of the "Others" is found and raised by Neanderthals. This series is prehistoric fiction, a classic.
-Everything ever written by Anne McCafferey. All of it. Here's a link: https://www.bookseriesinorder.com/anne-mccaffrey/
Especially these:
Dragonriders of Pern
Crystal Singer
Powers That Be
Brain and Brawn Ship
Freedom
-Vampire Winter by Lois tilton. Vampire Winter is a book about a vamp that wakes up after the bombs are dropped. He's like, sweet, nuclear winter, no sun. Then he realizes he can't drink blood tainted with radiation contamination. He has to find a way to preserve the few untainted humans, from all manner of dangers, including other humans, while not killing them himself.
-Grunts! by Mary Gentle. A group of Orcs raid a dragon's lair full of military grade weaponry. The Orcs slowly turn into the equivalent of US Marines in a fantasy world setting. Raunchy, unique, violent, hilarious.
You're still reading? Well bless your heart. That's all I got.
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Chronological order is:
-All Systems Red
-Artificial Condition
-Rogue Protocol
-Exit Strategy
-Fugitive Telemetry
-Network Effect
-System Collapse
If you've ever read and enjoyed Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine then you'll enjoy Nettle and Bone! (Similar "reimagined fairytale" energy!) And if you haven't read Ella Enchanted, then have two book suggestions!
Given my similar taste in books, based on your recommend list, I think that you'll like reading Nettle and Bone (and Ella Enchanted) and I suspect that I'll get a kick out of Dead Witch Walking. Thanks!! Take care~