I'm almost done with Galactic North, by Alastair Reynolds. Only one story left (I'm saving the actual story Galactic North until after the rest of his Revelation Space books). I'm generally not a short story guy, but they're interesting enough for me to want to tackle the actual trilogy soon (I've been slightly intimidated). Very complex and thought-provoking!
I absolutely LOVED Galactic North, but then again I'm a huge fan of Alastair Reynolds. Dilation Sleep, Nightengale and Grafenwalder's Bestiary were my favorite of the short stories in Galactic North. Dilation Sleep is one of my favorite short stories of all time...the way it conveys the loneliness of someone traveling between the stars, the atmosphere, the way the ship is described, the narrator's paranoia, and the ending...just wow. It's one of the stories I've recommended to people as an entry point into modern science fiction because it's so perfect.
But more than that, if you're a Reynolds fan, Dilation Sleep also ties in nicely with the overall Revelation Space trilogy and universe. In fact, all of the stories in GN do.
Of course, I cannot recommend the Revelation Space trilogy highly enough. Revelation Space itself completely changed the way I think about science fiction, and to this day there has not been another book that blew my mind the way RS did with its absolutely insane big ideas, and the exceptionally dark atmosphere. I remember reading a review where someone said they felt as if the characters in the book were perpetually draped in shadow, and somehow that fits perfectly -- the crew of the Nostalgia for Infinity are more machine than human, have absolutely no sense of morality, and are terrifyingly single-minded in their purpose. But the book is much bigger than that, about much more than that, and I can't say more here without spoiling it, except to say it's amazing.
As for me...
Just finishing up Aurora by Kim Stanley Robinson. It's my first time reading one of his books. I could really do without the thousands of words dedicated to pH balances in soil, the AI musing about greedy algorithms and halting problems, the ultra-detailed descriptions of how the ship's biomes function, etc. It's hard SF, I understand that, but I think there are ways to convey technical information without completely derailing the narrative and going on pages-long information dumps.
Next up: The Fabric of the Cosmos by Brian Greene, and then I think I'm gonna read some Banks, probably one of the Culture books I haven't read yet.