Eaten By A Grue
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Awesome news!Weeks has mentioned he'll be writing more books in that universe once he's finished with the current series he's working on.
Awesome news!Weeks has mentioned he'll be writing more books in that universe once he's finished with the current series he's working on.
Old prose is funny. It's a lot of pontificating and people being slain with no actual descriptions of the killing. A lot of "and then this happened and then THIS happened".
"I am called Chen Gong. My aged mother and family are in the east county of Dongjun. I am deeply affected by your loyalty and uprightness, and I will abandon my office and follow you!"
Wei Hong replied, "I have long desired this but, so far, have not found a person fit to undertake the task. Since you, Cao Cao, have so noble a desire, I willingly devote all my property to the cause."
Having said that,I found the finally twist entirely unnecessary, and I think the chapter where McGrath sits with Cordova in the nursing home is a far more natural (albeit neatly unambiguous) end point). The way the actual ending plays out just seems so artificially ambiguous to me.
Old prose is funny. It's a lot of pontificating and people being slain with no actual descriptions of the killing. A lot of "and then this happened and then THIS happened".
If you want a classic chinese novel, you should read The Story of the Stone (Dream of the red Chamber). Mumei knows whats up
Indiana Jones never pretends that there is no reason for him to be doing the things he is doing. There is limited call back in those stories in part to convey that this is just kind of what he does. In Inferno, it's like this is a wholly different parallel universe where none of the other events ever took place. It's especially bizarre because in the other books he DOES touch on past escapades.
If you want a classic chinese novel, you should read The Story of the Stone (Dream of the red Chamber). Mumei knows whats up
Finished Song of Kali by Dan Simmons, great book
and now onto
about 200 pages in so far, this book is pretty fucking expansive, almost double the words per page compared to Song of Kali and atleast 400 pages longer.
I wonder if it was a failed attempt to convey the urgency of the situation.
Currently reading this, about halfway through and really digging it.
I was never a Stones fan by any measure, and almost never read bios, but this has me quite enthralled. I would like to know if there are any comparable books about Led Zeppelin?
I agree completely with the spoilered part. It made me like the book a little less because of how it resolved. Definitelytrying too hard to leave it open ended when it didn't need to be.
But my question is, (Cordova's daughter spoiler)so did Cordova's daughter have a terminal illness? Or did she really think some evil devil worshipping stuff was happening? It's so hard to keep each character's realities straight
I thought I'd take a break from Lee. Since I'm in the middle of revisiting The Crow movies, I thought I'd give this book a shot. I love Poppy Z. Brite. I love The Crow. Hopefully two great tastes, taste great together. I guess I'll find out.
There's this one
And I assume you know about Keith Richards' auto-bio Life.
Just finished Smiley's People, really good, much easier read than the first 2.
Reccomend me the best choice between:
Under The Dome
The Stand
The Reality Dysfunction
The Godfather
No Country For Old Men
Just finished Smiley's People, really good, much easier read than the first 2.
Under The Dome
The Stand
Just finished Smiley's People, really good, much easier read than the first 2.
Reccomend me the best choice between:
Under The Dome
The Stand
The Reality Dysfunction
The Godfather
No Country For Old Men
The Crow: Clash By Night by Chet Williamson was my favourite of the Crow novels. Curious as to what you think of Brite's take on the property.
I finished Neal Stephenson's Reamde. Certainly the lesser of his work that I've read, but still fascinating, sort of like a Bourne chain of events with a dry sarcastic sense of humor and a nerd's fascination with certain details. Could have been shorter with less characters, but as it was I guess it worked alright.
Currently reading Mother Night by Vonnegut. I like it when I find one of his books that still feels fresh.
Might get a few more percentage points through Brothers Karamazov before meandering elsewhere.
EDIT: Finished Mother Night. Good stuff.
. . . and so it was a cold autumn rain and the streets were waxed in a paper-thin layer of wet red leaves.
Finished:
I forgotten who it was but thanks to person who recommended this. Fun book that, while it certainly didn't reinvent the fantasy genre, managed to stay away from being generic and full of stereotypes. The two main characters are really likable and the overall plot quite interesting even if some of the twists were a bit foreseeable. The ending left me wanting for more which is always a good thing, so I'll guess next up is:
Oh and like I mentioned before the narrator does a really good job as well.
Currently reading:
in German, so it takes some extra time. Haven't made it very far. Hitler has woken up on a park bench in Berlin, 2011. Pretty funny when he adressed the kid in a football t-shirt as "Hitlerjugend Ronaldo".
After Er ist wieder da I will start on Dust.
I'm 2/3 of the way through Eon myself. Pretty good, although the whole Soviet Union being the bad guy thing was tough to get past at first.I really like hard scifi and just finished Greg Bear's Eon (which wasn't exactly hard scifi but hit the right notes). After scouring the internet I found another Greg Bear novel, Blood Music which seems pretty interesting. Hoping to find time to get into it this weekend.