Island is a philosophical novel and is neither dystopian nor sci-fi (the latter outside of a few minor elements). It's excellent, but it's not what they're asking for.
I Am Legend by Richard Matheson is $1.99 ... NOTE: Don't let the horrible movie scare you away. The book is a great post-apocalypse story and has a much more interesting last half than the movie.
Thanks for the heads up! I usually check the daily deal but completely missed the extra sales.
Picked up Anathem, Childhood's End and I am Legend (had the last two on mass market paperback but they're worth double dipping at that price). Ended up also getting almost all of the other Clarke novels on sale.
Really interesting book so far. I am in this field of research for my PhD, so it's nice to see what the "little guys" are up to in their garages/wherever.
I've heard that Wolfe requires a certain taste in prose, but I've read about 40-50 pages of this and I think it's beautifully written and not too hard to follow as a non native english speaking person. I hope the book turns out good!
Finished Poor Man's Fight. It was really great. One of my favourite sci-fi books in recent memory (and an indie book to boot). Thoroughly impressive military sci-fi.
The ending was like classic vonnegut all-the-way. Definitely didn't find it to be as preachy as some people have found. (then again I'm a liberal that agrees with most of vonneguts opinions so i might be biased there). There's a good deal of subtlety found within the humorous tone of the novel, not to mention how damn entertaining it was to read, all the way through. I somehow managed to finish it in two sittings during my two-way train trip last weekend!
Now Reading
Not so sure If I'm going finish reading this.. it's not bad so far, just not exactly light-reading; although I heard the author relaxes on the vocabulary a bit after the first few chapters, so I'll probably give it a chance beyond then, and if I drop it, I'll definitely pick it up again when I'm in the right frame of mind to read something with such flowery language.;p
Definitely King on his 'A' game, a lot of fun. Today I'm doing my yearly read-through of Slaughterhouse-Five and tomorrow I start:
Love DFW's essays, and I read through The Pale King as soon as I got my Kindle. I have no idea why I haven't read through Jest yet, but I shall remedy that next week.
Very interesting insight into what he tries to achive in the shows he covers, Milder Comedian is covered in another book, a lot of cool little bits of information on where certain bits came from, how comedy changed in the nineties etc. Most of all, though, it's hilarious.
Will start this:
or this:
tomorrow. Barely Imagined Beings is one of the prettiest books I've seen. The content seems to be pretty interesting too from the minor skim I've had.
I'm reading Gardens of the Moon now and it's mostly very boring. It's similar to Prince of Nothing and The Black Company but not good. It's mostly the lack of compelling characters/motivation, but the pacing...and writing... I wish fantasy books were shorter and more focused. Moonspawn is cool though.
I've been meaning to get into Stephenson for a while, but I just read the sample to Anathem, and I had no clue what the hell any of the characters were talking about. Should I still pick it up and give it a shot anyways?
Anathem is fantastic and I'd absolutely recommend it. That said, the part you mentioned that turned you off to the book is something that I really like in a book. China Mieville does this often and some people seem to be personally offended by it, so your distaste is not uncommon.
Read this today.. was just so so for me. I genuinely liked 2 stories out of the whole collection, the rest got old and tiresome and boring very quickly.
Scored some Thomas Harlan books at a yard sale today, thinking about jumping in to one of those. Guess he likes to meld alternate history with futuristic sci-fi, sounds kinda interesting.
I'm a big fan of Snow Crash and The Diamond Age and I'm liking this as well. Really math heavy in some parts, but entertaining nonetheless. Stephenson gets a bit too wordy at times (a couple pages are devoted to a character character eating cereal); maybe it's just me.
Dance Dance Dance from Murakami, My first Murakami book and I really enjoying more than I though.
I not reading the japanese edition but I really like this cover.
Dance Dance Dance is my favorite Murakami novel and also the first one I read. Be sure to read A Wild Sheep Chase if you haven't already. Dance Dance Dance is a loose sequel to it.
I thoroughly enjoyed wallflower and Mockingjay had me screaming at the pages.
So anyways, Wallflower was surprisingly grim and dark. I was looking for recommendations for really good books that are really dark but not necessarily high school focused like Wallflower.
Read this today.. was just so so for me. I genuinely liked 2 stories out of the whole collection, the rest got old and tiresome and boring very quickly.
Hmmm... I thought at some point the Senate didn't even bother with the Imperator for Life thing Julius had going and just named him Emperor and Augustus didn't bother to argue not to be called it.
No, in fact every time they tried to call him Emperor he insisted on not being called that which is probably one of the reasons he had such a long rein.
wikipedia said:
This usage of "princeps" derived from the position of Princeps Senatus, the "first among equals" of the Senate. The princeps senatus (plural principes senatus) was the first member by precedence of the Roman Senate.
It was first given as a special title to Caesar Augustus in 27 BC,[3] who saw that use of the titles rex (king) or dictator would create resentment amongst senators and other influential men, who had earlier demonstrated their disapproval by supporting the assassination of Julius Caesar. While Augustus had political and military supremacy, he needed the assistance of his fellow Romans to manage the Empire. In his Res Gestae, Augustus claims auctoritas for the princeps (himself).[2]
It wasn't until after the rein of Tiberius that the accession of imperator became a normal thing and emperors would take Augustus name and their heir would take the name Caesar.
Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson
I'm a big fan of Snow Crash and The Diamond Age and I'm liking this as well. Really math heavy in some parts, but entertaining nonetheless. Stephenson gets a bit too wordy at times (a couple pages are devoted to a character character eating cereal); maybe it's just me.
Finished Sara Paretsky's Tunnel Vision. A typical modern detective novel where the detective has to solve all kinds of problems in addition to the murder case. Corruption? Check. Abusive families? Check. Illegal immigration? Check. Poverty? Check. Gender/race/class issues? Check on all three. And on and on. Poor V. I. Warshawski has more to deal with than any other detective I've read about. It's good, though - everything comes together nicely, and even makes sense. At least it appears to make sense. It's so complicated that I can't be sure.
Next will probably be the last book on my American Detective Novel course:
M is for Malice by Sue Grafton. Looks kinda menacing.
Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson
I'm a big fan of Snow Crash and The Diamond Age and I'm liking this as well. Really math heavy in some parts, but entertaining nonetheless.
And there are definite shades of Cryptonomicon (which I loved). I don't love this quite as much, but so far it's been a really entertaining read that I have trouble putting down.
Collection of Robert E. Howard stories seemingly set in the Lovecraft universe, Howard also has little tidbits and artifacts like a certain Black Stone recurring throughout the stories. Heavily recommended, and while written in the early '30s, dont feel very dated at all. Some of the writer perspectives, and twists are still novel to this day like in "The Valley of the Worm" were the narrator
in his dying moments can suddenly look back at all his previous lives and tells his most haunting tale experienced aeons back.
Awesome.
While all stories are worthwhile, ultimate favorite story was "Worms of the Earth", which could make the basis for a badass movie. Great, timeless stuff.
Because of all the talk on Neogaf about this series:
[
and
Both very intriguing, and despite some not liking the way so much of the world and the overall story remains an unexplained mystery, I found it made the world that much more intriguing. The way every little breadcrumb of information you gain through context can be both be very satisfying and leads to even more questions at the same time, so well written. There are many things that mystify me however, the main one being how that weird and very Lynch-like theatre play script will have any meaning later on? Concerning the whole untrustworthy narrator thing, for the moment it seems to me Severian is more clueless and naive about events happening then really purposely trying to deceive the reader. Can't wait to delve into the other books and find out more.
Day Watch was a step down from Night Watch, as it told the story in a different way that I didn't really care for, but Twilight Watch was just as good as the first book. Really glad they didn't try to Americanize the books during translation, as it's fun trying to understand Russian references by context or looking them up.
The Light/Dark thing in the books sounds like utter generic fantasy crap which would usually turn me completely off from reading a book, but I thought Lukyanenko played it very well.
Good lord this depressed me. For days afterward. I really bought into Jake and Sadie's relationship, and was rooting for things to work out. I understand how this was the best literary ending, but I can't remember the last time I wished for a happy ending this much.
Makes me with we had DLC alternate endings for books.
Taking a class on Japanese literature. So far we've read Confessions of a Mask, Woman in the Dunes, and now Norwegian Wood. I wasn't really into the first two, but Norwegian Wood was truly enjoyable. Not just because of the provocative scenes, but it was funny and intelligent; I find myself thinking about it still. This book apparently sent Murakami into stardom and 'everyone' in Japan has read it. I can easily see why. Recommended to everyone.
The last book I read, Robert Heinlein's "Methusalah's Children", was crap btw. Messy story spoiled by too much technobabble, silly aliens and a pointless resolution. Disappointing.
Finished The Last Watch by Sergei Lukyanenko. Only one more book to go, but it hasn't been released in english yet. Series has been pretty consistent quality wise.
Finished book seven of the Dresden Files yesterday.
Warden Dresden keeps on getting more powerful every book. I think it'll be interesting when/if Micheal finds out about Lasciel though. He's walking a narrow path either way, on one side is Micheal and on the other side is the White Council. I kinda have this feeling that he'll somehow become the next Blackstaff.
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
GF just read this and was going on about it, so I gave it a shot and.... hoooooly shit.. equal parts terrifying and fascinating.
Finished this last night, and another terrific recommendation for you, so thanks again. This was a terrific modern day Whodunnit, that turned into an absolutely terrifying 2nd half. The best stories will always have well written characters that you care about, and yeah, Gone Girl is full of them.
Amy is TERRIFYING. As she is revealing the truth about her ways and who she really is, my god. The ending had caused me to delay my sleep for a while, damn that bitch Amy, I really wanted Nick to get her, and it's definitely not a happy ending, Amy getting the last word
Great book, and a reminder why I think I stick to sci-fi and fantasy so much, this sort of stuff is more terrifying than any of that because it is so based in reality. lol
I made it about halfway through the audiobook version of 11/22/63 and couldn't go on. Part (most, perhaps) of the reason was the overwhelmingly melancholy narration, which, combined with the dark nature of the story, was not very enjoyable. Ended up just reading the summary for the rest on Wikipedia. No regrets.
Anyway...
Picked up a couple random audiobooks online from the local library's service. I finished Infected by Scott Sigler, and am listening to The Confession by John Grisham. Neither are particularly outstanding, but it makes the time pass a bit more quickly at work.
Just finished Bedlam by Christopher Brookmyre. He's normally a crime writer but has written something with more of a Sci-Fi bent to it, with the premise of a man waking in a videogame (and eventually other videogame worlds based on actual games such as Fable 3). It's a bit clumsy in parts but mostly engaging and fairly witty. Although this might be due to his Scottish background that I share.
Anyway:
Heaven is a prison. Hell is a playground.
Would it be your ultimate fantasy to enter the world of a video game?
A realm where you don't have to go to work or worry about your health; where you can look like a hero or a goddess; where you can fly space-ships, slay dragons, yet all of it feels completely real. A realm where there are no consequences and no responsibilities.
Or would it be your worst nightmare?
Stuck in an endless state of war and chaos where the pain and fear feels real and from which not even death can offer an escape.
Prison or playground. Heaven or hell. This is where you find out. This is white-knuckle action, sprawling adventure, merciless satire and outrageous humour like you've never experienced.
Finished this last night, and another terrific recommendation for you, so thanks again. This was a terrific modern day Whodunnit, that turned into an absolutely terrifying 2nd half. The best stories will always have well written characters that you care about, and yeah, Gone Girl is full of them.
Amy is TERRIFYING. As she is revealing the truth about her ways and who she really is, my god. The ending had caused me to delay my sleep for a while, damn that bitch Amy, I really wanted Nick to get her, and it's definitely not a happy ending, Amy getting the last word
Great book, and a reminder why I think I stick to sci-fi and fantasy so much, this sort of stuff is more terrifying than any of that because it is so based in reality. lol
haha yeah Amy is like a evil genius, I kinda liked her for part of the story, but by the end she just scared the hell out of me lol. Gillian Flynn did a great job writing her and Nick as well. He very relatable most of the time. Definitely will be keeping an eye on what she does next and of course for the inevitable hollywood take on it.