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What, are you reading? (January 2009)

Midas

Member
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I've read about half of it and quite like it.
 

NoitoraJirugajr

Neo Member
Oikistes said:
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It is the forth book in the Witcher Saga. The first two books are awesome, then it gets a bit more typical and loses some of its charm but remains a good reading. The focus needs to return to the main character and his bard friend. They are much funnier to read about than the rest of the cast.
I just started the first book. They are taking a bit longer to be translated into English but the translation seems to be high quality. Love it so far though ;3
 
I was really enjoying Atlas Shrugged, but am afraid I'm never going to finish it ... I got halfway through John Galt's epic rant at the end, and made the mistake of discovering just how many pages of said rant 'another half again' would entail ...

Seriously, who ends a book with a lecture? Way to blow to smithereens several hundred pages of careful character/thematic thread-weaving. I cannot be bothered!
 

Dan

No longer boycotting the Wolfenstein franchise
Just finished:

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Really good, I quite liked it.

Now I'm going through:

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Althane

Member
Just finished:

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Working on:
Feet-of-clay-2.jpg

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This makes me sad, why can't we Americans get Terry Pratchett covers that're as awesome? We get really crappy ones!
 

FirewalkR

Member
I've recently finished

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which is a mostly satisfying end to the saga of Ian Cormac and

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which is really really awesome, imho Reynold's best book so far.

I'm now in the process of convincing myself to start reading this behemoth:

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Karakand

Member
B-B-Bomba! said:
I was really enjoying Atlas Shrugged, but am afraid I'm never going to finish it ... I got halfway through John Galt's epic rant at the end, and made the mistake of discovering just how many pages of said rant 'another half again' would entail ...

Seriously, who ends a book with a lecture? Way to blow to smithereens several hundred pages of careful character/thematic thread-weaving. I cannot be bothered!
After seeing The Fountainhead (she wrote the screenplay) I firmly believe she would have been a much more enjoyed artist if she'd worked in a constrained medium like film.
 

Trurl

Banned
I'm half way through The Death and Life of Great American Cities. On the surface it seems like the book would be incredibly dry (the chapters have names like "The need for small blocks" and "The uses of sidewalks: Safety") but it is actually a lot of fun. Her love for cities is contagious.
 

Oikistes

Member
I just started the first book. They are taking a bit longer to be translated into English but the translation seems to be high quality. Love it so far though ;3

We got a really early translation because after Game of Thrones was finally translated and turned to be a success editors everywhere started looking for more good foreign fantasy. Thankfully, as before that almost everything you got was Forgotten Realms and spanish fantasy, which kind of sucks.
 

Shirokun

Member
I have less than 100 pages left of this, which has been absolutely fantastic.



knw4g.jpg


I'm resisting the urge to jump into the next book, A Storm of Swords, so I can read this instead:




2uttith.jpg
 

NoitoraJirugajr

Neo Member
Oikistes said:
We got a really early translation because after Game of Thrones was finally translated and turned to be a success editors everywhere started looking for more good foreign fantasy. Thankfully, as before that almost everything you got was Forgotten Realms and spanish fantasy, which kind of sucks.
Are there any other fantasy writers who are like Sapkowsky? I love steven brust but besides him and sapkowsky most fantasy is forgotten realms type stuff I can't stand.
 

Verdre

Unconfirmed Member
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I'm not much a fan of short story collections, but I got Peter S Beagle's The Line Between and it was mostly a good read.

Favorites were a little story about a mouse that tries to be a cat because he doesn't want to be hunted, a little short story sequel to The Last Unicorn that is as wonderful as the book, four lovely fables, a story about a sister and her brother that can do magic, and Salt Wine, a tale about a man who saves a merman and the gift he receives along with its cost.

Bit from one of the little fables:

An old gypsy moth, her beauty ruined by a lifetime of singeing herself against nothing but arc lights at night games, paused by him for a moment. "Sonny, we couldn't agree with you more," she said. "Love is all that matters, and all that other stuff is as shadow. But there's just something about a good fire."
 

Reza_Neko

Member
I'm reading three books (I like to alternate).

I'm rereading Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (had to check it out at the library since I lost my copy at my old workplace. How do you lose a book that size at a pool?)

I'm reading So Long and Thanks for All the Fish by Douglas Adams (the 4th book in the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy trilogy).

I'm just getting started on Howl's Moving Castle (the book that Hiyao Miyazaki's movie is based off of).

Im still trying to get through Favorite Folktales from Around the World (my fav textbook ever, only some stories were assigned for Mythology class). I own this one so I'm putting it off since the first two are library books and the third one I am borrowing from a friend.
 

CygnusXS

will gain confidence one day
Picked up Watchmen today. Wanted to read it before the movie came out so I know what to bitch about as I watch it.
 

Bowflex

The fact that anyone supports Hillary boggles my mind... I have tested between 130-160 on IQ tests
Just purchased....

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aeolist

Banned
FirewalkR said:
I'm now in the process of convincing myself to start reading this behemoth:

25auaz6.jpg
I'm about 2/3 through Anathem and I'm completely blown away.

I think it must be selling horribly though because it's so dense, so weird, and requires such concentration and contextual reading abilities.

Stephenson's probably the most intelligent novelist I've ever read. Not only did he create a completely different yet familiar world, but his book about it is stuffed full of totally bizarre yet internally consistent and logical philosophy and physics discussions that he manages to make insanely fascinating.
 
I'm re-reading the Brethren Trilogy by Robyn Young Robyn Young (Due to the release of the 3rd book)
They're the most well paced books i've read in a long time, and tell the story of the crusades very well from both sides. Really highly recommended
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bengraven

Member
Picked this up a few months ago and decided, screw it, after I Am Legend I'm in a vampire mood. About 50 pages in, which is the breaking point after which I can't stop.

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FirewalkR said:
I'm now in the process of convincing myself to start reading this behemoth:

25auaz6.jpg

Do it! It's a really awesome book so far, but very difficult reading at the beginning - for the first 200 pages or so I was contemplating taking the book back, as it was really doing nothing for me and seemed to be going absolutely nowhere, but somewhere around the 250-300 page mark it all started coming together and now i'm absolutely hooked. I've never read one of Stephenson's books before, but the way he has crafted his world and brought it to life in Anathem is nothing short of awe-inspiring. Obviousley it's a book that took some serious devotion, and then asks the exact same of the reader - but it's so worth it, probably the most intriguing book i've read in years.
 
cubicle47b said:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/516H1W1ASTL._SS500_.jpg[img]

It's been on my Amazon wish list for a while and someone finally bought it for me.[/QUOTE]


This is one of my favorite books. I have read it twice and will likely read it again sometime this year.
 

ninjarr

Neo Member
Shirokun said:
I have less than 100 pages left of this, which has been absolutely fantastic.

http://i40.tinypic.com/knw4g.jpg[IMG]

I'm resisting the urge to jump into the next book, [I]A Storm of Swords[/I], so I can read this instead:


[IMG]http://i43.tinypic.com/2uttith.jpg[IMG][/QUOTE]
Fuck yeah, do this, it is the best decision of your life.

Earthsea is AMAZING.

I am currently reading The Road and Pinball 1973.

Wish I could have gotten ahold of the first Murakami book for The Trilogy of the Rat (Hear the Wind Sing) but I couldn't find it anywhere. I already read Dance, Dance, Dance and want to get into Wild Sheep Chase but don't want to begin anywhere but as close to the beginning as possible.
 

Rei_Toei

Fclvat sbe Pnanqn, ru?
DefectiveReject said:
I'm re-reading the Brethren Trilogy by Robyn Young Robyn Young (Due to the release of the 3rd book)
They're the most well paced books i've read in a long time, and tell the story of the crusades very well from both sides. Really highly recommended
51BVTCDJHML._SL500_AA240_.jpg

51YnC0CMNTL._SL500_AA240_.jpg

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Did you by any chance read the books about the Templars from Jan Guillou?
 

Tinabina

Member
i've been wanting to read this for a while, finally got it. Now i wanna see the movie when i finish reading it.
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FnordChan

Member
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I recently read Old Man's War by John Scalzi and enjoyed it so much that, upon learning there were sequels, I abandoned the paperback I had started and went out and bought a copy of the second book in the series, The Ghost Brigades, immediately. Old Man's War is about a future where mankind has colonized the stars and found a lot of competition in the form of various alien races who we are frequently at war with. The people of Earth are isolated from the galaxy but they do know that on your 75th birthday you become eligible to join the military. Presumably some sort of revitalization process takes place, but beyond that they don't know what they're getting into, and that's where the book begins. It's an excellent, fast paced read that owes a lot to Starship Troopers and The Forever War, but not in a particularly political way. It's a terrific read, and there's a lot of life left in the world Scalzi created, as The Ghost Brigades was also excellent and I've already got a copy of The Last Colony on hand and ready to go.

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Still, I was able to bring myself to go back to the book I abandoned for The Ghost Brigades: John Le Carre's The Little Drummer Girl. I'm fifty or so pages in and it's off to a slow start, but I can say that the book is Le Carre's take on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict and that it's starting to become engrossing. I look forward to reporting back, as I'm expecting it to really get going before long.

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Finally, thanks to a Borders 40% off coupon I was able to justify buying True Crime Detective Magazines 1924-1969 by Eric Godtland and Dian Hanson. Godtland provides the nerd obsession with the subject, Hanson the experience of having edited true crime magazines, and in the glorious Taschen tradition they provide an overview on the subject in between page after page of glossy photographs of lurid covers and screaming headlines. Now, this is not the most quotable Taschen collection I've ever seen - that honor goes to their Men's Adventure Magazines volume - but it's still pretty fantastic. Go to the Amazon link for True Crime Detective Magazines (or the page at Taschen's website) and you'll find plenty of interior images and headlines to gawk at, such as this one:

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It's a beautiful thing to behold.

FnordChan
 

pinksage

Member
I read mostly comic books. Some of the Graphic Novels and mini series I have enjoyed are:

Magneto testament
The Roberts
Scalped
The New York Four
Deadspace
 

Eric P

Member
FnordChan said:
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I recently read Old Man's War by John Scalzi and enjoyed it so much that, upon learning there were sequels, I abandoned the paperback I had started and went out and bought a copy of the second book in the series, The Ghost Brigades, immediately. Old Man's War is about a future where mankind has colonized the stars and found a lot of competition in the form of various alien races who we are frequently at war with. The people of Earth are isolated from the galaxy but they do know that on your 75th birthday you become eligible to join the military. Presumably some sort of revitalization process takes place, but beyond that they don't know what they're getting into, and that's where the book begins. It's an excellent, fast paced read that owes a lot to Starship Troopers and The Forever War, but not in a particularly political way. It's a terrific read, and there's a lot of life left in the world Scalzi created, as The Ghost Brigades was also excellent and I've already got a copy of The Last Colony on hand and ready to go.



FnordChan

i was much in the same boat RE: Scalzi, but i read that the second one retreads the same ground but from the opposite direction, so it's been back burnered.

I'm currently trying to do 52 books in 52 weeks for a communal project w/ another forum.

i recently wrapped Brian Keene's The Rising and found it enjoyable but flawed. As an early novel though, it should be fine. I have the immediate follow up on deck but am moving away from that genre for the time being.

my next book is Norman Spinrad's Bug Jack Baron.

Fnord, Vintage Crime just put back into print Joe R Lansdale's Bad Mojo. Get thee hence. and purchase immediately if you haven't already read it.

also, Ed McBain's 87th Precinct is another recent revelation.

i'm working on a blog for the time being as well

http://thekrakennaps.blogspot.com/
 

FnordChan

Member
Eric P said:
i was much in the same boat RE: Scalzi, but i read that the second one retreads the same ground but from the opposite direction, so it's been back burnered.

Hrm. That's a fair assessment but I still enjoyed The Ghost Brigades quite a bit. Also, I'm hoping that now that he's well and truly established the setting that he can kick off The Last Colony without doing a lot of recap. I'll report back on that one.

Fnord, Vintage Crime just put back into print Joe R Lansdale's Bad Mojo. Get thee hence. and purchase immediately if you haven't already read it.

also, Ed McBain's 87th Precinct is another recent revelation.

I've had the pleasure of sitting next to Joe Lansdale at a dinner and chatting with him, but still haven't managed to read one of his books, despite having copies of The Drive-In 1 & 2 at the house. I'll add Bad Mojo to the list and try to bump him up the queue a bit. Meanwhile, I recently read Shotgun, the 23rd book in the 8th Precinct series, and liked it quite a bit. I picked up another random book in the series recently - can't remember which one off-hand, alas - but will probably get into it before too long.

Good luck with your book a week project! Also, let us know how Bug Jack Barron turns out, as I've always been curious about that one.

FnordChan
 

Eric P

Member
i started with Axe and read in a day. If I had started it after work I probably would have burned through it in a day. It's great stuff if you like police procedurals. I have a ton more of them thanks to ebay, but I'm trying to cycle through book genres so I don't read 6 detective novels in a row.

re: Lansdale, Savage Season is the first book. My Mistake. It's a quick entertaining read. I think you'll really dig it.

Start with two best friends who practice martial arts in their free time: one a straight white guy, the other a black gay guy. Add a conniving ex-wife in a blue-jean miniskirt. Throw in half a million in a muddy creekbed somewhere near the Sabine River in East Texas. Add an ex-radical from the '60s and two naive idealists who want to save the world. Mix them all together in a half-assed plan, season with double-crosses, and then top it off with a hilarious and chilling drug dealer named Soldier. Bloody mayhem a la Lansdale. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
 

Wes

venison crêpe
I've had this book for a while now and kept having to restart it as I would get sidetracked with uni work. Finally finished it today.

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Definitely not my favourite of his books. It moves along in fits and starts until you're two-thirds of the way through and then it finally kicks into the kind of gear you know Morgan is capable of. The three main characters are all quite interesting. The old war hero aspect of them all was rather fascinating but by the end I felt I hadn't really gotten to know them completely.
Ringil in particular looks to have an entertaining future in store...

I'm guessing and hoping this turns into a series of books. If it does then this could be considered a good foundation.
 

Alucard

Banned
I just finished reading The Restaurant at the End of the Universe by Douglas Adams, and have moved on to Life, the Universe, and Everything. I have waited a long time to read these books, but I'm glad to say that the wait has been worth it. I love Adams' wit and charm, and his piercing insights into human behaviours and motivations. Plus, he's hilarious. If you're into sci-fi or humour at all, I highly recommend the Hitchhiker books by Douglas Adams.
 

slayn

needs to show more effort.
friend got me this for christmas:

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I'm not big on graphic novels but I figure I'll try it out
 
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