joeyjoejoeshabadoo
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Boneshaker is great. I had a few minor issues with how it wrapped up but other than that it was a fun ride.Ceebs said:Currently reading this one. Not that far yet but seems like it may have some promise.
Boneshaker is great. I had a few minor issues with how it wrapped up but other than that it was a fun ride.Ceebs said:Currently reading this one. Not that far yet but seems like it may have some promise.
edgefusion said:I am reading (and loving):
icarus-daedelus said:GRATCH LUUUG RAAAACH ARRRRRRRGGG
Thanks for posting this after my post.Beowulf28 said:I initially thought this one was kinda boring but I'm about 200 pages through and now its starting to get good.
GDJustin said:Just started. I'm in for a heck of a ride, aren't I?
Honestly the first ~100 pages haven't grabbed me. VERY hard to keep track of who is who, where things are taking place, etc. I am constantly re-reading, and flipping back to previous chapters to remind me who is so-and-so's nephew, dead brother, sister, etc.
I'm a patient reader, though. And it's obviously not been all bad.
Fleet of Foot said:Has anyone read The Night's Dawn Trilogy by Peter Hamilton? I noticed it while browsing at Borders yesterday and decided to buy it on my Kindle. The whole trilogy is $7.99.
This looks loooooong. There are about 71,000 "locations" in the Kindle version, versus about 18,000 locations in A Clash of Kings, for instance. So yeah it will take a while. After reading it for several hours today, Kindle tells me I'm 3% done! But it's starting off really good.
I don't know how I've never heard of it.
Salazar said:I'm reading 'Red Seas Under Red Skies' by Scott Lynch. It's superb. Whereas Goodkind boasts that nobody edits his work, it's plain that Lynch's writing has been expertly pushed around.
PantherLotus said:I'm currently reading a rather mundane paint-by-numbers fantasy novel. Then again, how many truly aren't?
Yasser said:
just finished this, absolutely fantastic and i'm upset i can't find any of the author's other work in english
i'll be sure to check that out as well. you sum up fang pretty much perfectly, right up to the endSalazar said:Oh, dear me. It is a terrific book. Fang is such an endearingly pathetic creature. Kyril Bonfiglioli's Mortdecai books might work as a stop-gap. Well, more than that - they are wonderful in their own right. The anti-hero, Charlie Mortdecai, is comical and insipid in a sort of similar (more of a rake, though) way.
PantherLotus said:I'm currently reading a rather mundane paint-by-numbers fantasy novel. Then again, how many truly aren't? This one has potential because the setting matches the current weather conditions in RL:
But damn I love this cover.
Feep said:Came highly recommended, but through the first hundred pages or so, I'm only mildly interested. This book is SO British. We'll see!
http://blogs.feministsf.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/strangeandnorell.jpg
Jarlaxle said:Do yourself a huge favor and after finishing that book forget that there are any sequels. The storyline ends there. You're welcome.
Oooh, my mythology teacher recommended this book. She warned not to read it at night time lol.thomaser said:Read two books in the last week of 09: Elizabeth Kostova's "The Historian" and Arto Paasilinna's "The Year of the Hare". Both very enjoyable.
The Historian is a surprisingly good, modern Dracula-tale. It's not without flaws, the plot being driven forward by a string of extremely unlikely happy coincidences the worst of them, but if you can overlook that, it's a worthy follow-up to Bram Stoker's Dracula. The historic detail is very impressive, and Dracula himself is terrifying.
fanboi said:http://nomon.files.wordpress.com/2008/04/feastforcrowsuk.jpg
Anyone know anything about the new book when it will come etc?
otake said:Perhaps some of you can help me, I want to read something modern and perhaps existential. I don't want to read about killers, or dragons, or any fantasy. Something like "The Paperchase" movie. Something about modern life and business, etc.
Salazar said:Nicholson Baker's 'The Mezzanine'. He wrote a novel about stockbroking, and thenlike lifting the skeleton from a fishremoved all traces of plot, leaving it a book in the 'chosisme' tradition of acute scrutiny of the inanimate. It's deeply amusing and strange.
otake said:Perhaps some of you can help me, I want to read something modern and perhaps existential. I don't want to read about killers, or dragons, or any fantasy. Something like "The Paperchase" movie. Something about modern life and business, etc.
It is one of the centerpieces in Book GAF's Cliche Canon.Desaparecido said:Everyone's read this by now, probably ... or at least attempted to do so.
R.R. Martin's entire catalog is included too. This shit is a long canon. Move over Harvard.icarus-daedelus said:Ah, but it can never touch A Song of Ice and Fire in that regard.
Not everything in it is bad, it's just stuff that everyone reads month after month after month--a collection you read to make you the rank and file Book GAFer. Whether you deem that good or bad is up to you.Cyan said:Heh. Well, what would you put in the canon if you had your druthers?
whytemyke said:Mainly this:
Cyan said:Read a few books on vacation, all sci-fi/fantasy.
Peter Brett's The Warded Man.
Standard good vs evil fantasy (humans vs demons), but an interesting setting. In a post-apocalyptic future, demons arise from the earth every night and kill any humans they find. The only defense is to hide behind wards, magical symbols painted onto houses and city walls. It's a war of attrition and the humans are slowly dieing out, as a single mistake in your wards means near-certain death. Naturally, our hero decides he's sick of hiding, and sets out in search of a way to fight back.
It's a debut novel, and it kind of shows, but it's not bad. A well-realized setting, and the characters are fun. I'm not sure I agree with the way he structured it, but it works. First in a trilogy, with the second out in April.
FnordChan said:
I'm about halfway through Stephen King's Under The Dome and thoroughly enjoying it. Okay, so the main bad guy is pretty over the top, but I'm happy to roll with that. If nothing else, my belief that I should never live in a small town in Maine has been nicely reinforced so far.
FnordChan
bengraven said:I felt the same way you did; the world is fairly bland, but the concept behind the story is amazing. The demons rising up every night gave the night time this horribly tense feeling and was the best start to a world I've seen in modern fantasy lit.
Unfortunately I just wasn't feeling a lot of the story. That said, I'll be picking up the sequel in April and am anticipating it.
bengraven said:Good, give us a heads up review of it when you're done!
_Isaac said:I'm about to start a new book and have to decide between
The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen
I was leaning towards Everything is Illuminated because it's so short and I really enjoyed Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, but I can't seem to find my copy anymore
What do you guys say?
aidan said:Definitely. I'll be writing one for my blog, so I'll be sure to give you guys the heads up. I know Brett has some fans here.