SmoothCB said:and it's direct sequel (don't buy the first w/o the second! It's pretty much one novel.)
I think these two books are perfect for the Gaf crowd. If you have any interest in the internet, technology and current society you owe it to yourself to pick them up. Outstanding!
eznark said:These books (well, I deleted the first before finishing but I made it 80% through) are awful.
Just offering a counterpoint.
Tim the Wiz said:This isn't really about reading. During my usual travail of the local bookstore's "literary" shelves - which, by the way, holds no McCarthys or Pynchons beyond a scraping of their latest works, and absolutely nothing written by Michael Chabon
Salazar said:I can't see the problem, I'm afraid.
so good <3Lafiel said:Now reading
100 pages read so far.
Tim the Wiz said:Heh, care to expand on that?
Salazar said:Not an admirer of the authors you mention. At least, I don't think their absence from a bookstore's shelves makes it a deficient store. The fact that bookstores are now dedicating sections and vast stretches of shelving exclusively to insipid vampire pseudo-erotica bugs me more.
Kawaii said:
First three stories are the finest pieces of dutch literature, offcourse.
(Uitvreter, Titaantjes, Dichtertje)
Nederlandse literatuur lolZeitgeister said:ik ken ze geen van allen.
Tim the Wiz said:most books sold in Australia are imported from Britain or so I assume.
Salazar said:I can't see the problem, I'm afraid.
As for buying books simply to own them, Webster's Visual Dictionary.
http://www.quercuspress.com/webster_vimeo_video.htm
Touchdown said:
Just finished American Gods, also by Neil Gaiman which I thought was really dull and boring for the first 300 pages or so but then it redeemed itself toward the end. I'm only on the third chapter of Neverwhere and to me it's already 10x better than American Gods.
just read this recently, excellentNorwegian Wood said:
I'm loving it So far
finowns said:Cheapest book costs like $2000. You bought one?
Lafiel said:Finished "Consider Phlebas" by Iain M Banks, a few days ago, good stuff. But the last 1/4 of it, wasn't as good as the first 3/4. Looking forward to reading "player of games" next, which i hear is better.
Now reading
100 pages read so far.
Salazar said:, head and shoulders above Martin and Abercrombie. .
_Isaac said:Everybody loves this book, and I have no idea why. I still have the next two books on my shelf. I feel obligated to read through them, but I am just not interested at all. Ugh.
The series is moderately entertaining until a little more than halfway through, when the authors' agenda becomes really overt. I've read worse, but trust me, when the preaching starts it's difficult to stay interested.Ryu said:
Was going to start this next on a friend's recommendation. Anyone here read this before? Have an opinion on it? I'm a bit hesitant and I have tons of other things to read right now. Wondering if this is worth my time or not...
Ryu said:
Finished this, pretty meh. Wasn't expecting Shakespeare or anything, but still meh.
Uh-oh. If those kill your appetite for fantasy, just be sure to read Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun series before you quit the genre.Jedeye Sniv said::lol :lol :lol
You know it's gonna be rough when Tom Clancy's name is bigger than the author's. Dude is so rich now he doesn't even need to write his own books. Video game tie ins are always a gamble anyway - speaking of which I shall be starting the Dragon Age books shortly, making them the first fantasy books I shall have read. Maybe not the best start to the genre but at least I'll care about the universe a little.
I strongly recommend the Pevear & Volokhonsky translation of Crime and Punishment. It is elegant where the Garnett translation (available for free online, by the way) is awkward. I can't claim to have read through both editions, but based on scattered comparisons I'm confident my opinion is accurate.Pappasman said:
Garnett
He was so badly dressed that even a man accustomed to shabbiness would have been ashamed to be seen in the street in such rags. In that quarter of the town, however, scarcely any shortcoming in dress would have created surprise. Owing to the proximity of the Hay Market, the number of establishments of bad character, the preponderance of the trading and working class population crowded in these streets and alleys in the heart of Petersburg, types so various were to be seen in the streets that no figure, however queer, would have caused surprise. But there was such accumulated bitterness and contempt in the young man's heart, that, in spite of all the fastidiousness of youth, he minded his rags least of all in the street.
Of course, being translations of the same work, the two versions can be quite similar. But there still I favor Pevear & Volokhonsky:Pevear & Volokhonsky
He was so badly dressed that another man, even an accustomed one, would have been ashamed to go out in such rags during the daytime. However, the neighborhood was such that it was hard to cause any surprise with one's dress. The proximity of the Haymarket, the abundance of certain establishments, a population predominantly of craftsmen and artisans, who clustered in these central Petersburg streets and lanes, sometimes produced such a motley of types in the general panorama that to be surprised at meeting any sort of figure would even have been strange. But so much spiteful contempt was already stored up in the young man's soul that, for all his sometimes very youthful touchiness, he was least ashamed of his rags in the street.
Garnett
Marmeladov stopped short, as though his voice had failed him. Then he hurriedly filled his glass, drank, and cleared his throat.
"Since then, sir," he went on after a brief pause--"Since then, owing to an unfortunate occurrence and through information given by evil-intentioned persons--in all which Darya Frantsovna took a leading part on the pretext that she had been treated with want of respect--since then my daughter Sofya Semyonovna has been forced to take a yellow ticket, and owing to that she is unable to go on living with us. [. . .]"
Pevear & Volokhonsky
Marmeladov fell silent, as though his voice had failed him. Then suddenly he poured a quick glass, drank it, and grunted.
"Since then, my dear sir," he went on after some silence, "since then, owing to an unfortunate occurrence and reports made by ill-meaning personswhich Darya Frantsevna especially abetted, on the pretext that she had not been shown due respectsince then my daughter, Sofya Semyonovna, has been obliged to carry a yellow pass, and under such circumstances could no longer remain with us. [. . .]"
Monocle said:Uh-oh. If those kill your appetite for fantasy, just be sure to read Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun series before you quit the genre.
ItAintEasyBeinCheesy said:
Finished, good stuff!
You're surprised that a ghostwritten 'Tom Clancy's' book based on a video game is bad? Aim higher.Ryu said:Finished this, pretty meh. Wasn't expecting Shakespeare or anything, but still meh.
Was going to start this next on a friend's recommendation. Anyone here read this before? Have an opinion on it? I'm a bit hesitant and I have tons of other things to read right now. Wondering if this is worth my time or not...
His Dark Materials is just a trilogy, with a cogent beginning, middle and end. (P.S. I tried reading The Golden Compass and didn't particularly enjoy it, FYI.)eznark said:What author isn't trying tio get you to buy as many books as possible?
I have not read them but based on hearsay and opinion it sounds like The Golden Compass and Left Behind series are just two different sides of the same preaching coin.
Unless HDM features millions of people standing around worshiping all day, I think it's got an edge on the Left Behind series.eznark said:My comparison on HDM was the preachiness, not the number of books.
Only got about halfway through The Amber Spyglass, but it definitely avoided any overt "preachiness" up to that point.eznark said:My comparison on HDM was the preachiness, not the number of books.
Like I said I haven't read either of them but my that is my impression of both. Seems obvious in Left Behind and I still don't know anyone who has read past the first book of the dark materials series, and all (three or four, not exactly a huge number here, none religious) cite proselytizing as the reason they gave up.KingGondo said:Only got about halfway through The Amber Spyglass, but it definitely avoided any overt "preachiness" up to that point.