Easystride
Member
Think I might give Anathem another shot after I finish off Childhood's End.
Heart Shaped Box is $1.99 - worth a purchase?
I don't get the love for Blood Meridian. I know I'm in the minority here, but I recently bought it on my Kindle and struggled to finish. Maybe it gets better on subsequent rereads but I found the entire thing so laborious. More than likely I whiffed completely on the point of the book.
Next up:
Definitely in my top 3 favourite books of all time. LOTR can get bent, I must have read the Hobbit about 15 times at this point in my life. I just love it so much. I hope you enjoy it!
Definitely in my top 3 favourite books of all time. LOTR can get bent, I must have read the Hobbit about 15 times at this point in my life. I just love it so much. I hope you enjoy it!
Heart Shaped Box is $1.99 - worth a purchase?
Yeah I saw the movie when it came out back in December and really loved it. Big fan of the LOTR series. I read those books when I was younger and enjoyed them--for some reason never got around to reading The Hobbit. You don't like the LOTR books?
- The Dog Stars by Peter Heller. One of the best books I've ever read. A post-apocalpytic story. Some people don't like the unorthodox writing, and it does take time to get used to, but once you do it takes on a poetic quality. Penetrating insight into the characters and their situation. Brilliant and beautiful.
Ok, this sounds cool. Been a while since I took an art history class, but I've always found it interesting.
In the middle of this:
It's something I've had a hard time just picking up and reading at a given time since starting it, as I find the story so hard to just jump into and out of. It may have had to do with me starting this while I was in the middle of Roadside Picnic, which absolutely hums along at a much faster pace. That said, I absolutely love the world and the characters so far. Would love if anyone had any recommendations of similar books (thematically similar, similar plots).
Just finished This is a Book by Demetri martin
It's not that I don't like the LOTR books, I just find the Hobbit a much more fun and entertaining read. I'm not a huge Tolkien nerd and I love that the Hobbit is pretty much a stand alone tale.
Just picked up Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal. I really enjoed the sample and it is on sale on the Kindle store for $1.99.
I've just started this book recently after putting it off for over a year (got it for Christmas '11), and have enjoyed it so far. It does feel dense though, so reading it is slow going.
Re: Christopher Moore, I loved Sacré Bleu but couldn't stand Bloodsucking Fiends. Can you recommend a book of his that is similar to the former?Enjoy. Easily my favorite author.
http://i.imgur.com/E5M7w86.jpg
I think someone on GAF recommended this to me. Pretty good so far, very bleak and dark, kind of reminds me of The Stand.
Re: Christopher Moore, I loved Sacré Bleu but couldn't stand Bloodsucking Fiends. Can you recommend a book of his that is similar to the former?
I didn't exactly love Jubal , but did like the book up to the second part. I also didn't know how to feel about it after finishing it, but in the end my annoyance towards the second part prevailed. Looks like I can't grok it after all.So I just finished this
And I don't know how I feel about it. On the one hand I absolutely love it up to the point where Harshaw sorts out the matter of property rights between Mike and the General.
But then the book changes drastically. A lot of the characters established in the first half become their polar opposites in the second. The amount of acceptance and logical leaps made for Mike's religion to become acceptable to the supporting cast seems forced. While I understand that some of my unease might be due to my inability to grapple with some of the concepts introduced in the book, which are pretty interesting, some of my unease also comes from the disjointed character development and unrealistic portrayals as the story develops.
At the end, it's a book that leaves me with much food to grok because of what it tries to get at, but it doesn't accomplish it in as effortless of a manner with which it sets up the story.
And yes, I loved Jubal Harshaw while understanding that he was nothing more than a Heinlein mouth-piece.
Sounds cool. There might be an issue with people actually getting ahold of whatever it is.
Rubicon, by Tom Holland.
- The Dog Stars by Peter Heller. One of the best books I've ever read. A post-apocalpytic story. Some people don't like the unorthodox writing, and it does take time to get used to, but once you do it takes on a poetic quality. Penetrating insight into the characters and their situation. Brilliant and beautiful.
Just picked up Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal. I really enjoyed the sample and it is on sale on the Kindle store for $1.99.
I didn't exactly love Jubal , but did like the book up to the second part. I also didn't know how to feel about it after finishing it, but in the end my annoyance towards the second part prevailed. Looks like I can't grok it after all.