GDJustin said:STILL trying to make my way through American Gods. Not digging it as much as the rest of GAF. ~230 pages in and not sure I wanna spend another 350 with these characters.
I guess it's hit or miss with this book. I read it after reading Good Omens, and although I'll admit it wasn't as good, I really enjoyed it. To GDJustin, I say stick with it because I also thought the first half wasn't going in the direction I wanted it to go, but I ended up really getting into it and enjoying it to the end. And speaking about Gaiman, I'm about to start reading The Sandman. Can't wait, Volume 1 should be here soon and I think I can buy most of the other volumes locally (I'm in Costa Rica so they're difficult to track down)Combichristoffersen said:It really isn't all it's hyped up to be IMO. Sure, it's not really bad, but by Gaiman standards it's a rather mediocre book. But to be fair, he can't write a Stardust, a Coraline, a Good Omens or a Sandman every time.
Fireblend said:I guess it's hit or miss with this book. I read it after reading Good Omens, and although I'll admit it wasn't as good, I really enjoyed it. To GDJustin, I say stick with it because I also thought the first half wasn't going in the direction I wanted it to go, but I ended up really getting into it and enjoying it to the end. And speaking about Gaiman, I'm about to start reading The Sandman. Can't wait, Volume 1 should be here soon and I think I can buy most of the other volumes locally (I'm in Costa Rica so they're difficult to track down)
finowns said:Just started this. Hope it is as good as everyone says it is. The cover is terrible
GDJustin said:STILL trying to make my way through American Gods. Not digging it as much as the rest of GAF. ~230 pages in and not sure I wanna spend another 350 with these characters.
Mifune said:It hurts me to say this but the new Lethem is annoying the crap out of me. And I'm not even halfway through.
It's like he has completely forgotten his roots, abandoned his storytelling skills. The characters are all yuppie douche twats and the whole thing goes nowhere. It's hard to believe that the guy who gave us an amazing tale like Motherless Brooklyn is now spewing out this wannabe-DeLillo crap.
Maybe in the coming pages he'll give me a character, an event, anything to latch onto. His pretty prose can only go so far.
I ordered this off Amazon since it was only nine bucks, knowing nothing about the book going in. When I received it, Jesus Christ, was I surprised. Thing is massive. I'll probably put it off until I have more time.TheWiicast said:Just finished reading The Lost Symbol....fucking awful terrible book.
About to start:
Freakin' 1,074 pages! Should keep me busy for a while :lol
BenjaminBirdie said:I opened to the first page and found "Criterion Collection" right there. I love those guys but, whoa, RED FLAG.
(My fave Leth, BTW, is Motherless.)
Mifune said:Dude, it features an unreadable book called Obstinate Dust written by Ralph Warden Meeker.
He couldn't be ripping on the Greatest Book Ever Written, could he?
FnordChan said:
Well, it took two months longer than I'd planned but I finally finished Infinite Jest this week. It did not change my life. However, I don't regret having devoted almost half a year's worth of novel reading time to it. Parts of the novel were literally jaw-dropping and helped make up for other sections where I was sort of tapping my foot impatiently and trying to fight my way through the damn thing. However, when it was on - particularly- my god, was it ever on. I also grew very attached to many of the characters, especially Don Gately. I found the ending to be very satisfying emotionally butthe eschaton game, the fight outside Ennet House, and the brutal finaleStill, twelve years after having purchased the first trade edition, I'm glad to finally be able to check off that portion of my to-read list. I plan on reading some of Wallace's other work - I hear good things about his essays in particular - at some point in the future, but probably not any time soon.would have liked more in the way of a plot resolution; upon finishing I spent a few minutes trying to absorb it all, then flipped back to the beginning and skimmed through the first chapter. That helped, but we're still left hanging in a lot of ways.
BenjaminBirdie said:It might take the slightest bit of googling, but there's one dude who figured out everything about the end of the book and what happens before the beginning.
Nice choice on the Stark, BTW.
In other news, I am really digging Under The Dome.
finowns said:Just started this. Hope it is as good as everyone says it is. The cover is terrible
finowns said:Good fantasy book and first of a trilogy. Comparable to A Song of Ice and Fire series (although I hesitate to compare it to the subtle genius of GRRM's storytelling) with characters not being wholly good nor evil, and a lot of political machinations.
There is bad ass swordsmen and sorcerers, mysterious sects, kings, religious zealots, etc.
Has anyone else read the trilogy? I have only read the first book and would like to hear your take on the rest of the books.
Mifune said:this wannabe-DeLillo crap.
Mifune said:I kind of hated that book. To be honest, I think Gaiman is a genius when it comes to comics, but his novels have left me cold...except for Good Omens, which he had some help with.
Hah, I'm guessing I just started a unit in class similar to yours, because I just started...A Penguin said:Also,
For class. I've been waiting all high school to read this. Orwell has created a world that is fascinating and scary as hell.
Space Cadet said:Hey...DeLillo is amazing.
thomaser said:Yes, finally finished my "reading project"! I started it on July 14th. It consisted of reading Jane Austen's complete novels intertwined with two trilogies; McCarthy's "Border" trilogy and Shea/Wilson's "Illuminatus!" trilogy. I finished the whole thing November 18th. So it took me exactly 128 days, or just over four months. The books have 3103 pages in total, so during this period I read an average of 24,24 pages a day (I was in Oslo a few days in August, without reading, so the real number should be 24,82, supposing that I read all other days in the period). Also, my favourite of the 13 books turned out to be the first Border-book, "All the Pretty Horses".
Yep.
movie_club said:
T1tan said:I'm very interested in your impressions on this book. I was a fan of Little Brother by the same author.
the author teaches at my school (UMass), but its not for his class. Ill post impressions..probably in the December thread.Salazar said:This is a genuinely fine book. Fragmented, but the parts are hilarious.
finowns said:Why do all the women hate the men?
finowns said:What is up with all the traveling? The Author creates a really cool world but most of the time they are just traveling somewhere for 200 pages.
thomaser said:Also, my favourite of the 13 books turned out to be the first Border-book, "All the Pretty Horses".
I finished it up a few days ago. It's a great page turner, but unless you are a huge Dickens fan it may be a bit long in the tooth.Silkworm said:I too am curious to hear what Ceebs thinks of it. I finished reading "The Terror" by Dan Simmons not too long ago. It took me a long time to finish it, but I enjoyed it. Perhaps I should try Simmons' "Carrion Comfort" which is being re-released in paperback in a couple of weeks? It was his 2nd published book and I haven't read it but it has gotten good reviews whereas "Drood: A Novel" seems to have pretty mixed reactions.
Ceebs said:I finished it up a few days ago. It's a great page turner, but unless you are a huge Dickens fan it may be a bit long in the tooth.
sparky2112 said:Have you read much fantasy? Travelling is the mechanism by which fantasy works, for better or worse. You can thank Tolkein for that. Or maybe Homer, even. Sure, there's fantasy in a 'static' setting, but moving from point A to B to Q is what usually passes for plot. Still, I'm a fan...sigh.
desertmunky said:Just started this one a couple days ago. I'm getting really bummed out that I'm getting close to the end of the Dresden series. I can't wait until the new book comes out next year.
"The airport offers nothing to any human being except access to the interval between planes." In Le Guin's series of 16 vivid stories, an airport-bound woman with an inquiring mind visits assorted other planes of existence. With dispassion, wry humor, and a keen eye, and aided as well by research conducted in libraries of various kinds, she describes those excursions in hopes of inducing the reader to try interplanary travel. Each story features a different society and culture, and some of these settings allow telling commentary on the foibles of our world. Hegn, for example, is a small plane on which everyone belongs to the royal family, except for one, carefully nurtured family of commoners. In Asonu, adults rarely say even one word, though the children chatter until they hit their teens, when they start becoming more and more silent. As for Hennebet, do its people experience reincarnation, or are they living again? The narrator's expectations of identity and time become very confused trying to grasp the slippery concept upon which that plane is based. And then there is unusually tenuous Zuehe, which imparts the feeling of being in a landscape created by the artist Escher. Eric Beddows' black-and-white illustrations perfectly complement Le Guin's wildly inventive array of societies and cultures. Sure to delight fans of the unusual travelogue, this is just plain good airport reading.