BlueTsunami said:
Short stories from various authors based on During and Post Apocalyptic scenarios. I love the lead in message....
Bit-Bit said:Pretty busy month for me.
Right now I'm reading:
For the first time...
And rereading my all time favorite...
I read this at random a year ago or so, it's fantastic. It's really, really dorky in a very fun way. Lot's of inner monologuing about sexy mechanics and having to pay the electric bill.crowphoenix said:Currently reading,
The Automatic Detective is a straight up Noir Detective novel, except that it takes place in an alternate future where society has gone back to acting like the 1920s except with Hover cars, talking gorillas, and death rays.
The story takes place in Empire city, a place obsessed with technological advancement above all else. As a result, radiation and hazardous materials are everywhere and mutations are common. Mack Megaton is the main character, a robot that recently was blessed with the Glitch, a unexplainable phenomena that gives robots the ability to think and feel.
This is great for Mack as now he can go through the process of becoming a full citizen. Unfortunately, the family next door to Mack disappear one day with the only clue a picture given to him by the youngest child. Now Mack must decide whether he'll ignore the problem in order to keep his nose clean, or risk becoming scrap in order to find his friends.
Spruchy said:Let's just rename this to: "WHICH GEORGE MARTIN BOOK ARE YOU ON"?
For the record after I finish lost symbol ill be re-reading the series.
crowphoenix said:Currently reading,
The Automatic Detective is a straight up Noir Detective novel, except that it takes place in an alternate future where society has gone back to acting like the 1920s except with Hover cars, talking gorillas, and death rays.
The story takes place in Empire city, a place obsessed with technological advancement above all else. As a result, radiation and hazardous materials are everywhere and mutations are common. Mack Megaton is the main character, a robot that recently was blessed with the Glitch, a unexplainable phenomena that gives robots the ability to think and feel.
This is great for Mack as now he can go through the process of becoming a full citizen. Unfortunately, the family next door to Mack disappear one day with the only clue a picture given to him by the youngest child. Now Mack must decide whether he'll ignore the problem in order to keep his nose clean, or risk becoming scrap in order to find his friends.
Aegus said:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/3/3a/Unseen.jpg[/
Was pleasantly surprised to see this in Waterstones today as I thought it was out this Thursday.:D[/QUOTE]
It's out? Yay! This next week or so will have me in book stores daily until I can find a copy.
crowphoenix said:Currently reading,
http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y130/CrowPhoenix/adlg.jpg
The Automatic Detective is a straight up Noir Detective novel, except that it takes place in an alternate future where society has gone back to acting like the 1920s except with Hover cars, talking gorillas, and death rays.
The story takes place in Empire city, a place obsessed with technological advancement above all else. As a result, radiation and hazardous materials are everywhere and mutations are common. Mack Megaton is the main character, a robot that recently was blessed with the Glitch, a unexplainable phenomena that gives robots the ability to think and feel.
This is great for Mack as now he can go through the process of becoming a full citizen. Unfortunately, the family next door to Mack disappear one day with the only clue a picture given to him by the youngest child. Now Mack must decide whether he'll ignore the problem in order to keep his nose clean, or risk becoming scrap in order to find his friends.
newsguy said:WTF, it's the month od ASOIAF. I'm still reading:
I am such a slow reader, I drop it for weeks and only read in small chunks.
icarus-daedelus said:I'm trying to get into Terry Pratchett, starting with the very first Discworld book - The Colour of Magic. I have to say, it hasn't immediately grabbed me the way that Douglas Adams could at his best.
vegee said:
Hari Seldon said:Just downloaded that from audible and will start tonight!
vegee said:It's pretty good so far. Like past Robin Hobb books I've read, it starts off slowly but by page 50 or 60 it's flying along.
vegee said:I have this book, but I just couldn't get into it. I thought the quality of writing was subpar compared to what I had just read...really bothered me.
subzero9285 said:Currently reading for the first time:
ClosingADoor said:At the moment I'm reading The First Law: The Blade Itself, fun read.
I've read that three times and I've yet to make it through John's speech.lakesideflight said:still reading
ElectricBlue187 said:I'm having trouble getting into it
Stealth said:
Been recommended on here a few times but the book is fucking great. Basically a set up like the first Alien movie, but the fact that absolutely everything is hostile to human life in the setting is great. Great injections of dark humor every now and then, too. Can't wait to finish it.
Both are great books, and both I read this year. Enjoy! Admittedly it took a while for me to get into Catch-22, but that was because university kept getting between me and the book, and it's a bad book for quick-reading, much more enjoyable if you can take your time to read long fragments at a time.Liquid Helium said:Just finished reading:
And I'm going to start this soon:
I don't read much and a friend recommended me them, really enjoyed Catcher in the Rye