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Member
(05-28-2012, 05:22 AM)
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#401
Sounds like a save it until I have nothing else to read day.
My problem with huge casts is not remembering characters, it's that those novels always cut away from a character I am really enjoying to one I don't really care about. I spend all my time slogging through to get back to the one I want to read about. Those First Law books were like that. I loved them when the focus was on Ninefingers, and they felt like a slog when they shifted to the inquisitor. |
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Purple Drazi
(05-28-2012, 06:59 AM)
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#402
I'll still pick up the next one as soon as it comes out, of course. ;) |
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Member
(05-28-2012, 07:28 AM)
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#403
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Member
(05-28-2012, 11:20 AM)
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#404
Since we're nearing the end of the month - any interest in getting a book club book going for June?
Only read the first Mistborn book so far but it was great. I loved it. Definitely recommend it.
Last edited by Maklershed; 05-28-2012 at 11:52 AM.
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Member
(05-28-2012, 05:43 PM)
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#406
Started reading this b/c the hardcover was sitting on my desk at work for the longest time, but stopped reading it. Bad, bad, bad writing. I guess if you liked Ready Player One and Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and don't care about writing, plot, or character development, you'd like this.
![]() Strange Flesh by Michael Olson It just seems like a very gratuitous book and very juvenile male. Lots of sexual deviancy, objectification of women, lame acronyms for technology (imagine if all of technology was named by 11 year old boys), not a very original plot, and a kind of lame and boring virtual world. Am I selling it to you yet? |
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Purple Drazi
(05-28-2012, 05:55 PM)
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#408
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Member
(05-28-2012, 05:56 PM)
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#409
![]()
Originally Posted by Wiki:
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Purple Drazi
(05-28-2012, 06:00 PM)
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#412
1984 has the big, obvious dystopia of a totalitarian dictatorship running your life and demanding obedience. Brave New World has the subtler, more pernicious dystopia where you do what you want and it still works out to obedience. The big, obvious one is more popular--not that surprising. |
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Member
(05-28-2012, 06:04 PM)
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#413
It's part of my fifty to read this year list. I'm glad I got round to it. @cyan: getting round to 1984 sometime this year. Yes, I'm cheating, but who cares really. ;p Fiction aside, Orwell is the better writer in my opinion.
Last edited by Ashes1396; 05-28-2012 at 06:07 PM.
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Member
(05-28-2012, 06:54 PM)
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#414
Now that I'm done with The Way of Kings, I'm going to take a break from Brandon Sanderson even though I want to read the Mistborn trilogy eventually.
What I want to read next: Dune's been on the back of my mind since high school. However I read the first few pages and all the weird names are off-putting. Though it didn't help I tried to read it at 4 in the morning near the tail-end of my night shift. Does it get better as I read more of the book? |
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Member
(05-28-2012, 09:53 PM)
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#416
Oh yeah, I don't mean that Girl is high literature or anything, but at least it was entertaining to read. This was like Girl with the Dragon Tattoo with an even more lame narrator, and not that entertaining to read.
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Member
(05-28-2012, 10:10 PM)
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#417
Reading this right now:
![]() Chronicles of The Black Company by Glen Cook Not sure i really like it... The writing is what TV Tropes calls Beige Prose, very minimalistic and, well, dry. I love that it tells about mercenaries but the rest... So far i haven't found the characters, the setting, or whatever passes for plot in it to be very interesting. Ah, well, i'll read some more and post impressions later on. Is there any good scifi or fantasy about mercenaries, other than this?
Last edited by Woorloog; 05-28-2012 at 10:24 PM.
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Member
(05-29-2012, 09:57 AM)
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#419
I just finished Mistborn Trilogy, and while I enjoyed the characters, world/setting, and overarching plot, I was not a huge fan of the writing style. In particular the dialogue and the repetitive nature of the internal monologues. Therefore, I am worried that the Way of Kings will have similar issues without the awesome setting. Could someone give a 2 sentence spoiler-free description of the world?
On a related note, is Alloy of Law worth reading immediately, or should I wait for paperback/lower Kindle price? |
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punched Wheelchair Mike
(05-29-2012, 10:48 AM)
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#422
Panic - David Marr
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Quote:
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Member
(05-29-2012, 11:51 AM)
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#424
Finished Great Expectations and staying on a classic literature kick with The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson / Those Extraordinary Twins
![]() Pudd'nhead Wilson/Those Extraordinary Twins by Mark Twain |
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Member
(05-29-2012, 01:10 PM)
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#425
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Member
(05-29-2012, 03:57 PM)
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#426
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Purple Drazi
(05-29-2012, 04:33 PM)
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#427
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Member
(05-29-2012, 04:35 PM)
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#428
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Member
(05-29-2012, 05:51 PM)
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#429
Finished:
![]() Started: ![]() The Power of Habit was very interesting, as I have habits of my own I'd like to change, and the book lays out pretty well how scientists have determined that habits work, and how we can try to go about changing them. Engines of Change I picked up on a whim at Costco, and it's very readable and interesting, coming from someone who's never been overly interested in cars. |
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Member
(05-29-2012, 06:15 PM)
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#431
Sooooo goooooood. Plus, there's a nice little surprise in the review quotes section at the beginning of the novel.
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Member
(05-29-2012, 06:21 PM)
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#432
![]() Just started Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Doesn't seem like my kind of book judging by the blurb on the back (just a love story?), but I have read his One Hundred Years of Solitude, and that was so good that I trust him to write something much more interesting than just another love story. 20 pages in, and it's already seems as if I'm in for a treat. I'm in the middle of exams, though, so I won't get to really delve into it for another week or two. |
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If you stop seeing my posts, you can probably guess why
(05-29-2012, 06:25 PM)
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#433
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Member
(05-29-2012, 08:31 PM)
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#436
Lots of Abraham love on this page, and with that, I'm currently nearing the middle of The Dragon's Path. I'm liking it okay (I certainly can't fault Abraham for his style, pacing, etc.), but I dunno...I think my fantasy days may be limited. I know it's early for this series (what, it's supposed to be around 5 books?), but via these relatively small stories being told, I'm not seeing anything more than your vanilla fantasy. Maybe at some point it all explodes into something much bigger and/or different. Right now, it feels like comfort food (which is what 90-ish % of fantasy is...)
Keep in mind, this is coming from the guy that did a re-read of Game of Thrones recently trying to come back up to speed with Martin (I didn't read past Thrones back in the day when I first tried the series) and while it felt good if a bit frivolous on my first read, the re-read struck me as soap-operaish to the point of not wanting to continue. |
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Member
(05-30-2012, 12:11 AM)
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#438
Yeah, I think I might be a little burnt out on his style for now. Was thinking of checking out the City & the City after finishing up Stranger in a Strangeland. These threads have yet to disappoint! |
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Junior Member
(05-30-2012, 12:23 AM)
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#439
I've read three other Dune books and while they are readable, none capture the original magic of the first. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I just finished reading The Hunger Games trilogy. I thought it was pretty good for what it is. It kept me entertained, nothing more nothing less. Now I'm on the Cormac McCarthy's No Country for Old Men. I absolutely loved The Road, so I was looking forward to this one. It started a bit slow, but it's getting pretty good now. If only I could break myself away from games and school work to finish it! |
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Purple Drazi
(05-30-2012, 05:40 AM)
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#440
![]() Downbelow Station by C.J. Cherryh An... interesting book. Cherryh is a fairly big name in scifi, but I've barely read anything of hers (the rather dull and unfulfilling Rimrunners was it until now). Thought I ought to remedy that. Downbelow Station is not what I was expecting. It's an epic, in the sense of being about large-scale events and having a lot of characters to keep track of. It's also dated--it was published in the early 80s, and it shows. In the exposintro most of all. We've got two main sides and a bunch of neutrals trying to stay out of it, plus the noble savage aliens. But what the book is really about is the side effects of war--the breaking down of social structures, the fear and hunger and injury, the inhuman nature of pragmatic decisions. If this sounds dull... well it was, for about the first three quarters. Then, at the last, it all clicked into place and Cherryh perfectly stuck the landing. Good stuff. |
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'Wait and Hope'
(05-30-2012, 05:55 AM)
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#441
And I can send you a PM with some reading suggestions on the topic another gaffer sent me if you're interested.
I actually feel like as I get further, it is becoming much more interesting (since I now feel like I have the major characters and where they are - particularly spatially and in terms of alliances - in relation to one another). |
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Member
(05-30-2012, 05:55 AM)
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#442
What i mean by that, is that when you think of main characters who are nobleman in fantasy, you really do not think of characters like Gender and Dawson. Cithrin and Wester are a bit more typical (Wester a lot more so), but their situation is really quite interesting and different from any fantasy that ive read. Plus, those characters just feel so believable that I simply find it fascinating. Reading the second book right now, and I am quite liking it so far The Long Price Quartet definitely is a lot more unique from the get go. I would also consider The dagger and the Coin different from traditional fantasy fare, but it a more subtle way
Last edited by Piecake; 05-30-2012 at 05:57 AM.
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Member
(05-30-2012, 04:34 PM)
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#443
Reading (as much as anyone can read a cookbook) through this:
![]() Every Grain of Rice: Simple Chinese Home Cooking by Fuchsia Dunlop So far, it's a great introduction to home-styled Chinese dishes. I think the hardest thing about this book is getting the right ingredients, but if you have a Chinese or Asian market nearby, it should be my problem. I recommend it to anyone who's interested in cooking more at home and likes Chinese food. Also making my way through: ![]() Wool Omnibus Edition by Hugh Howey The first story blew me away. It wasn't anything new but (story about the end of the first story) when he got outside and everything was green and the sky was blue, I really really was happy for him and wanted to believe that's how it was. Then when his display died, aaaah, that was soul-crushing. |
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Member
(05-31-2012, 03:24 AM)
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#446
Hey GAF,
For my school's summer reading I have to choose one play to read and then either two short books or one longer book. I've laid out all the options below and was wondering if you all had any suggestions. (I can also choose books that are off-list, but they have to be classics of some form) - edit: and as a side note we will also be reading Great Expectations and Oedipus Rex One Play Death of a Salesman - Arthur Miller A Streetcar Named Desire - Tennessee Williams The Doll House - Henrik Ibsen An Enemy of the People - Henrik Ibsen Antigone - Sophocles The Glass Menagerie - Tennessee Williams Our Town - Thornton Wilder A Raisin in the Sun - Lorraine Hansberry Fences - August Wilson Pygmalion - George Bernard Shaw + Two Short Books The Awakening - Kate Choplin Billy Budd - Herman Melville Persuasion - Jane Austen The Turn of the Screw - Henrik Ibsen The Color Purple by Alice Walker Cry, The Beloved Country - Alan Paton Ethan Frome - Edith Wharton Their Eyes Were Watching God - Zora Neale Hurston A Farewell to Arms - Ernest Hemingway Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man - James Joyce The Scarlet Letter - Nathaniel Hawthorne The Stranger - Albert Camus Sula - Toni Morrison OR One Longer Book All the King's Men - Robert Penn Warren All the Pretty Horses - Cormac McCarthy Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner Emma - Jane Austen Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte Jude the Obscure - Thomas Hardy Moby Dick - Herman Melville Madame Bovary - Gustave Flaubert The Mayor of Casterbridge - Thomas Hardy Native Son - Richard Wright
Last edited by SaltyDoughnut; 05-31-2012 at 03:39 AM.
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'Wait and Hope'
(05-31-2012, 03:27 AM)
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#448
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Purple Drazi
(05-31-2012, 03:41 AM)
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#449
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Member
(05-31-2012, 04:14 AM)
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#450
I am probably odd, but Ethan Frome was one of my favorite required readings from High School. |