|
Member
(08-07-2012, 11:57 PM)
|
#202
|
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 12:21 AM)
|
#203
I mean she eventually caved and gave me $7 worth of store credit, so it's not that big of a deal.
I was just annoyed by the fact that they accused me of something I absolutely did not do. I was acting within their policies. You would think that after giving them so much business they would be a little nicer to returning customers. |
|
Junior Member
(08-08-2012, 12:29 AM)
|
#204
Finished the following:
![]() Savages: A Novel by Don Winslow Amazingly fun and clever. The sort of book you could easily finish in one sitting due to how fast and off the cuff it reads. ![]() A Storm of Swords by George R.R. Martin I get pretty tired of each book in this series till it gets about 2/3 of the way through then I become completely engrossed. I'm going to have to wait a bit till I have the strength to tackle A Feast for Crows ![]() Taking Wing by Michael A. Martin Meh. Rote Star Trek fiction. Nothing special here. Mainly read to burn time till tomorrow when I will get the first three Neal Stephenson novels and will start with.... ![]() The Big U by Neal Stephenson It's the first Stephenson I've read and I know he has come out disowning it but I usually like to start from the beginning when reading an author. I'm pretty excited to check out his stuff. I usually just lurk but I want to thank everyone for all the recommendations and discussion. Every time I enter this thread I find something else I want to read! |
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 12:48 AM)
|
#205
It's there. It's just a bit tougher to find. :)
http://www.amazon.com/Count-Cristo-P.../dp/B002RI9KL8 |
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 02:16 AM)
|
#206
Just finished
![]() Eaters of the Dead by Michael Crichton Enjoyed it. Was a lot better than the movie and reminded of The Long Ships, though not as good. Anyway, would definitely recommend it to anyone looking for a good Viking Story. Anyone know of any good colonization or terraforming books that are not the Mars trilogy? |
|
'Wait and Hope'
(08-08-2012, 04:20 AM)
|
#208
I got a lot of reading done of Pride and Prejudice. It was a bit of a slow burn for me at the start, but it has grown on me a lot. And I like Elizabeth better than I might partially because the annotator does a really good job contrasting her with other contemporary female heroines, elaborating on the stifling social context that she lives in (and which Austen's audience would have been familiar with, presumably), and it becomes more obvious the ways that she... I wouldn't say "rebels" but at least has some push-and-pull with it. I have about 50 pages to go, which for my edition is about half of Volume III.
I also read the first volume of Wandering Son yesterday. It was ... cute, I guess. I enjoyed the author's self-deprecation at the end about all the characters looking the same... because they did. |
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 05:27 AM)
|
#209
I just finished the Millennium trilogy, I like The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo more than the sequels, but enjoyed all of the series. Any suggestions for something in the same genre? I don't read this type of book often, so I don't want to go for something completely different just yet.
|
|
The Legend of BorkBork: BorkBorkity Borking
(08-08-2012, 05:47 AM)
|
#210
|
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 05:52 AM)
|
#211
![]() The Hot Zone: A Terrifying True Story by Richard Preston Thanks to the recent thread on the Uganda Ebola outbreak, I just finished this book. I listened to the audio book version. Pretty frightening but compelling, like staring into the abyss or watching a train wreck - hard to look away. |
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 09:20 AM)
|
#213
|
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 02:05 PM)
|
#215
Ohh that sounds good. Added to my wishlisht. |
|
FnordChan
(08-08-2012, 02:21 PM)
|
#216
FnordChan |
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 07:10 PM)
|
#220
Incedentally, I started reading Trouble Is My Business last night. Hopefully his short stories are as good as his full lengths. |
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 08:32 PM)
|
#221
Oh my goodness, why haven't I ever read more of Ray Bradbury?! Only thing I've read by him is Something Wicked This Way Comes. Finally got around to reading some more of him this month.
Just finished reading this: ![]() I loved how he was able to link all the individual tales together. It reminded me a lot of 2001 by Arthur C Clark in that manner. I was impressed with Bradbury's social commentary, too. Definitely one of my all time favorite books. Working on this: It's more of a short story collection than an actual novel. Still, it's an incredibly well put together book with complex short stories. I'm loving it so far. |
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 08:39 PM)
|
#222
The other books are: Grafton: ""M" is for Malice", MacDonald: "Black Money", Paretsky: "Tunnel Vision", Cornwell: "Body of Evidence", Hammett: "Maltese Falcon" and "Red Harvest", Mosley: "Devil in a Blue Dress", and Parker: "Promised Land". I know Hammett's books are supposed to be great, and Grafton's is a famous one, but what about the rest? Are they good too? |
|
Member
(08-08-2012, 10:04 PM)
|
#223
|
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 01:13 AM)
|
#225
I should probably read this. I watched the movie recently and none of the stories made a lick of sense but they were oddly intriguing none the less. I'm guessing the stories in the book are much easier to understand.
|
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 04:15 AM)
|
#229
I forgot to add - earlier this month I picked up this book after the author wrote a column regarding the recent mass shooting in Aurora, Colorado.
![]() Columbine by Dave Cullen I'll admit that perhaps it doesn't tell the whole story of what happened leading up to the shooting at Columbine, but it is a pretty good book. Made me sick to my stomach reading it. |
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 05:20 AM)
|
#230
Just finished House of Chains by Steven Erickson. This book series is easily the most difficult I've read; not because the books are boring, or the prose is difficult, but because it's incredibly important to pay attention as you read. Erickson plans so far ahead, and he throws little hints and important tidbits in previous books that may not come to fruition for two or three more books. I tend to skim over large sections of text in a lot of the books I read, but I can't do that with the Malazan novels. Erickson trusts his readers to intellectually put together clues he scatters everywhere. All that said, the series is becoming one of my favorite, and pretty much everything about these books has tickled my fancy so far.
I'm going to move onto American Gods by Neil Gaiman before reading the next Malazan book, Midnight Tides. |
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 06:21 AM)
|
#232
I got an email saying StoryBundle is up. Not sure of the quality of the books in the bundle, but since it's pay as you like, it's easy to take the plunge. It's like indie game bundle, but for books.
Will post my reviews as I go through the books. http://storybundle.com/ |
|
WHAT HAVE YOU DONE?
(08-09-2012, 06:48 AM)
|
#233
What are the next-best Cyberpunk novels after Neuromancer and Snow Crash? (Those are the two I hear talked about most at any rate)
To add to this discussion besides just looking for recommendations - Finished Crime and Punishment. Absolutely fantastic, though the prose was far more dense than Im used to. Probably would've taken another week or so to finish it (mostly on account of its prose), but our cable/internet/tv was out last thursday and friday which left me with little to do but read haha. But like I said, just fantastic. In my continuing effort to be reading some more classics inbetween all of my sci-fi and fantasy fare, ![]() The Complete Sherlock Holmes Been a long time fan of Sherlock Holmes since my dad introduced me to the old Granada TV Show, and finally getting around to reading these. Great and entertaining stories, though the text is so small that it feels like I'm barely making any progress as I read through it haha.
Last edited by Zerokku; 08-09-2012 at 07:28 AM.
|
|
Aliens ate my babysitter
(08-09-2012, 07:00 AM)
|
#234
Also, Erikson, not Erickson. Currently reading The Mongoliad by Neal Stephenson et al. and Röde Orm by Frans G. Bengtsson. |
|
FABULOUSLY
DIXI QUID QUID BEAR BEAR (08-09-2012, 07:10 AM)
|
#235
|
|
Lit himself on fire to get
a mod to tag him (08-09-2012, 01:29 PM)
|
#237
let me try this ![]() Night Watch by Terry Pratchett This is actually a re-read, but since I didn't actually own the book before and it's been a few years since I last read it I'll post it here. Probably my favourite of all the Watch books, though I haven't read Snuff yet. |
|
I have a foreskin yet I do not have AIDS
(08-09-2012, 01:31 PM)
|
#238
amazing books, love them. number 6 (a prequel) is great as well. number 5 is about the length of 1-4 combined I think. not entirely sure as I read it on kindle, but I think it's by far the longest.
|
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 02:41 PM)
|
#240
I almost feel like, after the first 5 books, I should go back and do a reread of them, before moving onto books 6 - 10, just to clarify things in my head. That, or try and devise a mind map for how everything connects. I imagine that would be quite an undertaking though. As I said earlier in the thread, from the comments I've read HoC improves greatly if you go back and read it again at the end, as there's a lot of setup and foreshadowing that seems to make the book feel incomplete the first time through. I'm just about to start Midnight Tides which I'm hugely looking forward to. |
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 02:47 PM)
|
#241
Also, someone posted this website earlier(http://www.tor.com/features/series/m...-of-the-fallen) that has a summary of each scene plus commentary from someone who is reading the book for the first time and someone who has read them all already. Careful of the comments section. It really helped me to understand some things that were confusing me, and they're usually pretty spot on. Oh, and I second Diamond Age for anyone looking for a cyberpunk novel, although I'm not quite sure it can be called cyberpunk
Last edited by CracknutWhirrun; 08-09-2012 at 02:51 PM.
|
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 03:53 PM)
|
#245
The forum over at Malazanempire.com is really useful too and helped to clarify a few things I'd overlooked but they're only worth reading after finishing the particular book you're on. Also - I second the Diamond Age recommendation. It was my first Neal Stephenson book and I enjoyed it immensely. |
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 07:09 PM)
|
#246
|
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 07:13 PM)
|
#249
Reading a Feast for Crows; the books is just AMAZING, I am engrossed, so much better than the TV series.
--- I also read [rather skipped through after being fed up with reading same shit over and over in each chapter] Fifty Shades of Grey; absolutely horrible, like those vampire books horrible [can't even remember the name, lol] I found it to be substantially better than the TV series. |
|
Member
(08-09-2012, 07:31 PM)
|
#250
In for a fiver, the covers for the bonus books scared me off of getting them. Probably gonna start with Undersea. ![]() Undersea by Geoffrey Morrison Edit: kinda cool that you can have them sent straight to your kindle as well. |