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What are you reading? (July 2010)

BigAT

Member
I finished up The Name of the Wind and went straight into The Blade Itself. Needless to say, I'm on a bit of a fantasy kick at the moment.
 
Should be finishing up Murakami's "South of the Border, West of the Sun" shortly.
Wonderful book, one of my favorites by him. Like all the critics say, his songs are a low howl of a blues note echoing across hot summer streets. Love that novel particularly.

I'm reading Carrots Love Tomatoes which is perfect source for gardeners (companion planting is genius to me) and The Crossing, which also happens to be perfect.

carrots-love-tomatoes-secrets-of-companion-planting-for-successful-gardening.jpg
crossing.jpg


Edit: I need some hard SF and have heard only good things about "The Forever War". Worth picking up? My favorites in the genre are Childhood's End and Rama by Clarke, along with a lot of short stories by Bradbury and the like.
 

carpal

Member
Continuing my recent sci-fi kick, I've finished Dune and moved on to this guy:

A_Fire_Upon_the_Deep.bookcover.jpg


At about 100 pages in, I'm still not hooked. Maybe because I just came off the masterpiece that is Dune? I have a growing stack of other books I want to read so I'm wondering if anybody can advise. Stick with it? Bail and move on?
 
D

Deleted member 17706

Unconfirmed Member
barnone said:
For some reason I am reading the Assassin's Trilogy by Robin Hobb. I'm on the third book (Assassin's Quest) and it's pretty good, though I wish I had read this maybe two years ago. I've just started getting into more fantasy after reading A Song of Ice and Fire, and while I don't think these assassin books are as good, I am really enjoying them for the plot. A good series for guys in their mid to later teens.

I'm thinking about starting the First Law (I think?) trilogy next because of the Ice and Fire thread.

Do read The First Law trilogy! I just finished the third book yesterday and the whole thing was amazing in my opinion. Abercrombie's prose is excellent and I loved the characters and the world he built. I've read some complaints about how it all ended, but personally I think the ending was great and it was very fitting.

I immediately started on Best Served Cold and from the 30 or so pages I have read so far it looks like it might even be better than The First Law. I eagerly anticipate more books from Abercrombie. The man produces some excellent writing and stories.
 
Almost done with the first book in the Bartimaeus trilogy; liking it a lot but I think I am gonna read something else before moving on to book 2.
 

eznark

Banned
This is going to come as a shock to you guys, but 100 pages in and Glen Beck is a pretty terrible novelist.
 

Burger

Member
carpal said:
Continuing my recent sci-fi kick, I've finished Dune and moved on to this guy:

At about 100 pages in, I'm still not hooked. Maybe because I just came off the masterpiece that is Dune? I have a growing stack of other books I want to read so I'm wondering if anybody can advise. Stick with it? Bail and move on?

Stick with it! Pretty soon it will feel like your eyes are opening for the first time.

Ok so not that dramatic, but it's a great book.
 

Extollere

Sucks at poetry
carpal said:
Continuing my recent sci-fi kick, I've finished Dune and moved on to this guy:

At about 100 pages in, I'm still not hooked. Maybe because I just came off the masterpiece that is Dune? I have a growing stack of other books I want to read so I'm wondering if anybody can advise. Stick with it? Bail and move on?

Try Foundation if you haven't already. I went from Dune to Foundation, and while I loved Dune, I loved Foundation even more. It was an easy jump to make because of the fact that Foundation deals with politics and economy in a similar way (although slightly more complex) than that of Dune. Also, the cause and effect themes in Foundation are astounding. Really great shit right there.
 

carpal

Member
Thanks for the encouragement. I'll stick it out for a bit longer. I'm into the ideas behind the book (even if its version of the Internet was obviously conceived in 1991). It has been Vinge's somewhat uninspired prose that has me feeling a bit antsy at this point.

Just so you know, here's a glimpse of what's on deck (in no particular order):

Foundation
A Song of Ice and Fire
The Book of the New Sun
Hyperion
 

Salazar

Member
Zeitgeister said:
strange question maybe, but how fast would you say that you read (those)?

Mack's biography of Pope I am reading quite slowly, with quite a bit of doubling back. It will be hanging around for the next couple of weeks.
Hill's book is only ninety pages, so rather quickly - taking quite a few notes, though.
Cerebus I read very slowly - in part because Sim's cursive script can be damned hard to make out.
 

tmarques

Member
BobsRevenge said:
Any other Zola fans here? It seems like every other book I read is written by him. Germinal is the best book I've ever read.

Read Nana a month or so ago - amazing, especially the last couple of pages. Germinal is on my backlog.
 

carpal

Member
Extollere said:
Try Foundation if you haven't already. I went from Dune to Foundation, and while I loved Dune, I loved Foundation even more. It was an easy jump to make because of the fact that Foundation deals with politics and economy in a similar way (although slightly more complex) than that of Dune. Also, the cause and effect themes in Foundation are astounding. Really great shit right there.

Ah good to know! I'm big into the long zoom view. I gave First and Last Men a try for this reason but couldn't hang with it since there is no character to get into other than, you know, humanity.
 

X26

Banned
READING:

Foundation and Empire
Only ~40pgs in but sofar it's not living up to foundation

The Blade Itself
~50pgs in and really enjoying it sofar, Glokta especially
 

tmarques

Member
Xater said:
Last Friday I finished A Wild Sheep Chase:

That was my first Murakami novel. I honestly liked it a lot. Then I read Dance Dance Dance and The Wind-up Bird Chronicle, as well as two collections of short stories.

Is it me or does Murakami write the same book over and over again? Man in his 30s quits his crappy job and goes searching for wife/girlfriend/sheep, antagonizes dangerous people, teams up with cynic teenager, travels all over Japan... And he always includes a psychic character so he can move the plot forward when under normal circumstances the protagonist would be stuck without clues.

I enjoyed what I've read, but talk about undeserved hype.
 

Salazar

Member
tmarques said:
I enjoyed what I've read, but talk about undeserved hype.

If it is wearing you down, read Kenzaburo Oe. Starting with 'Rouse Up O Young Men of the New Age'. Eeyore will completely, almost ruthlessly win you over.
 

tmarques

Member
Salazar said:
If it is wearing you down, read Kenzaburo Oe. Starting with 'Rouse Up O Young Men of the New Age'. Eeyore will completely, almost ruthlessly win you over.

Is that the author of No Longer Human? Loved that one.

Thanks for the tip, I'll definitely check it out.
 

Stealth

Member
tmarques said:
Is it me or does Murakami write the same book over and over again?

After reading Wind-Up Bird back in February, I thought I was the only one on GAF that had found Murakami to be not quite deserving of his hype here. It really just fell apart for me in the end, and so much of it was just left up in the air that I found almost nothing to take from the conclusion, if you could even call it one. Not that I like all my stories wrapped up in a bow when they finish -- quite the opposite, usually -- but I just couldn't develop empathy for any of these lifeless people.

Looking him up after I finished, it does in fact turn out that he makes a habit of using almost the same type of narrator, with the same name, in many of his books. Call it his signature?

Anyway, I haven't given up on him, and will be reading Norwegian Wood in a few months after I plow through some of my more deserving backlog.

----

This month, I'm about 150 pages out from finishing The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest. TGWPWF was fun but I've definitely noticed that Larsson's meticulous style of writing has gotten more and more inflated with each book. Still, I'm having a lot of fun with it.

As a fan of the rather wordy thrillers, I'm very much looking forward to Tana French's Faithful Place later this month. After Hornet's Nest, I'll be diving into the BOTM club with The Big Short, but then I'll be returning to Ms. French's wonderful little Irish Murder Squad, which she has established and proven to be incredibly full of enchanting, flawed characters with both In The Woods and The Likeness. After those two, it's on to A Clash of Kings, which I have been postponing for three months, which is how long it has been since I finished up the first book.

Yikes. That's a lot of pages still to read already one week into the month. Better get back to it!
 

Monroeski

Unconfirmed Member
About halfway through -

2hd06tu.jpg


I'll say it's a lot better than Little Brother, IMO, but still not as good as his earlier novels. I think you could definitely see some of Doctorow's principles and political beliefs in the early ones like Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom and Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town, but it was interspersed with some decent enough characterization and story, plus the tech stuff he introduced was pretty cool. Little Brother was pretty bad, I thought, because it felt like just a collection of blog posts from BoingBoing and incredibly stereotypical characters with what I thought was basically nothing whatsoever creative added by the author. It was basically just propoganda through and through, and was the first Doctorow book I got rid of after reading.

Thus far, For The Win has at least added some characterization along with pages long political diatribes. It's still very obvious that everything is headed in a very socialist pro-union direction, as is Doctorow's general slant, but I feel like I'm at least getting something in addition to the propoganda (which I didn't in Little Brother).
 

Extollere

Sucks at poetry
X26 said:
READING:

Foundation and Empire
Only ~40pgs in but sofar it's not living up to foundation

The Blade Itself
~50pgs in and really enjoying it sofar, Glokta especially

40pgs doesn't really sound like sufficient time to judge the standing of any particular book in relation to another :p

The sequels (Foundation and Empire, and Second Foundation) are as highly rated, if not higher, than the first book. I'll admit that I haven't started the 2nd or 3rd one yet, but it's on my shelf, and it's crisp paper back is awaiting destruction and a well crackled spine!
 

coldvein

Banned
although of course you end up becoming yourself (a road trip with david foster wallace) by david lipsky.

veeeeery interesting.
 

Xater

Member
Ok just finished Hyperion and thought it was great, but had I known that there would such a big cliffhanger I would have read it later. I actually wanted to read The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo next but now I ordered The Fall of Hyperion. Please tell me I can take a break after that before reading Endymion. :lol
 

Fritz

Member
this just arived from the UK
glass-book_01.jpg

Thanks for the recommendation Salazar! I'm only a couple of pages in obviously, but it's entertaining, has a good flow and seems to comprise exactly what I was looking for.

Charles Glass is an American journalist who was kidnapped by Hizballah militia in Beirut on a tour that was supposed to encompass the Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Israel in the 1980s. He returned in 2001 to conclude this journey. Literally a day before he sat foot on the Levant shore, 9/11 stroke, rendering this journey a piece of contemporary history once again. Well, that's all I gathered from the first chapter.
 

Kuraudo

Banned
Xater said:
Ok just finished Hyperion and thought it was great, but had I known that there would such a big cliffhanger I would have read it later. I actually wanted to read The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo next but now I ordered The Fall of Hyperion. Please tell me I can take a break after that before reading Endymion. :lol

Fall has a much more satisfying ending. I'd actually recommend not reading Endymion though - it's hugely disappointing after the first two books.
 

djtiesto

is beloved, despite what anyone might say
Just finished this:

19011.jpg


Was awesome... I remember seeing this guy give a speech at my high school back in '99... totally captivated me at the time (getting to hear talk about time travel, galactic civilizations, and alternate dimensions instead of being in class all day??? HELL YEAH!). Saw the book, picked it up and read through it really quickly. Now time to check out his other books.
 
I'm about half way through Let The Right One In (soon to be titled Let Me In I think) and I'm really enjoying it. I did rather enjoy the film alot (and I shall probably enjoy the remake too)
 

Jex

Member
Ray Bradbury Stories Volume 2. I've read some of them before, but it's sure nice having a lot of them in one book.
 

Foob

Member
So I'm just about done with The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet

It is a great, beautiful novel. Anyone who enjoyed Cloud Atlas will have almost certainly enjoy this - and those who thought that Cloud Atlas was a difficult read will find this a more linear, easier to follow book. That's not to say that it isn't complex or thought provoking, because it's by no means a simple novel. Mitchell's prose is SO GOOD, god, there is some heart wrenching stuff in here. I really only have a couple gripes - the main thing being a section of the book that is completely out of character and tone with the rest of the novel, and was actually rather jarring. Regardless, though, it is easily the best thing I've read this year.
 

belvedere

Junior Butler
Foob said:
So I'm just about done with The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet

It is a great, beautiful novel. Anyone who enjoyed Cloud Atlas will have almost certainly enjoy this - and those who thought that Cloud Atlas was a difficult read will find this a more linear, easier to follow book. That's not to say that it isn't complex or thought provoking, because it's by no means a simple novel. Mitchell's prose is SO GOOD, god, there is some heart wrenching stuff in here. I really only have a couple gripes - the main thing being a section of the book that is completely out of character and tone with the rest of the novel, and was actually rather jarring. Regardless, though, it is easily the best thing I've read this year.

I heard the NPR review of Thousand Autumns and will definitely be picking it up. Would you recommend starting with Thousand Autumns or a different book by Mitchell?
 

carpal

Member
belvedere said:
Would you recommend starting with Thousand Autumns or a different book by Mitchell?

Wondering this same thing as well. I tried to get into Mitchell starting with Ghostwritten but that one didn't really do it for me. I think maybe I had the wrong expectations going in. So far, that's the only stuff of his I've tried.
 

Foob

Member
Hmm, I guess that depends on the kind of thing you're looking for..

carpal: What was it that you didn't like about Ghostwritten? The segmented, juxtaposed nature of it? Cause that's really what most of his novels up until The Thousand Autumns... are like.

belvedre: The first novel I read by Mitchell was Cloud Atlas. After I read it I went back and read all of his previous novels, and for me Cloud Atlas takes all of the random, segmented aspects that I was talking about and perfects it. But if you're just looking for a more traditional, linear read then I would just go for this one.
 

Mifune

Mehmber
Nice writeup, Foob.

Anyway, I own both Ghostwritten and Cloud Atlas, and I just can't decide which to read first. On the one hand, I don't want everything to be downhill after reading his "masterpiece." On the other, I'm a little afraid that reading the earlier book first will lessen my enjoyment of Cloud Atlas.
 
I'm about half way through Feed. Not digging it too much so far which is amazing given the story is about a zombie apocalypse. I feel there's too much focus on the webpage and journalism and not enough about zombies. Also, I just don't buy the interactions between the characters (particularly between George, Buffy, and Shaun) or the ludicrous idea that blogs are the most popular form of entertainment and bloggers have replaced actors as A+ celebrities.
 

carpal

Member
Foob said:
carpal: What was it that you didn't like about Ghostwritten? The segmented, juxtaposed nature of it? Cause that's really what most of his novels up until The Thousand Autumns... are like.

I see. From what I remember, no one individual thread of the story really got its hooks into me and whatever piece it was that wove everything together was too slow to develop.

But again, I think it may have been my expectations calibrated wrong. Actually now the more I think back to why I didn't like it that much the more I'm interested in revisiting where I left off.
 

FnordChan

Member
carpal said:
At about 100 pages in, I'm still not hooked. Maybe because I just came off the masterpiece that is Dune? I have a growing stack of other books I want to read so I'm wondering if anybody can advise. Stick with it? Bail and move on?

It's been a while since I read A Fire Upon The Deep, but I seem to recall that it took me a bit of time before I really got into it, but once I did I tore through the rest. So, I'd say stick with it a while longer and hopefully it'll kick in for you. By the way, it's vision of the internet seems like it's conceived in 1991 because it was; the book was first published in 1992.

Late last month I finished reading Greg Rucka's Private Wars, his second Queen & Country novel. It's a solid read, either as a stand-alone contemporary espionage novel if you're not familiar with the comics or as continuation of the character's lives if you are. That said, I didn't exactly tear through it; I liked the book fine, but it didn't really grab hold of me. So, while the third Q&C novel, The Last Run, is coming out this fall, I think I'll be content to wait for the paperback.

515zYbhWczL.jpg


I'm currently reading Fledgling, a recent installment in Sharon Lee and Steve Miller's Liaden series. The Liaden novels are space opera with a strong romantic element included, with our heroes generally being associated with a powerful clan of traders and merchants who have a strong independent streak at odds with the society they live in. Generally "at odds" means "the shit has hit the fan" and things get pretty exciting, so there's plenty of fighting against authority, derring-do, true love in the face of adversity, and so forth. There are also space turtles that are completely awesome. These aren't the deepest books you'll ever read, but they're a lot of fun; I'd readily recommend them to a fan of, say, Bujold's Vorkosigan Saga.

Fledgling is about Theo Waitely, a teenage girl who lives in a highly structured society of academics, where she's bright but doesn't quite fit in. When her mother decides to go back to the extra-regimented depths of the university she teaches at, Theo is dragged along and things get complicated from there. I'm a couple of hundred pages in at this point and it looks like the plot is really about to get rolling. I'm enjoying it, as I apparently have a weakness for coming-of-age-in-space novels, and I'm looking forward to seeing how this ties into the rest of the Liaden universe, which it's fairly removed from so far. I'll report back when I'm finished.

FnordChan
 

S. L.

Member
carpal said:
Continuing my recent sci-fi kick, I've finished Dune and moved on to this guy:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/4a/A_Fire_Upon_the_Deep.bookcover.jpg[IMG]

At about 100 pages in, I'm still not hooked. Maybe because I just came off the masterpiece that is Dune? I have a growing stack of other books I want to read so I'm wondering if anybody can advise. Stick with it? Bail and move on?[/QUOTE]
it's okay. half of the book is an medieval adventure story with kids as main characters, which is not really my cup of tea.
 
Just finished Red Seas Under Red Skies. Fantastic book, and then to find out you have to wait for a year before the sequel comes out :(

Maybe someone can recommend me some fantasy novels that are like it? I don't really like those LOTR type series (dwarfs, elves, etc), but more the medieval kind, or how you would call it.

Already read and looking for something like:

- Lies of Lock Lamora
- Song of Ice and Fire
- First Law
- Temeraire
 

joesmokey

Member
kaskade said:
yNUmL.jpg


I'm not very far but so far it's pretty good.
I just finished this one, great read.

Last week I read The Pelican Brief. My first John Grisham novel and I thought it was pretty good. I'll definitely read a few more of his.

I'm starting The Girl Who Played With Fire soon.
 

Dragon

Banned
joesmokey said:
I just finished this one, great read.

Last week I read The Pelican Brief. My first John Grisham novel and I thought it was pretty good. I'll definitely read a few more of his.

I'm starting The Girl Who Played With Fire soon.

First two books are really good, I just finished the third book and although it was satisfying it wasn't as good as the first two.

Apparently there is a fourth book on a laptop somewhere with a questino about who owns the rights to it? Who knows if that'll ever see the printing press.
 

Mifune

Mehmber
21611.jpg


About halfway through. Coming off Stephen King's The Drawing of the Three, which is written in a chaotic style, it's nice to read crisp, controlled prose like Haldeman's. Things sometimes get a bit dry and technical, but I'm enjoying it so far.
 

kaskade

Member
TheBranca18 said:
First two books are really good, I just finished the third book and although it was satisfying it wasn't as good as the first two.

Apparently there is a fourth book on a laptop somewhere with a questino about who owns the rights to it? Who knows if that'll ever see the printing press.
I'm only about 100 pages in but it really started to pick up. I imagine stuff gets more crazy but I just found out what I guess is the main point of the book
the murder of the guys niece i believe
. I don't read much but I am enjoying it. Netflix has the movie instant streaming so I'm going to watch that when I end up finishing the book.
 

Mr Nash

square pies = communism
afternoon delight said:
I'm reading Carrots Love Tomatoes which is perfect source for gardeners (companion planting is genius to me) and The Crossing, which also happens to be perfect.

Ooo, I'm gonna have to check this out. Been experimenting with this in a raised bed garden, growing carrots and bush beans in alternating rows so the carrots can take advantage of the nitrogen that the beans produce. It's still early, but there is a noticeable difference. The carrots with beans on only one side are a fair bit smaller than the ones that are flanked on both sides by the beans. It's really neat to watch. Go science!
 
Thegirlwiththedragontattoo.jpg


I really enjoyed it. You can definitely tell this man was not a writer, and being a translated book did not help, but he had some nice ideas. It had a lot of elements in it, but none of them seemed thrown in just to have a story that was shocking or varied. Most characters felt very real, the mystery was riveting and I never questioned why someone was doing something - all the motives made sense or were clearly justified when they didn't, which is something that annoys me often in books.

I'm now reading

51yhD8HWlJL.jpg


I need a break before I go on to The Girl Who Played With Fire, and No Mercy has a cool premise. I really enjoy thrillers or mysteries. So far, despite a strong word here and there, the book feels like it's at a second grade reading level, which is a bit disheartening. The writing style...lacks style, but I'm only up to chapter five so hopefully it picks up. I've heard a lot of good about the book from the media and from some forums, so hopefully I agree.
 
TheBranca18 said:
First two books are really good, I just finished the third book and although it was satisfying it wasn't as good as the first two.

Apparently there is a fourth book on a laptop somewhere with a questino about who owns the rights to it? Who knows if that'll ever see the printing press.

Yeah, and it takes place in Cananda which is odd. There's no middle so it would have to be ghost written (or released middle-less) and as long as his wife hates his family hates the publishing company, she's not releasing it.


kaskade said:
I'm only about 100 pages in but it really started to pick up. I imagine stuff gets more crazy but I just found out what I guess is the main point of the book
the murder of the guys niece i believe
. I don't read much but I am enjoying it. Netflix has the movie instant streaming so I'm going to watch that when I end up finishing the book.

It definitely took a little while to pick up. There's a lot of information and a lot of time spent on setting things up, but it's worth it to push on. I actually just watched the Blu Ray yesterday and was disappointed at how shallow and different they made it, so don't be too excited.
 
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