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What are you reading? (July 2012)

Uncle

Member
1opPk.jpg


Found this by accident and bought it out of curiosity. Just started, so can't really comment on the quality yet.
 

thomaser

Member
Finally started reading Endymion:

0553572946.01.LZZZZZZZ.JPG


I hope it is as good as the previous books.

It's good! Perhaps not as impressive as the preceding books, but still a fun read.

Drinking game: take a shot every time you see the word "gossamer" in this book.
 

Error

Jealous of the Glory that is Johnny Depp
I'm midway through the first Wool book and I'm loving it, do the rest maintain this level of writing?

So good, omg!

A scene as mundane as putting a suit on is awesome because of the writing.
 

Mudita

Neo Member
A number of people seemed disappointed with Speaker of the Dead in the thread I had made but for the most part, barring the Portuguese I'm enjoying the direction it has taken.

I LOVE Speaker for the Dead and Children of the Mind as well. Don't expect them to be like Ender's Game and you will probably enjoy them.

edit: Xenocide too, almost forgot. I did really love the whole series but can understand why others don't. It gets very philosophical and becomes a moral thinker with less and less action and sci fi as it goes.
 
I LOVE Speaker for the Dead and Children of the Mind as well. Don't expect them to be like Ender's Game and you will probably enjoy them.

edit: Xenocide too, almost forgot. I did really love the whole series but can understand why others don't. It gets very philosophical and becomes a moral thinker with less and less action and sci fi as it goes.



Speaker was great, but after that the books get worse and worse. Children of the mind jumps ship completely and comes off like bad fan fiction.

Bean's Saga isn't too bad.
 
I am about 2/3 of the way through Pandora's Star by Peter Hamilton. I started it in January.

I hope to have it done before Joe Abercrombie's new book comes out in November.

I used to read 20+ books per year and this year I might only finish one.

Spending too much time on GAF, I guess.
 

Dresden

Member
Finished The Ten Thousand by Paul kearney tonight, on the heels of going through Corvus. Both were wonderfully violent military fantasy novels. Thinking about starting his Monarchies of God series instead of moving onto I HOTEL by karen yamashita like i planned to.
 
I am about 2/3 of the way through Pandora's Star by Peter Hamilton. I started it in January.

I hope to have it done before Joe Abercrombie's new book comes out in November.

I used to read 20+ books per year and this year I might only finish one.

Spending too much time on GAF, I guess.




Great book. Judas Unchained is awesome too.

Also didn't know Abercrombie's next book was that soon.

61Gzq4y0s9L._SS500_.jpg


Damn, that looks and sounds awesome. Also has a pub date of OCT 23 so maybe it got bumped up.
 

endre

Member
It's good! Perhaps not as impressive as the preceding books, but still a fun read.

Drinking game: take a shot every time you see the word "gossamer" in this book.

What does gossamer mean in the context of this novel?

I am not reading Endymion in English. I went to the library to start reading the Malazan series, but since they only have the first two books I have decided to finish the Hyperion Cantos.

The library only has a handful of English books, mostly not interesting to me.

Does anyone know if there is a Malazan complete series on bookdepisotory.com?

Or maybe I should acquire Revelation Space after this?

The library has the complete Mars trilogy, any thoughts on that? Is it good?

p.s.: Is it worth reading Fire Upon Deep? I have started it a few months ago, but I cannot get over the dog like aliens. Or maybe it is the translation...
 

thomaser

Member
What does gossamer mean in the context of this novel?

It's nothing important, just an adjective Simmons must have been hung up on at the time. That word is the main thing I remember from that book, so I have a (probably wrong) impression in my mind that it was used all the time.
 

CleverGirl

Neo Member
It (American Gods) gets hate? I was always under the impression that it was a well recieved novel by readers and critics alike. Anyways I finished last week and I loved it through and through. The beginning was a bit slow but it really picked up halfway through and it was just nonstop fun from there imo. I had to stop and look up some of the mythological names on wikipedia along the way but I enjoyed that :p
Is Anansi Boys worth checking out?

I loved American Gods. But then I'm a big mythology buff. Also I am in the middle of Anansi Boys, and am liking it too. Although it is a little more...frustrating to me than Gods was.
Anansi+Boys.jpg


Also just finished this and thought it was great! Apparently we do come with instruction manuals!

how-to-be-a-woman.jpg
 
What does gossamer mean in the context of this novel?

I am not reading Endymion in English. I went to the library to start reading the Malazan series, but since they only have the first two books I have decided to finish the Hyperion Cantos.

The library only has a handful of English books, mostly not interesting to me.

Does anyone know if there is a Malazan complete series on bookdepisotory.com?

Or maybe I should acquire Revelation Space after this?

The library has the complete Mars trilogy, any thoughts on that? Is it good?

p.s.: Is it worth reading Fire Upon Deep? I have started it a few months ago, but I cannot get over the dog like aliens. Or maybe it is the translation...


I had the same problem with Fire Upon the Deep, but a lot of people rave about it here, so I may try it again at some point.

Mars Trilogy bored me to tears, but I didn't even make it past the first installment, so no idea if it gets better. But it's very technical, and wordy and a little dated, imo.
 

endre

Member
I had the same problem with Fire Upon the Deep, but a lot of people rave about it here, so I may try it again at some point.

LoL, my thoughts exactly.

Mars Trilogy bored me to tears, but I didn't even make it past the first installment, so no idea if it gets better. But it's very technical, and wordy and a little dated, imo.

It is hard SF, that is why I am asking. I suppose hard sf is either very good or incredibly boring. Thanks for the input.

It's nothing important, just an adjective Simmons must have been hung up on at the time. That word is the main thing I remember from that book, so I have a (probably wrong) impression in my mind that it was used all the time.

TY.


EDIT: I like this video of D. Simmons talking about Sci-Fi movies and the adaptation of books into movies (Hyperion in this case):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YpQXu1sX6IA&feature=relmfu

Skip to 5:00
 

CleverGirl

Neo Member
She is called 'Moran' and nobody at the publisher saw any problem with that name?

wow (I have no idea who she is btw)

Are you suggesting that an author's name should be changed because some people might make fun of them for it? Wow indeed.

Also she's apparently a very well known columnist in England.
 

Ashes

Banned
Are you suggesting that an author's name should be changed because some people might make fun of them for it? Wow indeed.

Also she's apparently a very well known columnist in England.

Fairly well known yes. ;)


Can someone recommend me the most readable book ever? The shorter the better. The better written, the er better.

edit: I just noticed the two people being quoted on the book: claudia Winkleman and Jonathan Ross. They being TV personalities are probably a lot more well know than Moran. << sounds wrong to call her anything but Caitlin Moran. o.0 And I had to google to see if she was ever on tv, and it seems my memory isn't as rubbish this week as it normally is. woot¬!
 

Masoria

Neo Member
I've been reading the Alex Delaware series by Jonathan Kellerman. I've already read pretty much every book his wife has written.
 

Lamel

Banned
finished Huckleberry Finn; it was a really fun novel, and I liked the characters of Huck and Jim. Tom Sawyer was started pissing me off in the end, he is just too extravagant, but it made for a great story.

Also, I hate how people say this book is racist. That's the point, it is showing life in those times.

One thing I didn't understand though, so maybe one of you can help me.
When Huck and Jim started sailing on the raft, they started going north right? Then they thought they missed Cairo and decided to go back south until they ran into the King and the Duke. How far south did they exactly go, and why? Did they pass St. Petersburg again on the way down south? The navigation in the story kind of irks me.

republic.jpg


Just started The Republic by Plato. Don't really know what to expect from this, but it seems good so far.
 

Jintor

Member
homicidebook.jpg


Amazing book. Looking for more in its vein. IRL Police Procedurals, anybody got recommendations?

Debating whether to start watching Homicide or start watching The Wire...
 

Mumei

Member
I finished reading Changeless (pretty fun, in need of editing) and have also read William Blake's Songs of Innocence and of Experience, though I still have all of the commentary to read.

I love William Blake's poetry. There's something about a lot of them that speaks to me. I had forgotten that The Tyger is one of the poems. It was the poem I memorized for my eighth grade English class, and I still remembered most of it. I was actually introduced to a lot of these from Oe Kenzaburo's Rouse Up O Young Men Of the New Age, which used stanzas from the Songs as (I guess one way to put it) a way of understanding events in his life and framing them.

Amazing book. Looking for more in its vein. IRL Police Procedurals, anybody got recommendations?

Debating whether to start watching Homicide or start watching The Wire...

While The Wire is my favorite television show and I haven't even seen Homicide, I would suggest starting with Homicide because it probably isn't as good (and so going from it to The Wire will be an improvement, rather than a downgrade), Homicide came first anyway, and Homicide seems like the thing to watch if you liked the book.
 

Dresden

Member
Got a bit into I HOTEL by Karen Tei Yamashita.
It's been very enjoyable so far. The first chapter was a whirlwind juxtaposition of a young Chinese man dealing with the death of his father/legacy, the chaos surrounding the civil rights movement after MLK's assassination, and the conflict in Vietnam--and it all worked well. Gotta keep reading.

Amazing book. Looking for more in its vein. IRL Police Procedurals, anybody got recommendations?
Blue Blood by Edward Conlon.
 

Fjordson

Member
That Homicide book sounds so amazing. As a total Wire junkie I need to get to it eventually. Maybe after Tigana, which I'm actually making progress in and am enjoying a lot. The influence of renaissance Italy on the setting is really cool.
 

Mgoblue201

Won't stop picking the right nation
finished Huckleberry Finn; it was a really fun novel, and I liked the characters of Huck and Jim. Tom Sawyer was started pissing me off in the end, he is just too extravagant, but it made for a great story.

Also, I hate how people say this book is racist. That's the point, it is showing life in those times.

One thing I didn't understand though, so maybe one of you can help me.
When Huck and Jim started sailing on the raft, they started going north right? Then they thought they missed Cairo and decided to go back south until they ran into the King and the Duke. How far south did they exactly go, and why? Did they pass St. Petersburg again on the way down south? The navigation in the story kind of irks me.
The introduction to my own copy of Huck Finn indicates that this point in the story represents a literary turn in the narrative, when Twain set aside the novel for two years and, upon returning, decided to abandon the previous structure he had established. The sudden and unannounced change in the story reflects this trend. However, I don't quite remember the precise sequences of events that preceded the meeting with the King and the Duke, so I can't help you there, but it probably doesn't matter too much either.
 
homicidebook.jpg


Amazing book. Looking for more in its vein. IRL Police Procedurals, anybody got recommendations?

Debating whether to start watching Homicide or start watching The Wire...

I think you would want to pick up a copy of tokyo vice its about an american who move japan and becomes a reporter, and works with all of the criminal on goings in Tokyo and the surrounding area. Its a true story and there is a kindle version. Oh and its written by Jake Adelstein
 

Protome

Member
Just picked up this on my Kindle.
51BK6ycdBBL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA278_PIkin4,BottomRight,-64,22_AA300_SH20_OU02_.jpg


£0.77 for All the novels and the short stories (Which are free on kindle anyway), a bargain.
There were a couple of different compilations, not sure if there's any difference...
 
I finished Jasper Ffordes "well of lost plots". I really liked the first and second book of his Thursday Next series. They were funny, interesting and had a lot of good ideas. Unfortunatelly I missed all of those things in his third book. Despite the fact that I had problems finishing "well of lost plots" I'm really looking forward to the next one.

Currently I'm reading a german book: "Hiobs Brüder" from Rebecca Gablé:
B004ROTJWU.03._THUMBZZZ_.jpg
 

thomaser

Member
finished Huckleberry Finn; it was a really fun novel, and I liked the characters of Huck and Jim. Tom Sawyer was started pissing me off in the end, he is just too extravagant, but it made for a great story.

Also, I hate how people say this book is racist. That's the point, it is showing life in those times.

One thing I didn't understand though, so maybe one of you can help me.
When Huck and Jim started sailing on the raft, they started going north right? Then they thought they missed Cairo and decided to go back south until they ran into the King and the Duke. How far south did they exactly go, and why? Did they pass St. Petersburg again on the way down south? The navigation in the story kind of irks me.

Here's a crude map that might be of use.
 

Goody

Member
I sat down and read The Ballad of the Sad Cafe, by Carson McCullers, last night. Read the whole thing in a sitting. Didn't plan to, even though it's a pretty light novella. Really good. Really ripped my heart out.
 
D

Deleted member 1235

Unconfirmed Member
Was bored and decided to try out the sample for this:

http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1276131208l/8428985.jpg[/IMG

Finished the sample, and then finished the book a few hours later. [B]Just as good as Wool, if not better.[/B] Loved it.

It's only about 200 pages, but for $2.99 it's well worth it.[/QUOTE]

high praise indeed! will check it out.

Currently reading 'bitter seeds'

[URL]http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0765321505/[/URL]

quite interesting, german supermen vs english warlocks during WW2. Suffers a little from the main English character not being particularly likeable and pretty much the german supermen are cooler.
 
My Summer reading list always ends up with me reading too many at once:
On the Road by Jack Kerouac
The Ripening Seed by Colette
various Shakespeare plays (for uni)
just finished American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis
Scott Fitzgerald's short stories
 

TinMachine

Neo Member
Just finished Dan Simmons «The Rise of Enymion», starting on «Summer of Night» this evening. The Hyperion Cantos was such an entertaining read from start to finish.
 
D

Deleted member 1235

Unconfirmed Member
Found this book on a blog and immediately put it on my reading list. I'm really interested in your opinion when you've finished reading it.

i'm almost done with the first book and will pick up the sequel. it's very interesting in that the english warlocks are completely unlikeable and pretty much about as rotten as the german characters in the sense that (will put it in spoilers, but I think what I'm spoilering is written in the book description/back cover)

there is a very high price for their magic, arguably worse than what the germans are up to

I'd say give it a go, i'm quite interested to see how it finishes up, should get it done tonight I think.
 
Finished reading Grass by Sheri Tepper;

ibjXngtitRJBFJ.jpg


Thoroughly enjoyed this one, just a very inventive and unique science-fiction fantasy setting, an intriguing story and some excellent characters. It drags somewhat in the later third, but never outstayed its welcome.

And now I'm reading Prince of Thorns;

iOHJxCE3HXGJ.jpg
 
Finished Earth Abides. Very good book, the ending was a little weak, but overall a good read.

Now onto The City & The City.

Mieville_City_2009_UK.jpg


Has an interesting setting. There are two cities that share the same geographical location, but they live totally seperate. So if you live in one, you have no contact with people from the other, even when some of them might be living in the house next to you. You have to 'unsee' them. If you don't, you are in Breach and that's a major crime. Very fun, 100 pages in now.
 
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