• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

What are you reading (June 2012)

bro1

Banned
I love Dune and it's first 2 sequels. Is the rest of the series worth pursuing? I've tried reading book 4 but couldn't complete it. I'm thinking about going back to it. Thoughts?
 

Sleepy

Member
Thanks. You guys are awesome. Really getting back into the "classics/canon." Stuff I have always wanted to read but never did, for some reason or other. I was VERY heavy into postmodern lit in undergrad/grad school. And ignored those books, besides the ones I had to read.


Ashes-- The Metamorphosis is incredible. Did you like it? A colleague of mine just gave me a copy of The Castle. I am looking forward to it. I gave him the new translation of Barthes Mythologies; I feel like I got the better deal. :)

Nerdy-- While I don't believe any of the other Dune books are as good as Dune, if you have put that much time into them, you might as well plow through.
 

Yen

Member
I will start Game of Thrones tomorrow. The football thread bring the series up every other day, may as well try and get caught up!
 
So I started world war z a couple of days ago. I just reread the line, that made me put down the book, and think about stuff for a while.

Note, It's first person narration. We have the privilege of having access to the character's thoughts.

Some award-winning dialogue right there.

I've thought about picking up World War Z on audiobook. That seems like the ideal way to experience it.
 

Ashes

Banned
Thanks. You guys are awesome. Really getting back into the "classics/canon." Stuff I have always wanted to read but never did, for some reason or other. I was VERY heavy into postmodern lit in undergrad/grad school. And ignored those books, besides the ones I had to read.


Ashes-- The Metamorphosis is incredible. Did you like it? A colleague of mine just gave me a copy of The Castle. I am looking forward to it. I gave him the new translation of Barthes Mythologies; I feel like I got the better deal. :)

It is. :)

And short. For those taking part in the 50 books challenge. :p
 

bengraven

Member
Pretty sure dan brown knows what bad writing is. He just ignores it and goes with his gut. Storytelling is king.

/yeah I read that in a magazine a long long time ago.

But I do like a dan brown novel.

Talking about badly written books, last week, I finished the last book in the Hunger Games trilogy. RECOMMENDED. Just go in with your eyes open. Avoid, if you only read great novels, or award winning works, or stuff by good writers; this is a realty show novel.

I read Kafka's book Metamorphosis this week.

What to read next? I doubt anything light can match up to kafka. Pity.

I mean, if you write airport novels you're probably not the kind of person who's trying to make great literature. Dan Brown, John Grisham, Clancy, it's all about the boom boom and less about the "I say...".


So I started world war z a couple of days ago. I just reread the line, that made me put down the book, and think about stuff for a while.

Note, It's first person narration. We have the privilege of having access to the character's thoughts.

In fairness, he was a TV writer before he wrote ZSG and WWZ was his first real novel. He had to change the way he wrote and he makes a few sophomore errors.
 

Ashes

Banned
Some award-winning dialogue right there.

I've thought about picking up World War Z on audiobook. That seems like the ideal way to experience it.

There were seven of them, all on cots, all barely conscious. The villagers had moved them into their new communal meeting hall. The walls and floor were bare cement. The air was cold and damp. Of course they’re sick, I thought. I asked the villagers who had been taking care of these people. They said no one, it wasn’t “safe.” I noticed that the door had been locked from the outside. The villagers were clearly terrified. They cringed and whispered; some kept their distance and prayed. Their behavior made me angry, not at them, you understand, not as individuals, but what they represented about our country. After centuries of foreign oppression, exploitation, and humiliation, we were finally reclaiming our rightful place as humanity’s middle kingdom. We were the world’s richest and most dynamic superpower, masters of everything from outer space to cyber space. It was the dawn of what the world was finally acknowledging as “The Chinese Century” and yet so many of us still lived like these ignorant peasants, as stagnant and superstitious as the earliest Yangshao savages.

;)

Reading a novel, good or bad, I tend to read about it as well. It's an oral history, so the audio book should be cool.
I know I'm criticising it, but it's alright actually. The section following this done in interview form, and the pages just fly by.


@ben above: funnily enough, I didn't know that! :p
 

lightus

Member
I love Dune and it's first 2 sequels. Is the rest of the series worth pursuing? I've tried reading book 4 but couldn't complete it. I'm thinking about going back to it. Thoughts?

I've read four. It seems like Frank Herbert forgot what made the first book good and gets farther and farther away with every sequel.

I didn't care for the first half of God Emperor of Dune but liked the second half. I'm debating carrying on with the series at all at this point though. Some of the plot points were a bit wonky or just down right overdone, making it a bit of a chore to get through certain sections.

I'll read book five at some point I'm sure, I'm just waiting for myself to be in the "mood" to read it because I'm quite certain I wouldn't enjoy reading it in my current state.
 

Cheddahz

Banned
stranger1.jpg
 

bengraven

Member
;)

Reading a novel, good or bad, I tend to read about it as well. It's an oral history, so the audio book should be cool.
I know I'm criticising it, but it's alright actually. The section following this done in interview form, and the pages just fly by.

The audiobook is one of the best ever. Every segment is read by a different celebrity. Henry Rollins plays the American soldier that you follow a few times, I think.

Edit:

Max Brooks as Max Brooks
Alan Alda as Arthur Sinclair
Carl Reiner as Jurgen Warbrunn
Jürgen Prochnow as Philip Adler
Waleed Zuiater as Saladin Kader
Dean Edwards as Joe Muhammad
Michelle Kholos as Jesika Hendricks
Maz Jobrani as Ahmed Farahnakian
Mark Hamill as Todd Wainio
Henry Rollins as T. Sean Collins
Eamonn Walker as David Allen Forbes and Paul Redeker / Xolelwa Azania
Ajay Naidu as Ajay Shah
John Turturro as Seryosha Garcia Alvarez
Rob Reiner as "The Whacko"
Jay O. Sanders as Bob Archer
Dennis Boutsikaris as General Travis D'Ambrosia
Becky Ann Baker as Christina Eliopolis
Steve Park as Kwang Jingshu
Frank Kamai as Nury Televadi and Tomonaga Jiro
John McElroy as Ernesto Olguin
 

Ashes

Banned
The audiobook is one of the best ever. Every segment is read by a different celebrity. Henry Rollins plays the American soldier that you follow a few times, I think.

Edit:

Max Brooks as Max Brooks
Alan Alda as Arthur Sinclair
Carl Reiner as Jurgen Warbrunn
Jürgen Prochnow as Philip Adler
Waleed Zuiater as Saladin Kader
Dean Edwards as Joe Muhammad
Michelle Kholos as Jesika Hendricks
Maz Jobrani as Ahmed Farahnakian
Mark Hamill as Todd Wainio
Henry Rollins as T. Sean Collins
Eamonn Walker as David Allen Forbes and Paul Redeker / Xolelwa Azania
Ajay Naidu as Ajay Shah
John Turturro as Seryosha Garcia Alvarez
Rob Reiner as "The Whacko"
Jay O. Sanders as Bob Archer
Dennis Boutsikaris as General Travis D'Ambrosia
Becky Ann Baker as Christina Eliopolis
Steve Park as Kwang Jingshu
Frank Kamai as Nury Televadi and Tomonaga Jiro
John McElroy as Ernesto Olguin

Groan. Now I want the audiobook. ;(

But I got to read it though. It's part of my 50 books list.
 
I found it to certainly be intriguing and it built tension well, when it wanted to, but the pacing was totally off - also, I'd guess something was lost in translation, as the prose feels very sterile and stilted in places. I like where the sequels take the story, as that was never represented in the sequel movies, but I would be hard pressed to recommend any of the three Ring books, as more often than not I found them a chore to read.

lol damn it. hahah I ended up getting all 3 of them at the same time. I guess its a good thing i didnt order Promenade of the Gods and Birthday.




This was my favorite book in high school. I didnt have much money back in those days so I stole it for the school library. lol

Ended up not reading the Ring or Blair Witch Files but I did finish

th4jA.jpg


Now I just need to knock out Nothing to Envy....hows The Aquariums of Pyongyang?
 

Ermac

Proudly debt free. If you need a couple bucks, just ask.

Meh I don't know about this book. I read it when I was like 13 and hated it, and I just read it again, 10 years later, and still didn't like it. Just all around depressing with no real point to the plot. Yeah I get it's supposed to be all 'existential,' but not really my thing.
 

Mumei

Member
Now Reading -

7805.jpg


Restarted this after attempting to read it one time. Enjoying it a lot this time around though. I actually benefited from reading the poem the whole way through. (which wasn't hard to read). I initially skipped it on my first attempt on reading it.

!

Pale Fire is amazing. It is probably the best book I read last year. You simply must read this at some point after finishing (maybe a few weeks, after you think about it and come to your own conclusions before reading someone else's take).
 

Protome

Member
So in the past month I've read this entire trilogy
3syrN.jpg

ZO7AS.jpg

XLZwI.jpg


They were really enjoyable although pretty light reads. I had a few issues with them, including the author setting up things which are never used
in the final book, Akkarin's death could have been avoided by something the author set up. Namely Dorrien (you know, the highly skilled healer guy) hiding in a bush nearby and doing nothing while Akkarin bleeds out.
and also, why do ALL the characters shrug all the time?! It reminds me of a complaint someone in here had about Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn trilogy (which I personally enjoyed far more, although I DID enjoy these.)

Anyway. The books are interesting and fun with likable characters, although pretty straight-forward without many unexpected twists.
 

Ceebs

Member
So in the past month I've read this entire trilogy

They were really enjoyable although pretty light reads. I had a few issues with them, including the author setting up things which are never used
in the final book, Akkarin's death could have been avoided by something the author set up. Namely Dorrien (you know, the highly skilled healer guy) hiding in a bush nearby and doing nothing while Akkarin bleeds out.
and also, why do ALL the characters shrug all the time?! It reminds me of a complaint someone in here had about Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn trilogy (which I personally enjoyed far more, although I DID enjoy these.)

Anyway. The books are interesting and fun with likable characters, although pretty straight-forward without many unexpected twists.
The bigger complaint of characters doing stupid things was
that they did not go straight for the arena and draw it's power to wipe the floor with the 3 villains. Could have avoided that injury entirely.
 

Dresden

Member
Finished:

524698-L.jpg


Told piecemeal through shifting perspectives, each one connected to the next by circumstance. The picture grows larger with each passing chapter. It was pretty good, like a tessellation of an old-school SF novel.

Since the time of pre-history, carpetmakers tie intricate knots to form carpets for the court of the Emperor. These carpets are made from the hairs of wives and daughters; they are so detailed and fragile that each carpetmaker finishes only one single carpet in his entire lifetime.

This art descends from father to son, since the beginning of time itself.

But one day the empire of the God Emperor vanishes, and strangers begin to arrive from the stars to follow the trace of the hair carpets. What these strangers discover is beyond all belief, more than anything they could have ever imagined...

Started In the Shadow of the Sword by Tom Holland. Enjoyable so far.
 

Protome

Member
The bigger complaint of characters doing stupid things was
that they did not go straight for the arena and draw it's power to wipe the floor with the 3 villains. Could have avoided that injury entirely.

Yes! especially since
It is brought up multiple times in the run-up to the ending and then completely dropped. I can only assume Canavan intended it to be more of a case of "We need to stop them doing this" than "We should do this." But when Sonea brings it up multiple times as a way to stop the Sachakans it makes little sense when they don't.
 
Finished this last night.
kVANU.jpg


It was OK but yeah you could tell who the "witch's daughter" was from the beginning. There's a twist at the end that adds some mystery to the story but it was the worst part of the book.
 

Sotha Sil

Member
N.K. Jemisin's Hundred Thousand Kingdoms was quite good. It often reminded me of Abraham's prose (anthropomorphic, weaponized Gods/Elements; focus on a limited cast of characters and their emotional ties), in a very good way. The first person narrative works really well, apart from little asides where the narrator indulges herself with childish after-the-fact retorts or observations. The obvious villains are, well, a little too obvious. Granted, it's (also) a book about hubris, but cackling sadists get old fast. Thankfully, the antagonist are not what matter here. Kingdoms is (mainly) about love, and love it does well. This is where the book truly shines. A strong, poetic and promising piece of literature.

On to the sequel!
 

finowns

Member
Embarrassingly I have started reading fan fiction after a certain recommendation is there any well known (good) works?
 

Woorloog

Banned
N.K. Jemisin's Hundred Thousand Kingdoms was quite good. It often reminded me of Abraham's prose (anthropomorphic, weaponized Gods/Elements; focus on a limited cast of characters and their emotional ties), in a very good way. The first person narrative works really well, apart from little asides where the narrator indulges herself with childish after-the-fact retorts or observations. The obvious villains are, well, a little too obvious. Granted, it's (also) a book about hubris, but cackling sadists get old fast. Thankfully, the antagonist are not what matter here. Kingdoms is (mainly) about love, and love it does well. This is where the book truly shines. A strong, poetic and promising piece of literature.

On to the sequel!

After you've read the sequel, tell if it is any good. I really didn't like HTK at all. I don't think it was the writing but the worldbuilding and the characters that didn't i couldn't like.

And... it seems i'm desperate for something to read if i contemplate reading a sequel to a book i don't like.
Anyone know where i could get Michael Ely's Alpha Centauri trilogy? Centauri Dawn, Dragon Sun, Twilight of the Mind. The latter two specifically, it seems that the trilogy has had only one or two print runs as the latter two's prices are 30 to 70+ dollars.. for an used book not necessarily in the best condition. I wonder where i could get them with reasonable price.
 
I finished reading 'A song of ice and fire'. Really enjoyed the book overall. Took me about 4 months to finish it.

I am currently reading 'The likeness' by Tana French and it's pretty interesting so far. Hopefully the book stays consistent like the first two chapters.
 

eattomorro

Neo Member
Finally finished this historic war story. A pretty good read till the last 1/3 and then it got really repetitive...

61aKUyj7HyL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA278_PIkin4,BottomRight,-52,22_AA300_SH20_OU01_.jpg


And now reading about future war from a book that I bought way in my past. I feel so old.

518R5gpuhjL._SL500_AA300_.jpg
 

NekoFever

Member
I'm about halfway through my Lovecraft omnibus, my first experience with his work, and I've finished At the Mountains of Madness and The Case of Charles Dexter Ward.

I've enjoyed them both, but I was surprised to find myself liking Ward better, even though it wasn't what I'd been led to expect from Lovecraft. I found parts of ATMOM to be laying it on a bit thick, and a lot of the description of the
Elder Ones' city
being quite repetitive. I'd still love to see Del Toro's screen version if that ever happens, though.

But yeah, I found Ward fascinating. I was totally with it all the way. Great story.

The rest of this volume is short stories. Now I'm deliberating whether to go straight on to the next volume when I've finished or take a break and read a couple of other books first to keep from overdoing it.
 

FnordChan

Member
Embarrassingly I have started reading fan fiction after a certain recommendation is there any well known (good) works?

Well, I'll confess to having read fanfic, though without knowing what fandoms you're into it's hard to just throw out recommendations. I will say that my all-time favorite fanfic novel is Kid Dynamo by Connie Hirsch, which is a story about the New Mutants set roughly around the time of the Fall of the Mutants storyline. If you're a fan of the X-Men comics circa the late 1980s, I can give Kid Dynamo my highest recommendation...but if you're not, well, I dunno how much you'd get out of it.

For something slightly less esoteric, I started reading Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality a while back and thought it was a hoot, though I haven't gotten back to it in a while.

Finally, for something old-school famous that has been the subject of academic discussion, I've read Leslie Fish's Star Trek fanfic novel The Weight, which I don't think I can adequately describe here, except to say that it's incredibly weird and I think it was pretty good (or, at least, strange enough to be compelling), but I don't think it's the sort of thing I'd actually recommend to folks.

That wasn't very helpful at all, was it? If you throw out some fandoms you're interested in, I'll see if there are any stories I'd recommend that wouldn't be incredibly embarrassing to mention publicly.

FnordChan, who is not going to go into Undocumented Features here, no sir, no way
 

Mumei

Member
Let's see:

After I finished Part III of Three Kingdoms, I discovered that someone checked out Part V from the library... for some reason... despite my being the first person to have checked out Part I. So in any case, it has sort of put me off wanting to continue on Part IV for now, so that's on hold for a tick, or at least until I can get Part V, too.

Instead, I read The Gendered Society, which was quite excellent for anyone looking to learn why a sociological perspective is the best perspective for understanding gender difference and how these differences are produced and reproduced by inequality - and are not the cause of inequality. It is a good introduction for a lot of aspects - biological and psychological perspectievs, gendered institutions (family, classroom, workplace), interactions (friendship and love, sexualities, and violence), social construction of gender relations, anthropological evidence from around the world, etc. - though I wouldn't say that it is particularly in-depth for any single one.

And while I was last at the library, I saw a new book that they had gotten prominently displayed called The Japanese House: Architecture and Interiors by Noburo Murata and Alexandra Black that I am reading now. When I saw first saw it, I flipped through it and while I wouldn't normally think of myself as someone into, er, architecture porn, it is gorgeous.

I, of course, am reading it to be informed, however.
 

Yen

Member
I'm about halfway through my Lovecraft omnibus, my first experience with his work, and I've finished At the Mountains of Madness and The Case of Charles Dexter Ward.

I've enjoyed them both, but I was surprised to find myself liking Ward better, even though it wasn't what I'd been led to expect from Lovecraft. I found parts of ATMOM to be laying it on a bit thick, and a lot of the description of the
Elder Ones' city
being quite repetitive. I'd still love to see Del Toro's screen version if that ever happens, though.

But yeah, I found Ward fascinating. I was totally with it all the way. Great story.

The rest of this volume is short stories. Now I'm deliberating whether to go straight on to the next volume when I've finished or take a break and read a couple of other books first to keep from overdoing it.

I read recently that Del Toro will never make ATMOM because it would be too similar to a recently released movie, can't remember which.
 

Emerson

May contain jokes =>
Would you recommend it? I've been thinking about picking it up.

I absolutely would. It covers a lot of areas of science and will give you a lot of insight into them, particularly if you're not much of a science person. My main caveat would be that I like to read one book at a time, or one fiction and one non-fiction at a time. Don't do this book this way. It's long and by the end of it I wasn't enjoying it anymore. It'd be best read occasionally or when taking a dump or whatever.
 

Victarion

Member
Reading

7uXif.jpg


It's the first novel in "The Godless World" series, those who love A Song of Ice and Fire, will find this interesting.
 

John Blade

Member
Just got myself 10 books from Value village for $20 dollars. Start reading this book

tumblr_m33l7gU5sd1qd4q8ao1_1280.jpg


Yes, it isn't the best sci-fi novel but it's a simple pick up and read book for me as of now. Also, I have a soft spot for DOOM.

I was wondering if anyone can give me some ideas of what good sci-fi books that is easy to pick up to read. I am slowly trying to go back reading some sci-fi novels after a long absent of reading any good books.
 
Ok first post, I thought I might as well do it in this thread. Earlier this month I decided to pick up some graphic novels. I started out with Batman Year One, then the Dark Knight Returns and moved on to Batman the Long Halloween. Out of those three I found The Long Halloween the most enjoyable. I'm new to comics and it was fun seeing a lot of Batman's villains all in the same story arc.

HUorB.jpg


Picked up V for Vendetta immediately after and really liked that too, next step for me is to finally watch the movie.

At the same time that I was reading those comics, I was slogging through this:

gC5qA.jpg


I don't think I have anything new to add that countless others have already said, but holy shit this book was boring. I didn't feel like Kvothe accomplished anything of real significance by the end, other than leveling up some of his 'skills' haha. Ah well on to Battle Royale now, hopefully it's a better read.
 

NekoFever

Member
I read recently that Del Toro will never make ATMOM because it would be too similar to a recently released movie, can't remember which.
Yeah, I think it was Prometheus.

I don't expect it ever to happen but I'll hope to be pleasantly surprised.
 
Just got myself 10 books from Value village for $20 dollars. Start reading this book

tumblr_m33l7gU5sd1qd4q8ao1_1280.jpg


Yes, it isn't the best sci-fi novel but it's a simple pick up and read book for me as of now. Also, I have a soft spot for DOOM.

I was wondering if anyone can give me some ideas of what good sci-fi books that is easy to pick up to read. I am slowly trying to go back reading some sci-fi novels after a long absent of reading any good books.

lol this cover is so rad.
 

Ermac

Proudly debt free. If you need a couple bucks, just ask.
Just got myself 10 books from Value village for $20 dollars. Start reading this book

tumblr_m33l7gU5sd1qd4q8ao1_1280.jpg


Yes, it isn't the best sci-fi novel but it's a simple pick up and read book for me as of now. Also, I have a soft spot for DOOM.

I was wondering if anyone can give me some ideas of what good sci-fi books that is easy to pick up to read. I am slowly trying to go back reading some sci-fi novels after a long absent of reading any good books.

Icarus_Effect.jpg


easy read, goes by quick. Readin it not and lovin it.
 
Top Bottom