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Alexander
QUOTE(Burnt Sierra @ Mar 11 2009, 08:20 AM) *


Can't remember who recommended Greg Keyes to me, must have been a very wise person indeed tongue.gif


Nah, wise-nose more likely wink.gif
redsrock
I'm currently reading The Dark Tower: The Waste Lands by Stephen King (for fun) and Oedipus (for my Lit class).
Colonel Mustard
I've just finished The Dance of the Voodoo Handbag, an interesting, philosophical and downright hilarious book that explores the meaning of life, the origins of the universe and the mind of God (literally!). While very, very funny, the book has multiple switches between 3rd and 1st person meaning that the plot, already dizzyingly complex, gets even harder to comprehend. However, once you do work out what the hell is going on it is well worth the read, and it's very good nonetheless.
Wolfie
I just finished reading Orson Scott Card's "Ender's Game"..... which I opnly started reading about 3 hours ago XD. The ability to read fast without skimming can be a curse sometimes. But yeah, awesome book... too bad the sequels weren't all that great.
Also, currently reading The Stand by Stephen King... again. Must be the 4th or 5th time by now, at least. Great book though.
redsrock
QUOTE(Wolfie @ Mar 12 2009, 11:20 PM) *
Also, currently reading The Stand by Stephen King... again. Must be the 4th or 5th time by now, at least. Great book though.


I think I already asked you this before, but I'll ask again. So it's a good book?
Wolfie
QUOTE(redsrock @ Mar 13 2009, 02:49 PM) *

QUOTE(Wolfie @ Mar 12 2009, 11:20 PM) *
Also, currently reading The Stand by Stephen King... again. Must be the 4th or 5th time by now, at least. Great book though.


I think I already asked you this before, but I'll ask again. So it's a good book?

Haha, that it is. Takes a bit to really get going, but most novels do. Don't like the ending though, but then again, it's a King book.... the man never learned to write endings. Instead he just stops XD
redsrock
It's still on my list to read after I'm done with The Dark Tower. I think that's what I'll pull from my bookshelf first.
Ramirez
We by Yevgeny Zamyatin.

Like 1984, a great Dystopian themed novel.
Olen
QUOTE(redsrock @ Mar 13 2009, 02:49 PM) *

QUOTE(Wolfie @ Mar 12 2009, 11:20 PM) *
Also, currently reading The Stand by Stephen King... again. Must be the 4th or 5th time by now, at least. Great book though.


I think I already asked you this before, but I'll ask again. So it's a good book?


I'm still reading The Stand, I'm not sure a book's ever taken me this long to read. I got the uncut version though which was a fatal mistake. There was a reason some parts were cut out because King can certainly ramble which at times just dodn't add anything and makes it drag.

Having said that it is a very good book, very good. Just don't get the uncut version unless you're a quick reader and like rambles, or have lots of time.
Alexander
QUOTE(Olen @ Mar 15 2009, 06:25 PM) *

I'm still reading The Stand, I'm not sure a book's ever taken me this long to read. I got the uncut version though which was a fatal mistake. There was a reason some parts were cut out because King can certainly ramble which at times just dodn't add anything and makes it drag.

Having said that it is a very good book, very good. Just don't get the uncut version unless you're a quick reader and like rambles, or have lots of time.


Same as Wolfie, I've too read the uncut unabidged version 4-5 times and loved it every time and every step of the way, all 1000+ pages of it smile.gif


I'm currently reading Rides a Dread Legion, the latest Feist book. I guess I'm nearing halfway and I feel a bit conflicted about it, at one point I guess I'm enjoying it a bit better then the last one which really changed some of the lore from some of the past books, at the same time I can't help but get the feeling that he somehow isn't into the series as much as he once was and is copying things from earlier books simply to get to the end quicker.


The book also really emanates the sense of nearing the end of the line as we get quite a few references to moments and people past.

All in all, I am enjoying it, but I'd rather the series end with another book or two that are really great, then is drawn out in 4 more books as he's planned but all somewhat repetitive of earlier ones.

I'll likely mention more after I finish it. smile.gif
The Metal Mallet
I'm actually on my way to finishing up the Ender series. I agree with Wolfie about "Ender's Game" so far being the best of the series. The other books are much more philosophically based and focused on developing a lot of characters rather than just a few. Still an interesting read, it's just that I think "Ender's Game" panders to a bit of a different audience than the rest of the series.
Lord Revan

I have read Ender's Game but none of the others in the series. In my abscence I've read the entire Twilight series (I'm a guy by the way) and the latest book of the Inheritance (Eragon) series. I probably sound like a fantasy junkie right now.

Presently, my attention is on House to House: A Soldier's Memoir, an account on the war in Iraq by Staff Sergeant Bellavia. The events documented occured in 2004.
The Metal Mallet
Well this is a forum about a fantasy-type game. I wouldn't be surprised if fantasy novels are the preferred genre of fans of this game. For the most part, all I usually read is fantasy though recently I've been checking out popular sci-fi books as well.
seerauna
QUOTE(The Metal Mallet @ Mar 17 2009, 02:40 PM) *

Well this is a forum about a fantasy-type game. I wouldn't be surprised if fantasy novels are the preferred genre of fans of this game. For the most part, all I usually read is fantasy though recently I've been checking out popular sci-fi books as well.

Fantasy is almost all I read too, but I do read some others. I've read Twilight and the Inheritance series. I loved them, especially Twilight biggrin.gif.
jack cloudy
I used to be a fantasy junkie in my early days, though nowadays that has been pretty much fully replaced by sci-fi junkiness.

For example, I've recently come into the situation where I can buy books as I please. With moderation, although I've thrown over a hundred euros at it by now. Err...am I becoming addicted? blink.gif Then again, those hundred euros are spread out over more than thirty books and some of it went into education books.
And I guess my personall motto is also to blame.
"If it's a good book, better buy the whole series in one go before some sneaky honoured user runs off with parts 3 and 5."

I swear though, it's amazing what kind of stuff you can find in the used section. Books from all the great ones and the more obscure ones. Often even in pristine quality! By comparison, the brand-new section is just filled with Star Wars novels based on the last film, the last (and only the last) book in the Wheel of Time series and the latest reprint of Lord of the Rings. All that, fills half a rack. The used section barely makes it to two racks. One of those racks is filled with nothing but the older reprints of Tolkien. The guy even gets his own section. Man, I know that he's been pretty influential but I think that it's now getting a bit too crazy.

Anyway, the closest to fantasy in my personal library would be the John Carter of Mars series. I got the first three books in the series for the price of one. Awesome. I think it's sword and sorcery to be more specific.

Now getting back on topic. I have not yet started reading, but am planning to read: Hyperion, by Dan Simmons. I've read the sequel to it years ago in the library and while confusing as heck, it did have its share of moments that made me go "HOLY CRAP, THAT'S AWESOME!" I've also read Endymion which is supposed to be the sequel to the Hyperion series, but that one only managed to confuse me. Still, it was nice to see the Shrike, aka 'the bad guy' from Hyperion turn into the totally awesome silent saviour and stuff.

Speaking of which, I remember a conversation I had a few years ago with some friends. Basically, we were trying to decide on the greatest badass in sci-fi. For a while, Darth Vader led because of his calm and ruthless behaviour, and his awesome mask. But when we moved onto less well known badasses, we eventually settled on the following. The Shrike is the ultimate badass ever, period.

I mean, we're talking here about a three metres tall...thing made out of nothing but indestructible beyond razorsharp spikes, blades, barbed wire etc. Add in four arms (I think, the covers only ever show two), two creepy red glowing eyes, bullet-time that makes Neo go "That's impossible!" and a habit of standing still just long enough to catch a grenade to the face, just so it can watch people crap their pants when they realize said grenade didn't do a damn thing.

Oh, and then there is the gigantic tree-version of itself which it uses to impale its victims on. The victims never die and are doomed to suffer for eternity. So yeah, he's either badass, or some sort of god of hell. Your choice. It kind of makes me wonder how Simmons ever came up with it.
canis216
Heh, I don't read fantasy at all. A lot of Ed Abbey's awesome anarchistic wilderness-centered non-fiction and novels, a fair brace of "nature writing" non-fiction (Aldo Leopold, Craig Childs, Terry Tempest Williams, etc.), and a passel of Tony Hillerman's southwest-centered mysteries, but no fantasy (or sci-fi, for that matter). I think I'm a bit of an anachronism on TES-related forums.

Currently re-reading Abbey's Black Sun, by the way. As he writes in the Preface:

Black Sun is a novel about love. And about sex, and the forest, and love under the sun in the forest, and about disappearance. The vanishing of a loved one. About mystery, that is, and the bewildering grief of death. Like most honest novels, it is partly autobiographical, mostly invention, and entirely true. I wrote this book in four weeks, hacking away on a borrowed typrewriter, at night, after work, in a strange place in Arizona.

Yes, and I have spent many a summer in what the Forest Service calls a "fire lookout". A tower in the woods. Far away from all that sustains sanity. The voice that speaks in this book is the passionate voice of the forest, that sound the wind makes wailing through the yellow pines. You'll see what I mean. The madness of desire, and the joy of love, and the anguish of final loss--so much, and no more, was my modest ambition in the creation of the book Black Sun.
Wolfie
So, bought and read Feist's "Rides a Dread Legion" the other day, and I gotta agree with Alex... good book, but something seems lacking compared to the earlier ones. One thing I was glad to see is that there wasn't any further retconning of multiple trivial to semi-important events. And I'll definitely say that there was certain events at the end of the book that had me double checking to make sure I hadn't mistaken what I just read.
Olen
Well I finished he Stand which took me longer to read than any other book I think. It was excellent (barring the ending), well realised from its principal and well done. But I think the uncut edition was madness, King simply waffled too much for my tastes and I got bored at points. Still generally very good, especially towards the end once it was done with milling around. The end itself was a bit disappointing I thought, it wasn't that satisfying and then drew out a bit to far after the main conflict was done with.

Now I'm reading Iain M Banks, Consider Phlebas. Banks is my favourite author, at least when writing as Iain M Banks - ie SF, when he writes as Iain Banks I find him a bit too obscure. Its quick moving and, like all his books, is full of really cool ideas. I'm enjoying it so much I think I'll follow it with all the other 'culture' novels.
Kiln
Yeah its odd that I'm reading anything, I usually don't have time to sit and turn a few pages these days but I'm reading a book inspired by Halo...yes the video game. I know I'm a dork but "The Fall of Reach" has really captured my attention.
Channler
Currently I am reading (or have recently finished)...

Fighting Techniques of the Napoleonic Age, 1792 ~ 1815: Equipment, Combat Skills, and Tactics
Lord of the Rings Trilogy (for the 3rd time)
Paradise of the Blind
Gates of Fire
A three part biography on Theodore Roosevelt
A biography on Ronald Reagan
The Prince
The Art of War
and...
Fredrick the Great's Order Letters (or something like that)

Btw thats Clausewitz's Art of War, no Sun Tzu's
Lord Revan

I've recently finished a soldier's memoir of the war in Iraq called House to House. And started reading Band of Brothers.
Colonel Mustard
I'm currently working my way through The Book Thief by Markus Zusak. Officially my favourite book ever.

Even more so than the Mr Men saga.
Olen
Well I finished Consider Phlebas a while ago so its safe for me to say something about it now without raving overly. It's good, a bit dark which isn't everyone's thing but is exactly what I like. Like all his books there's some quite original stuff there. The plot is slightly annoying but it gets away with it, and some of the things are slightly far fetched but are cool enough to make them allowable. Its the first SF book Banks wrote and its a good one, more action filled than other books he's written and less about the past, though I'm not sure if that's good or bad. Overal I'd definatly recommend it, though perhaps not quite so highly as Against a Dark Background which is another by Banks but in a setting he only used for it - Consider Phlebas is the first 'Culture' novel he wrote.

I'n now reading The Player of Games which is the second culture novel and, after a slow start, is shaping up well.
seerauna
Just started Jurassic Park by Michael Crighton. I've seen the movie but will probably get a few surprises along the way, because the movies never stick to the book do they? wink.gif Anyways, I think it will most likely be a good book.
Wolfie
Just bought and read Dan Abnett's Brothers of the Snake recently, a series of interconnected short stories follwing the exploits of a squad of Iron Snakes pace marines, and more specifically the sergeant of the squad, Priad. Great read, if you're into that sort of thing... which I am tongue.gif
Reading Heinlein's Starship Troopers now, but since I've read it so often now, it's more a read a page or two when bored than actively trying to get it finished kinda thing. Fantastic book though
Romanian_Dude2563
Hey this is like my first post here! Time sure has past.

Ok, I've decided to focus my attention for the following year exclusively on urban fantasies or modern fantasies. I'm curently writting three short stories in this theme so I want to get in it as much as I can. One combines Sherlock Holmes with The Master and Margharita and Memento in early 20th century Moscow. One is placed in modern New York, I'm not sure about the theme yet, but I've got most of the main characters shaped up and it has the dark goth feel of World of Darkness. And the last one is in 1921 Bagdad, the theme is the story of Alladin backwards in which a genie (I don't know how to shape him up yet) searches for his master. I might change the location to somewhere in China to stay true to the Arabian Nights, but I want to use ancient arab folklore in the story, so I'm using Bagdad during the british rule.

I'm a big Neil Gaiman fan, so I've read Neverwhere, American Gods and Graveyard book. Then there's The Master and Margharita that did a great job at combining fantasy with 20th century Moscow making it funny without overdoing, but the last 100 or so pages nearly ruined the whole book for me. I guess I could add Good Omes in this lot, but the book doesn't take itself seriously so it doesn't count. I'm going to go through Nine Princes in Ambers soon. And I'm planing on buying a China Mieville soon.

What other books focus on old folklore like American Gods does? And what other urban fantasy books should I read?
Colonel Mustard
Just read a sample of Brian Clevinger and Scott Wegener's comic, Atomic Robo.

It's good to see some good old superhero action after so many years without reading any comics. I feel just like a kid again.
milanius
This
saqin
I have soon finished reading "The wounded land" by Stephen Donaldson, and is thinking of which to read next, as I have got quite a selection of books.
Olen
Almost finished Bram Stoker's Dracula. It's the vampire classic and it is very good. It has an unusal format (written entirely in letters and diary entries of the characters) which works well for it though does cost it some tension and immediacy. It was written a bit over 100 years ago though so is in a style of English which had almost died out and which I greatly like. It also has some inadvertant humour in some of the old ideas it contains (a good example is ).

The spoiler above is only a very mild one but I included the tags just in case.
1234king
Almost finished Faith of The Fallen, the 6th book in Terry Goodkind's Sword of Truth Series
Olen
Can't say I got on with Goodkind's style when I tried it...

Anyway I finished Iain M Banks Inversions. To be honest it's not the best of the culture series, fairly compelling but I'm not sure I really got what it's point was. Banks being as he is that may in fact be the point, or I may have missed something.

I'm now reading Bernard Cornwell's Vagabond which is the second of the 'Grail Series'. It's brilliantly written (as was the first, Harlequin) and has the added bonus of being extremely historically accurite. While the main character himself didn't exist and for one person to be involved in all he is would be far fetched many background characters are historical figures and actual events are described as happened (with a very few execptions which are noted at the end). I like the fact that it describes actual events and everyting in it could have happened (though probably not to one person). Certainly a series I'd recommend, its set in the hundred years war, around the late 1340s.
milanius
Zeit zu leben und Zeit zu sterben (Time to Live and Time to Die), by Erich Maria Remarque.
minque
QUOTE(milanius @ Nov 14 2009, 04:55 PM) *

Zeit zu leben und Zeit zu sterben (Time to Live and Time to Die), by Erich Maria Remarque.

OMG! that book is one of my absolute favourite ! I read it for the first time many many years ago, when I was pretty young. My dad had it and I was too young to be allowed to read such books...But..I read it anyway..when my folks were asleep!

Since then I've read it several times..hmm think I'm gonna go for it soon...
treydog
Jamaica Me Dead- Bob Morris
Darkom
Ah, I always read four or five books at once, usually two or three novels and a few history or philosophy books. Right now I am reading "The Hot Zone" by Richard Preston, "The Count of Monte Cristo" by Alexander Dumas, "The English Philosophers from Bacon to Mill" edited by Edwin A. Burt, "A History of the Ancient World" by Chester G. Starr, and Hannibal (of Carthage) by an author I cannot seem to recall.
Burnt Sierra
Just finished reading "The Paladin" by C.J. Cherryh which had been recommended to me. Not bad, would probably appeal to fans of Feist etc, but I expected a little more from it if I'm honest. From the author who created The Morgaine Saga, The Faded Sun Trilogy, Chanur & Downbelow Station... Good, but not as good as I hoped.

I've got a treat coming now though. Those lovely folks at Amazon have finally delivered me my copies of two brand new hardbacks. "Under Heaven" by Guy Gavriel Kay, and "Kraken" by China Mieville. I've got a good week of quality reading ahead of me biggrin.gif So excited about Under Heaven, been waiting years for his new one.
minque
I'm very fond of the Norwegian author Jo Nesbo, and I've been reading and still read, his wonderful books about the detective Harry Hole....

I guess our norwegian members know this author and his books pretty well! wink.gif
Destri Melarg
I have just finished reading Fenimore Cooper's Literary Offenses which is a scathingly satirical essay written by Mark Twain and first published in 1895. As a work of literary criticism it stands alone. Twain is at his most venomous and irreverent, and by the time you finish reading it you truly do feel sorry for the man who brought us The Pathfinder, The Deerslayer, and Last of the Mohicans.
canis216
Just finished The River Why by David James Duncan. Full of farce, fable, metaphysics, and fishing. An interesting novel.
Zalphon
The Two Swords, by R.A. Salvatore. It's about Drizzt Do'Urden, the Chaotic Good Drow Ranger who was formerly of House Do'Urden and renegade of Menzoberrean.
lovest.harding
I've been reading D. M. Cornish's Monster Blood Tattoo series.
They're alright books. If you're willing to put up with his obsessive need to list every detail that could possibly be listed. >>

It's a shame too. The more tense action is quite good while the ideas are sound and interesting.

I'm only finishing the second because my friend and I decided we'd do a book club thing (as she moved pretty far away with her boyfriend and I never see her). She isn't really enjoying it a lot either.
Very slow read, trying to sit through the place names (especially of places and locations the main character will never ever visit) and the author's need to tell us four different names for one thing when he'll only ever use one name from then on (sometimes he'll bring out one of the other names and just confuse me more too).
DarkZerker
Reading the Odyssey by Homer. It's a really interesting but hard read.
Ornamental Nonsense
For some really informative and excellent reading, I recommend Mary Roach's 'Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers'. I finished that a little bit ago, and it was fantastic.

As of right now though, I'm re-reading Dostoyevsky's 'The Idiot'. Excellent reading. If you haven't given the man's books a try, but you love amazing, psychological portraits of people and dark topics, he's a must-read.
DarkZerker
As of right now...The Art of War.
mALX
QUOTE(DarkZerker @ Jul 12 2010, 03:25 PM) *

Reading the Odyssey by Homer. It's a really interesting but hard read.



I loved it, really interesting.
Olen
I just finished Wizard and Glass by Stephen King and I very much enjoyed it, by far the best of the Dark Tower (so far, each has been an inporvement on its predecessor) and probably the best thing I've read by him. The atmosphere was bang on and the character interactions excellent. I've no idea what genre it is though, somewhere between fantasy, horror and western...

I'm now reading a collection of Lovecraft's stories which are ok, the characters are a little flat and the way he writes has been overused since but they're enjoyable enough. Being written between 80 and 90 years ago the view of the world is entertaining anyway (you'd think there would be a limited number of mad Arab prophets, but it seems not).
Rachel the Breton
I just finished Laurence Rees' "Auschwitz: A New History" (which, btw, was a really stupid choice for reading before bedtime [alas, the only time it seems I have to read tongue.gif ]...but a fascinating read nonetheless) and Brooke Allen's "Moral Minority" (a much better choice, and a fascinating read as well). Now I'm starting Alison Weir's "Mary Queen of Scots and the Murder of Lord Darnley". I've read other books of hers, and they are fantastic, so I'm excited!
treydog
I have been on a Nero Wolfe binge of late- having added a number of the 3-in-1 novellas to my Kindle. And that will almost certainly lead to watching the A&E series with Timothy Hutton and Maury Chaykin again.

Also reading Shoot to Thrill by P.J. Tracy. It is a murder mystery also- but the protagonists are a group of very clever computer programmers. This is the most recent book in the series, which started with Monkeewrench.
hazmick
I just finished reading 'The Dwarves' by Markus Heitz. It's about a Dwarf who has been brought up by humans who is thrust into an epic adventure of fantastical fantasy. Well worth a read for any fans of fantasy books. biggrin.gif
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