Author Topic: What are you reading?  (Read 1059422 times)

stePH

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Reply #1800 on: May 20, 2011, 11:03:29 PM
Richard Stark's The Sour Lemon Score, between volumes 12 and 13 of Hikaru no Go (I pick up volumes 13-21 at the library later tonight or sometime tomorrow).

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Sandikal

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Reply #1801 on: May 20, 2011, 11:27:18 PM
Currently reading that Stephen King book where he ripped off the Simpson's Movie.  :P

I think the Simpson's movie was better.   ;D




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Reply #1802 on: May 20, 2011, 11:56:46 PM
Whew. Finished reading A Game of Thrones about two weeks ago. Loved it. The way Martin pulled things off, like (*NON-SPECIFIC SPOILERS*) during the big battles, he has us rooting for a character on the wrong side - so we want said character to survive, but we want his army to get his ass-kicked; also - showing the other major battle through the eyes of someone who didn't actually participate in it, a woman who is terrified of losing her son in battle? - total genius.

So, yeah. Looking forward to reading the next one. When I have free time (maybe sometime in in 2015? :P)

Read Daniel Abraham's The Dragon's Path - will talk more about that...soon, but thoroughly enjoyed it.

Just finished listening to Mary Roach's Packing For Mars. Completely amusing book about the trials and tribulations and crazy-ass science experiements astronauts go through. Unfortunately, the narration didn't do it for me - I'd recommend reading it, instead of listening. But like I said - very, very amusing.

I'm going to catch up on some podcasts now  :)


Listener

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Reply #1803 on: May 23, 2011, 05:38:39 PM
Finished: "The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms" by NK Jemisin, "Scouts" by Nobilis Reed
Reading: "Embassytown" by China Mieville (it's exactly what you'd expect from the author of the New Crobuzon books if he set something in the far future, with space travel)
Next: "Geist" by Philippa Ballantine, "Pirates" by Nobilis Reed

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Scattercat

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Reply #1804 on: May 24, 2011, 07:44:21 AM
Read "The Last Colony," the third book in John Scalzi's "Old Man's War" series.  Like the other two, it's a fluffy bit of space opera fun in the vein of grand, traditional science fiction.  Good times were had by all, but it's got about the impact of a Nerf dart in the end.  Recommended for times when you just want a fun story with super-tech and space fights.

Also read "The Disappearing Spoon," a sort of helter-skelter history of the periodic table.  Very interesting in a sort of ADHD "Science!" kind of mode.  It might help if you have some familiarity with the big names in science history, because he throws them at you hard and fast at times.  Other than a few awkward prose moments, I found it worthwhile. 

Finished "Zoo City."  The last few chapters felt like a short story, in that the plot basically resolves itself super-duper fast.  I really feel like most of the novel was padding, just stuff happening to fill space and meet the correct wordcount.  The setting was intriguing, and the characters' personal dramas were well-drawn, but the protagonist has zero impact on the overall murder-mystery plot.  Like, nothing would have been different about that plot if she hadn't been involved at all, and the only thing that changed in HER life because of it was her boyfriend got [redacted], which didn't affect their relationship drama in the slightest.  I find it weird to read a whole book with a first-person protagonist and at the end go, "But why was she even THERE?"  Definitely well-written, just... I dunno.  It bothered me, the way nothing really drew together at the end.

Reread the Darwath trilogy by Barbara Hambly.  <3 those books so much.  Going to have to continue on with "Mother of Winter" and "Icefalcon's Quest" for the umpteenth time, I'm afraid, just because I love love love the whole flavor of the world and the Keeps and all that.



kibitzer

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Reply #1805 on: May 24, 2011, 07:56:42 AM
Must... restrain... apostrophe... impulse...


Scattercat

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Reply #1806 on: May 24, 2011, 08:00:06 AM
Must... restrain... apostrophe... impulse...

???



iamafish

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Reply #1807 on: May 24, 2011, 08:22:26 AM
currently reading Empire by Niall Ferguson. Not actually fiction, bit there we go.

as for fiction I've read recently, I've mentioned in the last few pages that I was reading the Troy Series by David Gemmell, which I LOVED. I'm a sucker for heroic fantasy and the Troy myth, so I was almost bound to enjoy it. I found the fact that Gemmell historicised (is that a word?) it, rather than sticking true to the Myth a little jarring, but I soon got used to it. I found the writing fell off all little in the final book, but it's hard to maintain standard when you're dead. Sorry Stella.

As for Shadow of a Dark Queen by Raymond E. Feist. I enjoyed it, but I'm not rushing to read other books in their sage, or by him. The world Feist created was fascinating and the way it was revealed was great, I just found that the actual plot and characters failed to really draw me in. The plot wasn't too well paced and the characters weren't interesting enough to make me care. I like a book to hurry me towards the ending and make me really care about the characters, but if SoaDQ had ended with everyone dieing, I wouldn't have been too upset.


stePH

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Reply #1808 on: May 24, 2011, 02:46:14 PM
Must... restrain... apostrophe... impulse...

???

I think he's referring to:

Currently reading that Stephen King book where he ripped off the Simpson's Movie.  :P

I think the Simpson's movie was better.   ;D

Here, kibitzer, I'll take care of it for you:


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Scattercat

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Reply #1809 on: May 24, 2011, 03:10:09 PM
Must... restrain... apostrophe... impulse...

???

I think he's referring to:

Currently reading that Stephen King book where he ripped off the Simpson's Movie.  :P

I think the Simpson's movie was better.   ;D

Well, that would explain my confusion; that post was four days ago and on the previous page.  I thought he meant I'd messed something up in my post, and I reread it like five times looking for a misplaced apostrophe.



stePH

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Reply #1810 on: May 24, 2011, 04:57:22 PM
Read Hikaru no Go vol. 13 a couple of days ago, and reading Stark's (Westlake's) second Grofield spin-off, The Dame now, as I'm still waiting for vol. 14 to come in.

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Sandikal

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Reply #1811 on: May 25, 2011, 12:01:45 AM
I can't believe I repeated the apostrophe mistake in my reply.  I'm usually anal about apostrophes, especially since my last name ends in "s".  DOH!



Faraway Ray

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Reply #1812 on: May 25, 2011, 12:57:21 AM
Funny. I'm usually good about that kind of thing. Well, I'm sure its nothing to worry about.


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kibitzer

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Reply #1813 on: May 27, 2011, 04:44:23 AM
Hmm? What? I have to post sequential replies now or at least quote the source?? What's that about?

(btw, thx stePH :-)


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Reply #1814 on: May 27, 2011, 04:44:18 PM
Started listening to Bradbury's The Illustrated Man. Haven't read the thing in it's entirety since I was a teenager, I think.

I didn't remember that Bradbury wrote the line "She went back to the future" decades before Back to the Future came out. Did he coin that line, or did somebody else?


Sgarre1

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Reply #1815 on: May 27, 2011, 11:00:59 PM
The ending of the "The Illustrated Man", the short story, may be one of my all-time favorite endings...



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Reply #1816 on: May 28, 2011, 04:51:33 PM
Did he coin that line, or did somebody else?

somebody else



stePH

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Reply #1817 on: May 28, 2011, 06:13:47 PM
Richard Stark's Slayground, waiting for volume 16 of Hikaru no Go.

This actually violates my "no re-reads for 2011" resolution, but I'm making an exception because I'm reading all of Westlake's "Parker" novels in sequence. I've only read Slayground before, over fifteen years ago when it was the only Stark I could find at my local library.

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Reply #1818 on: May 29, 2011, 11:14:06 AM
I wrapped up "The Historian," which is a layered mostly-epistolary novel in the old tradition of Victorian vampire schtuff, which is both fun (I, personally, enjoyed the meandering, why-the-hell-are-you-writing-about-this, look-at-my-research-everyone tone) and kind of not at all good.  As in, the plot progresses and resolves with a series of almost ludicrous coincidences (including the saddest excuse for a deus ex machina I've seen in a long time) and features an evil mastermind who for some reason keeps leaving deliberate clues in his pursuers' hotel rooms instead of, y'know, just waiting there and breaking their necks with his undead strength when they come in unsuspecting.  Basically, the only way for it to make sense in the end is if Dracula is pulling off the Ultimate Troll.

Aaaanyway.  Fun if you like that sort of thing and aces if you really dig historical research, but kind of lackluster if you want, y'know, a plot.  Or sensible characters.



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Reply #1819 on: May 30, 2011, 01:25:14 AM
Aaaanyway.  Fun if you like that sort of thing and aces if you really dig historical research, but kind of lackluster if you want, y'know, a plot.  Or sensible characters.

I felt really cheated by that book. It didn't make sense to me -- and it takes a LOT for a book to get to that point -- and while the concept of SPOILER as a historian is a good one, didn't we see him for all of two pages and then he was gone? I had to go back and reread twice just to make sure I didn't miss it.

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Sandikal

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Reply #1820 on: May 30, 2011, 01:27:13 AM
I wrapped up "The Historian," which is a layered mostly-epistolary novel in the old tradition of Victorian vampire schtuff, which is both fun (I, personally, enjoyed the meandering, why-the-hell-are-you-writing-about-this, look-at-my-research-everyone tone) and kind of not at all good.  As in, the plot progresses and resolves with a series of almost ludicrous coincidences (including the saddest excuse for a deus ex machina I've seen in a long time) and features an evil mastermind who for some reason keeps leaving deliberate clues in his pursuers' hotel rooms instead of, y'know, just waiting there and breaking their necks with his undead strength when they come in unsuspecting.  Basically, the only way for it to make sense in the end is if Dracula is pulling off the Ultimate Troll.

Aaaanyway.  Fun if you like that sort of thing and aces if you really dig historical research, but kind of lackluster if you want, y'know, a plot.  Or sensible characters.

I think that sums up the book very well.

I'm about 400 pages into "Judas Unchained".  I hated the narration of the audiobook of "Pandora's Star" and it took me forever to get through it.  Reading the sequel in print is a much better experience.  

I just finished listening to the audiobook of "Doomsday Book" by Connie Willis.  I read it when it first came out but apparently forgot everything except Kivrin's desperation at the end.



stePH

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Reply #1821 on: May 30, 2011, 05:09:44 PM
Finished Slayground Saturday night, didn't get around to the library for volume 16 of Hikaru no Go so that'll have to wait for tomorrow.
In the meantime, back to the New Oxford Annotated Bible, and the Gospel of John. Only started the first chapter last night, and like kibitzer said... weird. This is apparently the one that pumps the "Jesus = God" aspect the most.

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Reply #1822 on: June 01, 2011, 01:28:12 AM
I'm starting Eight Skilled Gentlemen by Barry Hughart.  It's the third book in his Chronicles of Master Li and Number Ten Ox series that started with the fantastic Bridge of Birds. 

They're fantasy / mystery novels set in ancient China.  They are well researched and move along really fast, and the first book is also the funniest thing I've read since Hitchhiker's Guide.  The second book (which is really really hard to find) isn't quite as good, but Gentlemen seems to really bring the spark back.  And you don't need to read the second book to enjoy the third - they're unrelated cases - by this point the characters have had many fantastic adventures that are only mentioned in passing and were never shown in the books.



kibitzer

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Reply #1823 on: June 01, 2011, 04:05:20 PM
I'm starting Eight Skilled Gentlemen by Barry Hughart.  It's the third book in his Chronicles of Master Li and Number Ten Ox series that started with the fantastic Bridge of Birds. 

They're fantasy / mystery novels set in ancient China.  They are well researched and move along really fast, and the first book is also the funniest thing I've read since Hitchhiker's Guide.  The second book (which is really really hard to find) isn't quite as good, but Gentlemen seems to really bring the spark back.  And you don't need to read the second book to enjoy the third - they're unrelated cases - by this point the characters have had many fantastic adventures that are only mentioned in passing and were never shown in the books.

I read those last year. Loved 'em -- wonderful fun.


iamafish

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Reply #1824 on: June 02, 2011, 10:03:29 AM
I just finished Witches Abroad by Terry Pratchett. It took longer to get into than the only other TP book I've read; The Wee Free Men, but once i got into the swing of things i found it pretty enjoyable.