i cannot disagree w JPK re this, that moment is staggering. I'd argue against it being just for shock's sake, it fits the story, but it hits hard then and in the repercussions. Dark Age in general hits the reader like a slap more than once. I loved the book, but i won't ever say it's light reading. It's an MoI/Empire Strikes Back kind of work.
The fridging early in bk 1 is as blunt as it seems. It isn't pointless but it is simplistic and per upthread that was just the first time i almost dropped the book. Still glad i didn't.
QT you could read the first trilo and stop. I suspect you may not want to stop there because honestly the series just gets wilder. I suppose the question is whether to go ahead knowing that one scene is out there - and to be clear it is one scene, in the series to date nothing else like that happens or compares to it, but it is brutal.
I remember the start of NK Jemisin's BROKEN EARTH that threw you (and many many other people i know of) right out of the book, did you ever go back and read those?
Reading at t'moment?
#30341
Posted Today, 03:15 PM
THIS IS YOUR REMINDER THAT THERE IS A
'VIEW NEW CONTENT' BUTTON THAT
ALLOWS YOU TO VIEW NEW CONTENT
'VIEW NEW CONTENT' BUTTON THAT
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#30342
Posted Today, 03:19 PM
I honestly wish I'd stopped after book 3 because it ends well, and now my view of the series as a whole is tainted a little bit. But I acknowledge I'm in the minority here!
A Haunting Poem
I Scream
You Scream
We all Scream
For I Scream.
I Scream
You Scream
We all Scream
For I Scream.
#30343
Posted Today, 03:34 PM
After the glorious journey that was NLF, i needed something a little less deep. The very satisfying SUPERMAN movie and a drift through Spotify's freebies gave me SUPERMAN: THE UNAUTHORIZED BIOGRAPHY, by Glen Weldon. I know my comics history, but the author does a very nice job of folding the character's origins into the wider events in the US and world at the time. He did the research an isn't afraid to through around theories, including his own, where the story is less clear. He goes well beyond the comics into the radio shows, tv, movies, all the way up to the announcement of the recent movie. The delivery is entertainingly informative, I picked up a lot i didn't know, and the occassional joke or sarcasm are well placed. Fun read, worth a try.
Next was this....
...you know me, my feelings about anthologies slant negative. This was... better than most, in the sense that i enjoyed most of the stories and only DNF'd three. There are some very clever ideas... a New Zealand Maori squad dodging tanks and monsters during the desert campaign, an immortal British assassin teaming up with werewolves in occupied France to prevent Nazi necromancers leaning the secrets of lycanthropy, a really fun take on the Russian all-women pilots squadron. Cline's entry was satisfying, too brief vs his novels but fun in a zombies vs nazis at sea kind of way.
And then back to the world of Jorath for The 13th Paladin bk 10, THE GREEN SEA, which was fun despite the painfully blunt thinly veiled American Indigenous people analogy prairie culture. The action is especially well written in this one and the end is so striking i went straight ahead into bk 11 CITY OF CUTTHROATS.
Next was this....
Abyss, on 17 September 2024 - 02:30 PM, said:
You know I'm a fan of Peter Clines... he got me w his EX-HEROES superheroes v zombies books, but his THRESHOLD and related books are among my fave thriller/sf reads now and an automatic pre-order.
I just pre-ordered the earbook for an anthology titled COMBAT MONSTERS, primarily for his story because i find most anthologies disappointing, but am intrigued by the concept and at least a couple of other authors in there i know to be good.
More intriguing to me tho, is that the short story is about his characters 'Carter & Kraft'. Here's what i know about Carter & Kraft: Clines writes them, they're set during WW2, and he's written an unclear number of short stories about them, maybe 3.
Three minutes ago I found the first one - 'Banner of the Bent Cross' - easily, it's in a cheap anthology titled KAIJU RISING... and i need to check when i get home later because i think i already own it. A minute ago i found the second - 'Projekt Maria' in something titled MECH: AGE OF STEEL - not so cheap, am skeptical whether it's worth a whole audible credit, but will see - and now i'm a little obsessed w finding the rest of these... because Peter Clines writing weird war WW2 stories is something iwant need...
ETA ok it seems the three i've identified are all of them. Proceeding w acquisition.
I just pre-ordered the earbook for an anthology titled COMBAT MONSTERS, primarily for his story because i find most anthologies disappointing, but am intrigued by the concept and at least a couple of other authors in there i know to be good.
More intriguing to me tho, is that the short story is about his characters 'Carter & Kraft'. Here's what i know about Carter & Kraft: Clines writes them, they're set during WW2, and he's written an unclear number of short stories about them, maybe 3.
Three minutes ago I found the first one - 'Banner of the Bent Cross' - easily, it's in a cheap anthology titled KAIJU RISING... and i need to check when i get home later because i think i already own it. A minute ago i found the second - 'Projekt Maria' in something titled MECH: AGE OF STEEL - not so cheap, am skeptical whether it's worth a whole audible credit, but will see - and now i'm a little obsessed w finding the rest of these... because Peter Clines writing weird war WW2 stories is something i
ETA ok it seems the three i've identified are all of them. Proceeding w acquisition.
...you know me, my feelings about anthologies slant negative. This was... better than most, in the sense that i enjoyed most of the stories and only DNF'd three. There are some very clever ideas... a New Zealand Maori squad dodging tanks and monsters during the desert campaign, an immortal British assassin teaming up with werewolves in occupied France to prevent Nazi necromancers leaning the secrets of lycanthropy, a really fun take on the Russian all-women pilots squadron. Cline's entry was satisfying, too brief vs his novels but fun in a zombies vs nazis at sea kind of way.
And then back to the world of Jorath for The 13th Paladin bk 10, THE GREEN SEA, which was fun despite the painfully blunt thinly veiled American Indigenous people analogy prairie culture. The action is especially well written in this one and the end is so striking i went straight ahead into bk 11 CITY OF CUTTHROATS.
THIS IS YOUR REMINDER THAT THERE IS A
'VIEW NEW CONTENT' BUTTON THAT
ALLOWS YOU TO VIEW NEW CONTENT
'VIEW NEW CONTENT' BUTTON THAT
ALLOWS YOU TO VIEW NEW CONTENT
#30344
Posted Today, 03:38 PM
Abyss, on 26 November 2025 - 03:15 PM, said:
i cannot disagree w JPK re this, that moment is staggering. I'd argue against it being just for shock's sake, it fits the story, but it hits hard then and in the repercussions. Dark Age in general hits the reader like a slap more than once. I loved the book, but i won't ever say it's light reading. It's an MoI/Empire Strikes Back kind of work.
The fridging early in bk 1 is as blunt as it seems. It isn't pointless but it is simplistic and per upthread that was just the first time i almost dropped the book. Still glad i didn't.
QT you could read the first trilo and stop. I suspect you may not want to stop there because honestly the series just gets wilder. I suppose the question is whether to go ahead knowing that one scene is out there - and to be clear it is one scene, in the series to date nothing else like that happens or compares to it, but it is brutal.
The fridging early in bk 1 is as blunt as it seems. It isn't pointless but it is simplistic and per upthread that was just the first time i almost dropped the book. Still glad i didn't.
QT you could read the first trilo and stop. I suspect you may not want to stop there because honestly the series just gets wilder. I suppose the question is whether to go ahead knowing that one scene is out there - and to be clear it is one scene, in the series to date nothing else like that happens or compares to it, but it is brutal.
I admit I'm wiling to endure bleak stuff...so I may keep going, and feel it out as I go. I'm glad of the trigger warning though as if I came across that just in passing without knowing about it ahead of time...it probably would have made me chuck the book against the wall.
Abyss, on 26 November 2025 - 03:15 PM, said:
I remember the start of NK Jemisin's BROKEN EARTH that threw you (and many many other people i know of) right out of the book, did you ever go back and read those?
No, but that one also had tense issues that bugged me. I may go back to it one day, but I'm not fussed any time soon.
This post has been edited by QuickTidal: Today, 03:39 PM
"When the last tree has fallen, and the rivers are poisoned, you cannot eat money, oh no." ~Aurora
"Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone." ~Ursula Vernon
"Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone." ~Ursula Vernon
#30345
Posted Today, 04:02 PM
Tense tension can be intense.
They came with white hands and left with red hands.

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