Reading at t'moment?
#10481
Posted 15 April 2013 - 03:48 AM
100+ pages now on the The Black Company, i didn't get to read much on my trip, only a few pages, after i finish the first book on this omnibus, i will read the 1st novella of Bauchelain and Korbal Broach,
i'm so happy i got to read the The Black Company, they were like the forefathers/ancestors/predecessors of the Bridgeburners/Bonehunters,
i like the Taken and the Lady, they are so badass, i love those types of groups, like the Forsaken (wheel of time), like the Akatsuki (naruto), Phantom Brigade/Genei Ryodan (Hunter x Hunter), Ten Swords/Juppongata (Rurouni Kenshin/Samurai X) to name a few of my favorite villain groups,
i'm so happy i got to read the The Black Company, they were like the forefathers/ancestors/predecessors of the Bridgeburners/Bonehunters,
i like the Taken and the Lady, they are so badass, i love those types of groups, like the Forsaken (wheel of time), like the Akatsuki (naruto), Phantom Brigade/Genei Ryodan (Hunter x Hunter), Ten Swords/Juppongata (Rurouni Kenshin/Samurai X) to name a few of my favorite villain groups,
It's not who I am underneath.. but what i do that defines me - Batman, Batman Begins; 'Without our deaths, sir, there would be no crime. Thus, no punishment to match,' 'Mortal Sword - '
'We are done, my friend. Now, in this manner, we choose the meaning of our deaths' - Mortal Sword Brukhalian to Veteran Nilbanas, siege of Capustan
'Ippen shinde miru (want to try dying this once) ?' - Jigoku Shoujo (Hell Girl)
'We are done, my friend. Now, in this manner, we choose the meaning of our deaths' - Mortal Sword Brukhalian to Veteran Nilbanas, siege of Capustan
'Ippen shinde miru (want to try dying this once) ?' - Jigoku Shoujo (Hell Girl)
#10482
Posted 15 April 2013 - 12:53 PM
I'm about 500 pages into Abercrombie's Best Served Cold and totally loving it I'm surprised, in a good way, because I thought The Heroes was bloody marvellous, but didn't like the First Law trilogy all that much. I was thinking The Heroes might be a one-off, but I'm liking BSC almost as much. Can't wait for Red Country to come out in paperback, now. Might even have to give First Law another chance and see if I enjoy it more.
#10483
Posted 15 April 2013 - 02:12 PM
Finished a few books recently. One was Bauchelain and Korbal Broach. I thought Blood Follows was decent, but the other two novellas were not that good. I would be upset that I paid $10 for the Kindle version, but considering SE has given us many 800+ page awesome novels I will let it slide.
Also finished OST by ICE. I thought this was pretty good. I liked NoK, but did not care for RotCG and SW. BaB will break the tie.
And last was The Dragon Reborn by Jordan. I liked it, but I am in the minority in feeling that the first book was better. It seems the general consensus is the books get better until five or six. And I think I see some things in these books that influenced Erikson. Although, I do not see RJ mentioned as one of his influences. Here is what I'm talking about. I'm not a fantasy expert, so maybe these have been used by authors before RJ. Mild spoilers below...
,
,
,
.
- Don't The Ways seem like The Warrens? SE does take it to another level though.
- The Dark One uses Dark Hounds, and we know Erikson uses hounds a lot.
- Matt's luck maybe an inspiration for Oponn?
Also finished OST by ICE. I thought this was pretty good. I liked NoK, but did not care for RotCG and SW. BaB will break the tie.
And last was The Dragon Reborn by Jordan. I liked it, but I am in the minority in feeling that the first book was better. It seems the general consensus is the books get better until five or six. And I think I see some things in these books that influenced Erikson. Although, I do not see RJ mentioned as one of his influences. Here is what I'm talking about. I'm not a fantasy expert, so maybe these have been used by authors before RJ. Mild spoilers below...
,
,
,
.
- Don't The Ways seem like The Warrens? SE does take it to another level though.
- The Dark One uses Dark Hounds, and we know Erikson uses hounds a lot.
- Matt's luck maybe an inspiration for Oponn?
#10484
Posted 15 April 2013 - 02:38 PM
Started THE QUANTUM THIEF but i wasn't in the right brainspace for hi-concept hard sf, so i paused a few chapters in and started bk 1 of THE RIYRIA REVELATIONS. So far, so good.
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#10485
Posted 15 April 2013 - 05:51 PM
I finished Banks's Stonemouth last night, which I thought was very good. It didn't really have any massive OMGWTF twists but it was a solid read, engaging from beginning to end, where I spent yesterday afternoon reading the last 250/300 pages.
I think 'simple but effective' describes this book well. Here's a man whose humour and brilliant imagination I will greatly miss when he passes.
As of this morning, I am reading The Scar.
I think 'simple but effective' describes this book well. Here's a man whose humour and brilliant imagination I will greatly miss when he passes.
As of this morning, I am reading The Scar.
The love I bear thee can afford no better term than this: thou art a villain.
"Perhaps we think up our own destinies and so, in a sense, deserve whatever happens to us, for not having had the wit to imagine something better." ― Iain Banks
"Perhaps we think up our own destinies and so, in a sense, deserve whatever happens to us, for not having had the wit to imagine something better." ― Iain Banks
#10486
Posted 15 April 2013 - 07:49 PM
I'm nearly done listening to Alastair Reynolds's Blue Remembered Earth. Based on most reviews I saw, I wasn't expecting anything phenomenal but that's exactly what this book is. I can't recommend this book highly enough. And the narrator is superb.
"Give a man a fire and he's warm for the day. But set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life." - Terry Pratchett, Jingo"Just erotic. Nothing kinky. It's the difference between using a feather and using a chicken." - Terry Pratchett, Eric
"Wisdom comes from experience. Experience is often a result of a lack of wisdom." - Terry Pratchett
"Wisdom comes from experience. Experience is often a result of a lack of wisdom." - Terry Pratchett
#10487
Posted 15 April 2013 - 07:54 PM
Just finished Prince of Thorns - great book, Black Company meets Sven from the Death's Head series! Very surprised at how good this was - downloaded the second one already
Finished The Way of Kings, which was ultimately rubbish, imo - long-winded, YA, boring rubbish. The invented swear-words were inexcusable as well. Storm off you storming storm-lover! Pffft... This was a piece of commercial fluff with power armor. Like Jordan at his worst.
After that came Daniel Abraham's book, can't even remember the name of it now - showed some promise but was unsatisfying in the end. You can see how it will play out in broad strokes already and it's boring.
Finished The Way of Kings, which was ultimately rubbish, imo - long-winded, YA, boring rubbish. The invented swear-words were inexcusable as well. Storm off you storming storm-lover! Pffft... This was a piece of commercial fluff with power armor. Like Jordan at his worst.
After that came Daniel Abraham's book, can't even remember the name of it now - showed some promise but was unsatisfying in the end. You can see how it will play out in broad strokes already and it's boring.
#10488
Posted 15 April 2013 - 08:01 PM
Finished Patient Zero (Joe Ledger #1) by Jonathan Maberry. Zombies! Mad scientists! Terrorists! Stuff blowing up! This book was a lot of fun, a very enjoyable and fast read. Nothing new or haven't-read-that-before, but this is a very well executed novel. Great dialogue and characters, though as nails hero, cool action scenes.... I liked it a lot. Recommended.
Now reading the 2nd Joe Ledger book, The Dragon Factory. Also good, but a bit slower (I'm halfway through).
Now reading the 2nd Joe Ledger book, The Dragon Factory. Also good, but a bit slower (I'm halfway through).
#10489
Posted 16 April 2013 - 12:30 PM
Moving on to Emperor: Field of Swords by C. Iggulden.
“The others followed, and found themselves in a small, stuffy basement, which would have been damp, smelly, close, and dark, were it not, in fact, well-lit, which prevented it from being dark.”
― Steven Brust, The Phoenix Guards
― Steven Brust, The Phoenix Guards
#10490
Posted 16 April 2013 - 01:47 PM
House Rules by jodi picoult
Apt is the only one who reads this. Apt is nice.
#10491
Posted 16 April 2013 - 02:33 PM
Tiste Simeon, on 10 April 2013 - 09:46 PM, said:
polishgenius, on 11 April 2013 - 10:19 PM, said:
Malaclypse, on 11 April 2013 - 09:26 PM, said:
...
The Scar was average imo, and that's being kind, I truly don't understand why people get excited about it - it was moody, certainly but otherwise? not much to speak of.
The Scar was average imo, and that's being kind, I truly don't understand why people get excited about it - it was moody, certainly but otherwise? not much to speak of.
The Scar is pretty much a how-to on how to construct and pace that kind of novel.
I also don't see the political agenda in The Scar, at all. In Iron Council, I can see the argument, though I think a bigger deal is made of it than is really the case in the book, but The Scar? Nah.
Grief, on 12 April 2013 - 04:11 AM, said:
...Personally I think Perdido Street Station is his best work. For me, the Scar would be just behind it. Looking back though, I would struggle to point at anything it did that PSS didn't already do better (reading PSS first possibly biases me a bit in that way. There are a couple of areas it's definitely better for me, but mostly it just does a lot of the same stuff slightly better). I've not re-read Iron Council but my memory of it (it's ending particularly) isn't very favourable.
Which is another gripe I have with Mieville. Most of his endings range from poor to dire. The end of the Scar is the weakest part of the book imo, and most complaints I've heard about PSS have been ending related too. However great the build up is, a book can lose a lot if it can't be concluded well. It particularly makes his use of ambiguous weirdness feel like a cheap trick to build tension easily.
...
Which is another gripe I have with Mieville. Most of his endings range from poor to dire. The end of the Scar is the weakest part of the book imo, and most complaints I've heard about PSS have been ending related too. However great the build up is, a book can lose a lot if it can't be concluded well. It particularly makes his use of ambiguous weirdness feel like a cheap trick to build tension easily.
...
Obdigore, on 12 April 2013 - 05:35 AM, said:
Grief, on 12 April 2013 - 05:26 AM, said:
What made you like Kraken so much? Possibly the first time I've seen in mentioned in the same breath as PSS or the Scar.
In particular, what did you think of the ending? Iron council is the one people usually bring up as a bad ending, but I didn't feel like Krakens was much more satisfying.
Just curious as it's one of the ones I'm less keen on, and I've not come across so many people who really rate it.
In particular, what did you think of the ending? Iron council is the one people usually bring up as a bad ending, but I didn't feel like Krakens was much more satisfying.
Just curious as it's one of the ones I'm less keen on, and I've not come across so many people who really rate it.
I couldn't tell you. I thought it was going to be meh-tastic after about 20 pages in, but I just couldn't put it down and ended up staying up way too late reading it. The ending wasn't the best ending, but it was a satisfying conclusion to the book to me.
Skipping some of the more volatile Mieville upthread chatter, I like Mieville. I don't always love his work, but everything i have read has entertained me and been worth the dollars.
The ending thing is only, imnsho, an issue with the Bas-Lag books. All three are fairly open and while events have come to a conclusion, the story is left very open and to an extent unresolved. A lot of people find this frustrating. I don't. I don't need a complete and tidy wrapped up with a bow ending (FFS i'm an Erikson fan...). I love THE SCAR because Armada is one of the most original, interesting, well constructed fantasy settings i have ever read and the events that take place on it are fascinating. PERDIDO may have better characters and IRON COUNCIL a more interesting conflict, but SCAR held my attention for every page.
EMBASSYTOWN was mind candy. It asks big questions and doesn't spoon feed the author's answers. I found it slow but interesting and i was satisfied with the end result, even if some of it seemed a bit trite (ie how the protag finally addressed the alien's inability to recognize humans as sentient).
KRAKEN... KRAKEN was sheer mad fun urban fantasy popcorn with Mieville weirdness. I loved it. It was part Butcher at his craziest, part Carey at his darkest, and loaded with pure Mieville weerdiest. Also my favorite ending of any of his books.
RAILSEA was totally YA and just clever enough. I liked.
Throw in the WAITING FOR JAKE collection and i've liked everything i've read by Mieville. I don't care about his sexuality or attitude. He's never said anything publically that irritated me nearly as much as Card or Goodkind.
Salt-Man Z, on 14 April 2013 - 07:58 PM, said:
Finished Ex-Patriots last night, and it was just as fun (if not quite as good) as the first.
But admit it... you can't wait for EX-COMMUNICATION in June.
The hints about what's coming.... heehee...
Ulrik, on 14 April 2013 - 09:15 PM, said:
I need recommendation... Rather fantasy, dark, gritty...but not as prince of thorns. It just sucked my enthusiasm. Ive just finished Wise Mans Fear and it was...just acceptable. first book was more interesting for me. Thacks and orry typo - new tablet :/
Not sure if you've read these, but Stover's CAINE series, Morgan's LAND FIT FOR HEROES, Ruckley's GODLESS WORLD trilo come to mind.
Serenity, on 15 April 2013 - 12:53 PM, said:
I'm about 500 pages into Abercrombie's Best Served Cold and totally loving it ... Might even have to give First Law another chance and see if I enjoy it more.
COLD remains my fave Abercrombie book. I'll be curious to hear if you enjoy FIRST LAW any morehaving read the standalones.
Hound, on 15 April 2013 - 08:01 PM, said:
Finished Patient Zero (Joe Ledger #1) by Jonathan Maberry. Zombies! Mad scientists! Terrorists! Stuff blowing up! This book was a lot of fun, a very enjoyable and fast read. Nothing new or haven't-read-that-before, but this is a very well executed novel. Great dialogue and characters, though as nails hero, cool action scenes.... I liked it a lot. Recommended.
Now reading the 2nd Joe Ledger book, The Dragon Factory. Also good, but a bit slower (I'm halfway through).
Now reading the 2nd Joe Ledger book, The Dragon Factory. Also good, but a bit slower (I'm halfway through).
I have a few of his in the TRP. Good to know. I'm always a littl reluctant to get into zombie books laterly because there is so much of it out there and so much of it is very very bad. Plus Clines is hard to beat. That said, it seems the zombies are not Maberry's whole deal.
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#10492
Posted 16 April 2013 - 02:52 PM
Abyss, on 16 April 2013 - 02:33 PM, said:
EMBASSYTOWN was mind candy. It asks big questions and doesn't spoon feed the author's answers. I found it slow but interesting and i was satisfied with the end result
Embassytown remains the only Mieville I've read (an error I plan to rectify soon) but I'm in total agreement with this. One of the best science fiction books I've had the pleasure of reading.
Abyss, on 16 April 2013 - 02:33 PM, said:
But admit it... you can't wait for EX-COMMUNICATION in June.
Word.
"Here is light. You will say that it is not a living entity, but you miss the point that it is more, not less. Without occupying space, it fills the universe. It nourishes everything, yet itself feeds upon destruction. We claim to control it, but does it not perhaps cultivate us as a source of food? May it not be that all wood grows so that it can be set ablaze, and that men and women are born to kindle fires?"
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch
#10493
Posted 16 April 2013 - 03:09 PM
I feel left out and unloved abyss. Yes abyss lower case a.
Apt is the only one who reads this. Apt is nice.
#10494
Posted 16 April 2013 - 03:14 PM
Ganoes Paran, on 16 April 2013 - 03:09 PM, said:
I feel left out and unloved abyss. Yes abyss lower case a.
Read some better books, loser. All the cool kids are like hey swords and zombies and spaceships and you're all ooooo look at me i'm reading House Rules by jodi picoult... who the fuck is jodi picoult and wasn't that a movie back in the 90s about some dude making cider while spiderman got it on with that tall serial killer chick? seriously....
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#10495
Posted 16 April 2013 - 03:19 PM
Abyss, on 16 April 2013 - 03:14 PM, said:
Ganoes Paran, on 16 April 2013 - 03:09 PM, said:
I feel left out and unloved abyss. Yes abyss lower case a.
Read some better books, loser. All the cool kids are like hey swords and zombies and spaceships and you're all ooooo look at me i'm reading House Rules by jodi picoult... who the fuck is jodi picoult and wasn't that a movie back in the 90s about some dude making cider while spiderman got it on with that tall serial killer chick? seriously....
She wrote "My Sister's Keeper", "The Pact", and yeah, I hear you, I think I need to man up but these are beautiful stories about the unlikeliest of heroes. I am re reading Malazan at the same time. I am going through a phase of reading the same books as my wife, so she picks one and I pick one and so on. I picked the Running Man by Stephen King last, before that she picked "A time to kill"
Apt is the only one who reads this. Apt is nice.
#10496
Posted 16 April 2013 - 03:26 PM
Ganoes Paran, on 16 April 2013 - 03:19 PM, said:
.... I picked the Running Man by Stephen King last...
One of my fave shorts by him in his Bachman years. You redeemed yourself. Slightly.
Relatedly if If you haven't read RAGE and THE LONG WALK from his same era, i recommend.
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#10497
#10498
Posted 16 April 2013 - 05:49 PM
Abyss, on 16 April 2013 - 02:33 PM, said:
Hound, on 15 April 2013 - 08:01 PM, said:
Finished Patient Zero (Joe Ledger #1) by Jonathan Maberry. Zombies! Mad scientists! Terrorists! Stuff blowing up! This book was a lot of fun, a very enjoyable and fast read. Nothing new or haven't-read-that-before, but this is a very well executed novel. Great dialogue and characters, though as nails hero, cool action scenes.... I liked it a lot. Recommended.
Now reading the 2nd Joe Ledger book, The Dragon Factory. Also good, but a bit slower (I'm halfway through).
Now reading the 2nd Joe Ledger book, The Dragon Factory. Also good, but a bit slower (I'm halfway through).
I have a few of his in the TRP. Good to know. I'm always a littl reluctant to get into zombie books laterly because there is so much of it out there and so much of it is very very bad. Plus Clines is hard to beat. That said, it seems the zombies are not Maberry's whole deal.
Yup. Agreed about Clines. But Maberry is more similar in tone and style to Rollins Sigma stuff or David Baldacci / Lee Child. Patient Zero is more a technothriller than a urban fantasy/horror/scifi book
Btw, great that Ex-Communications comes out in june!!! Didn't knew that, and now I can't wait!
#10499
Posted 17 April 2013 - 05:33 PM
Found Dead Beat by Buther at the thrift store for 3,50 euros (=cheap) -- bought it and am now reading it. Is was not that much piqued by Storm Front that I read earlier, but maybe I need to use some more to get addicted to the crack...?
Secret message: "Keep up the good work, yours truly"
#10500
Posted 17 April 2013 - 05:48 PM
Finished The Quantum Prince. "Oh Shit" is my new favourite phrase.
I'm thinking about what to read now. Don't want to completely destroy my mind by reading The Fractal Prince.
I'm thinking about what to read now. Don't want to completely destroy my mind by reading The Fractal Prince.
Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori
#sarcasm
Pro patria mori
#sarcasm