Reading at t'moment?
#13881
Posted 08 September 2014 - 05:02 PM
About 30% through Jeff Salyards Veil of the Deserters. Vast improvement on the first book. I am getting the impresssion that Salyards is actively working and concentrating on writing gritty soldier narratives as well as bloody and bleak battles
#13882
Posted 08 September 2014 - 05:49 PM
I finished Assail yesterday, liked it a great deal.
Now started on Blindsight. About halfway through, it's good so far but not great.
Now started on Blindsight. About halfway through, it's good so far but not great.
I can't carry it for you, but I can carry you.
#13883
Posted 08 September 2014 - 07:24 PM
Finished Red Country last night. Abercrombie's books are just straight up fun to read. I wish there were more.
Thinking I might go back to reading some classics I've skipped on. Always wanted to read William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. Probably will read that next.
Thinking I might go back to reading some classics I've skipped on. Always wanted to read William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. Probably will read that next.
Theorizing that one could poop within his own lifetime, Doctor Poopet led an elite group of scientists into the desert to develop a top secret project, known as QUANTUM POOP. Pressured to prove his theories or lose funding, Doctor Poopet, prematurely stepped into the Poop Accelerator and vanished. He awoke to find himself in the past, suffering from partial amnesia and facing a mirror image that was not his own. Fortunately, contact with his own bowels was made through brainwave transmissions, with Al the Poop Observer, who appeared in the form of a hologram that only Doctor Poopet could see and hear. Trapped in the past, Doctor Poopet finds himself pooping from life to life, pooping things right, that once went wrong and hoping each time, that his next poop will be the poop home.
#13884
Posted 08 September 2014 - 07:32 PM
I just started Red Country myself last night. Just the first chapter.
Finished In Cold Blood as well. Book is haunting and I have the notion it will stick with me the rest of my life.
Finished In Cold Blood as well. Book is haunting and I have the notion it will stick with me the rest of my life.
They came with white hands and left with red hands.
#13885
Posted 08 September 2014 - 10:14 PM
polishgenius, on 08 September 2014 - 05:49 PM, said:
I finished Assail yesterday, liked it a great deal.
I've been working on it for almost 3 weeks now, and I'm about 1/3 of the way through. It's not terribly written, but it's not terribly exciting either.
"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
#13886
Posted 08 September 2014 - 11:07 PM
Started the second Ilona Andrews Kate Daniels book MAGIC BURNS and it's already more of the goods. GREAT urban fantasy that belongs up with the likes of Butcher, Carey, and Aaronovitch.
"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
#13887
Posted 08 September 2014 - 11:54 PM
Salt-Man Z, on 08 September 2014 - 10:14 PM, said:
I'm having the same issue at the halfway mark. I can see a lot of the groundwork that's being laid but it's just not sinking it's hooks into me as I thought it would.
In other news, I finished The Silver Spike and started Guards! Guards! as my traveling book.
#13888
Posted 09 September 2014 - 01:29 AM
QuickTidal, on 08 September 2014 - 11:07 PM, said:
Started the second Ilona Andrews Kate Daniels book MAGIC BURNS and it's already more of the goods. GREAT urban fantasy that belongs up with the likes of Butcher, Carey, and Aaronovitch.
Needs more Catherine Webb on that list (Matthew Swift series).
I survived the Permian and all I got was this t-shirt.
#13889
#13890
Posted 09 September 2014 - 03:06 AM
Andorion, on 09 September 2014 - 02:00 AM, said:
She really is.
"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
#13891
Posted 09 September 2014 - 07:18 AM
After a week or so of not reading anything really, I have now started Assail. I feel good seeing all those familiar terms again!
A Haunting Poem
I Scream
You Scream
We all Scream
For I Scream.
I Scream
You Scream
We all Scream
For I Scream.
#13892
Posted 09 September 2014 - 11:10 AM
Finished ELVEN STAR. All the grating characters I've come to expect from Weis & Hickman, none of anything that made book 1 semi-interesting. I'm officially out.
Returning to the Black Company with WATER SLEEPS.
Returning to the Black Company with WATER SLEEPS.
OK, I think I got it, but just in case, can you say the whole thing over again? I wasn't really listening.
#13893
Posted 09 September 2014 - 12:50 PM
75% into Veil of the Betrayer and I am continuously wondering how awesome it would be if the Syldoon had access to the Malazan Marine Heavy Assault Crossbows.
#13894
Posted 09 September 2014 - 02:57 PM
McLovin, on 09 September 2014 - 11:10 AM, said:
Finished ELVEN STAR. All the grating characters I've come to expect from Weis & Hickman, none of anything that made book 1 semi-interesting. I'm officially out.
...
...
Fwiw, STAR was by far the weakest book in the series. In fact, Star was the most tedious of the ten or so books by them that i have read (and i read the whole DARKSWORD series so that's really saying something) and if i didn't have #3 FIRE SEA standing by i likely would have bailed too.
You've read two and dropped it, so i'm not trying to change your mind or anything, but Fire was where Weis and Hickman started getting creative and darker and putting the epic in the fantasy story they were trying to tell and the scope expands, the history fills out a bit, the characters become less irritating archetypes and the bigger/more interesting conflicts start to crystallize. The book has a few genuinely wtf moments of fantasy gold that were utterly lacking in Star.
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
#13895
Posted 09 September 2014 - 07:52 PM
McLovin, on 09 September 2014 - 11:10 AM, said:
Finished ELVEN STAR. All the grating characters I've come to expect from Weis & Hickman, none of anything that made book 1 semi-interesting. I'm officially out.
Listen to Abyss...Fire Sea is worth testing at least. Thought if you got black company stuff lying about it can't compare.
#13896
Posted 10 September 2014 - 05:17 AM
Finished Salyards, can't wait for the next installment. Now in a bit of a bind as to what to read next:
1. Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time (I asked the forum a coupel of months back about this and the yeas and naes were split down the middle)
2. Richard Morgan's Sci-fi books,
3. Scott Bakkers Prince of Nothing books,
4. Scott Westerfeld who writes books like Leviathan and Behemoth. Bit hazy about the genre but the blurb seems a bit steampunky maybe?
So, suggestions?
1. Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time (I asked the forum a coupel of months back about this and the yeas and naes were split down the middle)
2. Richard Morgan's Sci-fi books,
3. Scott Bakkers Prince of Nothing books,
4. Scott Westerfeld who writes books like Leviathan and Behemoth. Bit hazy about the genre but the blurb seems a bit steampunky maybe?
So, suggestions?
#13897
Posted 10 September 2014 - 07:12 AM
Andorion, my thoughts for what they're worth...
1. Only ever read the first WoT. It was OK but by all accounts the series gets pretty naff.
2. I read Morgans' Kovacs books. The first one especially was excellent. I personally found they got worse but there are only 3 of them and the 3rd one still has some good stuff in there. Definitely worth reading.
3. Ugh. Prince of Nothing was a terrible series. I'm of the "don't waste your time on this boring pretentious tripe" persuasion. I know loads of people on here will tell you otherwise but from about 3/4 of the way through book 1 it was a drag and I only kept going because I thought something was actually going to happen. It didn't.
4. Not read these books but from what I can tell they are pretty good. Also if you're going to read Leviathan, you need to listen to the Mastodon album of the same name whilst doing it! It is unrelated AFAIK but it's a great album! \m/
1. Only ever read the first WoT. It was OK but by all accounts the series gets pretty naff.
2. I read Morgans' Kovacs books. The first one especially was excellent. I personally found they got worse but there are only 3 of them and the 3rd one still has some good stuff in there. Definitely worth reading.
3. Ugh. Prince of Nothing was a terrible series. I'm of the "don't waste your time on this boring pretentious tripe" persuasion. I know loads of people on here will tell you otherwise but from about 3/4 of the way through book 1 it was a drag and I only kept going because I thought something was actually going to happen. It didn't.
4. Not read these books but from what I can tell they are pretty good. Also if you're going to read Leviathan, you need to listen to the Mastodon album of the same name whilst doing it! It is unrelated AFAIK but it's a great album! \m/
A Haunting Poem
I Scream
You Scream
We all Scream
For I Scream.
I Scream
You Scream
We all Scream
For I Scream.
#13898
Posted 10 September 2014 - 09:30 AM
Andorion, on 10 September 2014 - 05:17 AM, said:
Finished Salyards, can't wait for the next installment. Now in a bit of a bind as to what to read next:
1. Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time (I asked the forum a coupel of months back about this and the yeas and naes were split down the middle)
2. Richard Morgan's Sci-fi books,
3. Scott Bakkers Prince of Nothing books,
4. Scott Westerfeld who writes books like Leviathan and Behemoth. Bit hazy about the genre but the blurb seems a bit steampunky maybe?
So, suggestions?
1. Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time (I asked the forum a coupel of months back about this and the yeas and naes were split down the middle)
2. Richard Morgan's Sci-fi books,
3. Scott Bakkers Prince of Nothing books,
4. Scott Westerfeld who writes books like Leviathan and Behemoth. Bit hazy about the genre but the blurb seems a bit steampunky maybe?
So, suggestions?
WoT is very good but is a significant reading commitment (lots of pages and stuff you know). It is also a bit dated in some people's view and definitely suffer from EFSB (Epic Fantasy Saga Bloat).
Though on the plus side, you can start reading it without having to wait 12 years for the finale.
I am the Onyx Wizards
#13899
Posted 10 September 2014 - 10:38 AM
Andorion, on 10 September 2014 - 05:17 AM, said:
4. Scott Westerfeld who writes books like Leviathan and Behemoth. Bit hazy about the genre but the blurb seems a bit steampunky maybe?
I can chime in here. These are YA, but they are QUITE unique, and decently written. WWI by way of steampunk. It has the added bonus of being filled with great art.
Oh and I'm also in the crowd with Simeon who will tell you to skip Bakker. He's up his own ass, and the books are meh.
This post has been edited by QuickTidal: 10 September 2014 - 10:39 AM
"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
#13900
Posted 10 September 2014 - 10:47 AM
Bakker's the baws. The first trilogy takes some effort to get into but it's worth it, and the first two books of the second trilogy are brilliant.
I can't carry it for you, but I can carry you.