acesn8s, on 23 September 2014 - 12:25 PM, said:
I spent the past month marathoning through the Iron Druid series (books 1-6). Suddenly I had enough.
You do know that 7 was just released, yes?
Not that i blame you for needing a break... i found the series wildly swings between great fun / original and holy fuck this is stupid / boring.
The Old Guard, on 23 September 2014 - 11:52 PM, said:
The Republic Of Thieves by Scott Lynch. Stormed through the first two Gentlemen Bastards' books in a week or so. Very well written, witty, cynic and with some Camorri "street creed" philosophy sprinkled in here and there. Love it!
I thought i was done w Lyn ch after my disappointment in RED SEAS but the buzz here and on io9 about REPUBLIC has me thinking i'll read it after all.
QuickTidal, on 24 September 2014 - 07:16 PM, said:
Mentalist, on 24 September 2014 - 07:12 PM, said:
...
Does it actually do anything original? I liked "Otherland"--the only other Williams I've read, but this just seemed too formulaic.
It does some original stuff definitely. It's certainly not an ASOIAF derivative...very much more fantasy elements. But nothing groundbreaking. Williams succeeds in making some of the creepy stuff come off well, but his straight up fantasy stuff is a little generic. Not bad, but just generic. There is some very cool stuff in the series, but I've only read books 1 & 2.
I deeply disliked MS&T. It was hideously drawn out, unoriginal, suffered from a serious case of 'one big action sequence per book', incessant travelogue placeholder subplots and characters who spend a hell of a lot of time whining. Also, the nice elves and the evil elves battle by fucking singing at each other.
OTHERLAND... great trilogy.
But i will note that his WAR OF THE FLOWERS is a one and done, urban fantasy, nicely original takes on classic tropes/critters, and a doorstopper of a really enjoyable read..
Baco Xtath, on 27 September 2014 - 12:24 AM, said:
... Finished Maelstrom by Watts. Really liked it but don't know if I'll immediately jump back into the Rifter saga.
I'd say jump straight into LEVIATHAN or you're likely never going to finish the trilo. They read well altogether but with an extended gap, eh, can't see that being much fun.
Tattersail_, on 29 September 2014 - 09:11 AM, said:
Acts of Caine book 1, 2 and 3 (currently read 4) OMG!! OMfuckingdickpullingfuckingGod! Fucking hell! Are there only 4 books? I want more!!!! My word I loved each and every one of these. I wish I could erase my memory and read them again for the first time! Just quality! Take a bow, Matthew Stover!!
Aaaand we have another coCaine addict.
Additional books have been rumoured, but i get the impression from blog posts and such that Stover's kind of fed up with the lack of interest in the series and stick with his way better paying licensed property work.
Fuck.
Andorion, on 29 September 2014 - 01:50 PM, said:
Tattersail_, on 29 September 2014 - 09:11 AM, said:
I have recently read;
Dan Brown's Inferno. Very enjoyable, and once I got into the meat and potatoes I could not put it down. Satisfying outcome, and unexpected.
...
What I really liked about Inferno was the outcome, when Brown took a slightly differnet route than expected. But Langdon's problem reminded me a bit of the Bourne Identity
Was this better than LOST SYMBOL? As in, was it a LOT better?
...because SYMBOL was fairly awful.