amphibian;186978 said:
I ain't sure how informed you are of pejoratives and slang, but the word "spade" is also used to refer to black people in a negative manner. It's actually offensive in most cases to say "spade" in public, unless it is explicitly clear you are referring to the digging implement.
A better phrase would be "I call them like I see them."
I don't know where you live, where you're from, or how you were raised--but that phrase has to do with spades & shovels, and how a spade == shovel but shovel does not always = spade. Anyone who feels discriminated by that saying is wrong & foolish, unless it is explicity used in a a discriminatory context--and I don't stay in the presence of those who would even contemplate such except for legalistic issues alike this. After all, anything can be used to hurt another, but it is wise to stay away from those who are negative, lest you too allow mediocrity to enter your life.
I read KJA's Star Wars books when I was a kid, and I liked them. They were simplistic, action-packed books. Then I read Zahn's Thrawn books, and found those to be amazing. Having re-read books as an adult, theres no comparison--complex & tight writing > action-packed yet simplistic drabble. Had I not the strategical/tactical mindset I have been blessed by God with, I would have certainly enjoyed KJA's books better--they're easier to jump into, the plots aren't too complex to understand, etc.
I've only read one Dune book, and it was (suggested by another person, as to what to start with) House Atreides. And it was ... mediocre, when viewed at with a complex mind. It doesn't stand up to works of Erikson's, Zahn's, Jordan's, etc.
But it wasn't bad. It was bad relative to what I read, but it wasn't bad. That's the difference many of you need to see--just how Dragonlance is "rubbish" to you & me, doesn't make it rubbish. Others see Malazan as "rubbish", because its so complex it doesn't make sense to most people--why would anyone in their right mind want to allocate all that time to read the doorstopper, and allocate memory to remember all those names & personalities & ideas & so forth...