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What are you reading? |
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Kiln |
Mar 20 2016, 05:33 PM
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Forum Bard

Joined: 22-June 05
From: Balmora, Eight Plates

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QUOTE(Winter Wolf @ Mar 10 2016, 09:46 AM)  I am preparing for the end of the world. Metro 2033.But the npcs are dying in different ways to the way the game does it. It is doing my head in. The atmosphere and back stories are very cool to read. Books are always the best medium for that. You can almost taste their fear of a plague sweeping the metro. It's a very good book. I only wish the second one lived up to the high bar that 2033 set. Right now I'm reading Tom Clancy's Red Storm Rising. Only about 40 pages in but so far it is excellent. Very intricate descriptions and naturally flowing dialogue.
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He who fights with monsters should be careful lest he thereby become a monster. And if thou gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will also gaze into thee. - Friedrich Nietzsche
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Lady-Mara-II |
Mar 30 2016, 12:26 PM
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Retainer
Joined: 16-October 11
From: UK

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QUOTE(Winter Wolf @ Mar 26 2016, 02:38 AM) 
Now I am reading Fire Starter (Stephen King). Great characters. Depth. Feeling. Much better!
oh I like a bit of Stephen King. I've just bought a compendium of his shorter stories that I found in a second-hand book store, looking forward to starting it. I have challenged myself to read 24 books this year and I'm slightly ahead of schedule, currently on my 11th book of the year, Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice. It's creeping me out a bit with the age of one of the characters. Just feels a bit... wrong. I can see how this has influenced a lot of vampire books since though.
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Blessings of Mara upon ye.
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Kiln |
Mar 30 2016, 03:44 PM
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Forum Bard

Joined: 22-June 05
From: Balmora, Eight Plates

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QUOTE(Winter Wolf @ Mar 26 2016, 01:38 AM)  Yes, Red Storm Rising. Those early Clancy's were very tasty. I loved RSR and Hunt 4 RO.
I have now grown bored with Metro (the character was just going on and on about which stations he would navigate through, not once but 50 times in internal dialogue). It drove me crazy. Plus I never related to the Nazis and Reds thing. Yes, it makes sense, but for some reason it bores me.
Now I am reading Fire Starter (Stephen King). Great characters. Depth. Feeling. Much better!
I think the reason Artyom details so many stations is to help build the lore of his universe. It's the same reason there is a station map in the first few pages. I still think 2033 was excellent. The Nazis and Reds are presented as more of a commentary on why their systems of government are broken than anything else. Yeah I also bought Hunt for Red October and Executive Orders with RSR but haven't so much as opened them yet.
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He who fights with monsters should be careful lest he thereby become a monster. And if thou gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will also gaze into thee. - Friedrich Nietzsche
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Decrepit |
Apr 5 2016, 05:08 PM
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Master

Joined: 9-September 15
From: Mid-South USA

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At 1045 this morning, during lunch, I finished my fourth reading of Gene Wolfe's The Shadow of the Torturer, volume one of The Book of the New Sun. Took me bloody long enough, nearly an entire monthly to wade through 260 pages. In ye olden days I might have polished it off in two days, surely no more than a week. Be that as it may, I intend to continue on with volume two, The Claw of the Conciliator. Gotta love that name. This post has been edited by Decrepit: Apr 5 2016, 05:09 PM
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Callidus Thorn |
Apr 14 2016, 11:07 AM
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Councilor

Joined: 29-September 13
From: Midgard, Cyrodiil, one or two others.

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Well, that went badly. I bailed on Rainbow Six about three-quarters of the way through. Damn, was that book a mess. On so many levels. Id say more, but I'd probably just end up ranting about it  Edit: And I've now started reading The Silmarillion This post has been edited by Callidus Thorn: Apr 14 2016, 04:35 PM
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A mind without purpose will walk in dark places
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ghastley |
Apr 18 2016, 06:49 PM
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Councilor

Joined: 13-December 10

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Since I'm heading for his home town on a business trip, I started reading the Bloodsong trilogy by C Dean Andersson, an ex-colleague of mine - his day job was writing technical manuals for the software I develop. And then I started reading Wikipedia to follow all the Norse mythology it borrows from. Found Ratatoskr, who might be related to someone here. 
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Mods for The Elder Scrolls single-player games, and I play ESO.
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Decrepit |
May 11 2016, 04:25 PM
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Master

Joined: 9-September 15
From: Mid-South USA

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I am in the midst of reading Orson Scott Card's Seventh Son, the first book in his The Tales of Alvin Maker series. It's been a my library for many years. Never bothered to read it before. Not sure why, except that I'm not a big Card fan. Then again I can say the same about a good many authors I've read, to one degree or other. I quite like one of his very early fantasy works, the 1983 Hart's Hope, or did during all previous reads. Ender's Game, despite being Sci-fi, a literary genre I normally have little sympathy for, was enjoyable enough that I bought its followup. Couldn't get beyond a few chapters in that book. Seventh Son being fantasy, I figured it might be worth a try but, as mentioned, couldn't bring myself to read it . . . until now.
I goofed big time yesterday. Saw that Guy Gavriel Kay's Children of Earth and Sky is a last in print and available at our (semi) local Barnes and Noble, for 30% off! Or so I thought. Very unlike me, I made a special trip into town to buy it. Only, once in the store I found out that the 30% discount is online only. Needless to say I drove home empty handed. Ordered it off Amazon. Had I dug a little deeper while online that morning I could have discovered the truth of the discount and saved myself a couple of bucks in gas money.
(The good thing about ordering through Amazon, aside from the book being discounted as much as at online B&N, is that combined with two items already in my Amazon Cart, I qualified for free shipping.)
This post has been edited by Decrepit: May 11 2016, 11:48 PM
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Decrepit |
May 13 2016, 10:33 AM
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Master

Joined: 9-September 15
From: Mid-South USA

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At 2241 yesterday evening, 12 May 2016, I concluded my initial reading of Orson Scott Card's Seventh Son, book one of his The Tales of Alvin Maker series. Not expecting Children of Earth and Sky to arrived from Amazon until mid next week, I will move on to volume two, Red Prophet.
I enjoyed Seventh Son, which resided unread in my library for decades, more so than anticipated. Don't believe I currently own any volumes beyond Red Prophet.
ADDENDUM: To my surprise I do indeed own book three, and oddly a second copy of book two. (One copy of book two has water damage from when my hot water heater went bad some years ago, damages around ten books at the bottom of a cardboard box on the floor in the patch of escaping heater water. But . . . I had to have acquired the second copy years before then.)
This post has been edited by Decrepit: May 13 2016, 02:18 PM
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treydog |
Jun 3 2016, 02:03 AM
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Master

Joined: 13-February 05
From: The Smoky Mountains

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To my delight, I discovered that "The Prophet of Lamath" is now available on the Kindle. I owned the paperback when it first came out, and intended to get the next books in the series, but was never able to do so.
(Back in those days, I would buy the first book in a series, hoping to find a sustained string of good reads- but money was tight, so the tiny bookstore's stock could get rotated before I got back to some of them....)
So far, it is living up to memory of an enjoyable experience- what with the "identity crisis" of the 2-headed dragon, Vicia-Heinox and the introduction of Pelmen (who will eventually become the Powershaper).
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The dreams down here aren't broken, nah, they're walkin' with a limp...
The best-dressed newt in Mournhold.
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Callidus Thorn |
Jun 5 2016, 08:13 PM
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Councilor

Joined: 29-September 13
From: Midgard, Cyrodiil, one or two others.

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I'm continuing to work my way through the Malazan series, currently on book 8. Up until this book, I've found them all to be great, but book 8 is different. The style changes, and while there's still the big buildup to events that I know I'll get to sooner or later, unlike the previous books there just isn't any real information about it being dished out. I'm more than 70% of the way through the book, and I'm still wondering mostly the same things I did after the first hundred pages.
It seems that Erikson has stopped giving answers that would enhance the buildup in favour of near endless philosophy and introspection, with a few gratuitously melodramatic deaths thrown in. The latest of those was a character from one of the early books, and while I know it's significant to the plot that he's dead, not really knowing what's going on(beyond that it's a convergence) means that it doesn't have the impact it should. I know that it will trigger a couple of minor details in the plot, but since I've no idea what those details are actually contributing to, it just comes off as meaningless.
This is the first of the Malazan series that I've been disappointed with, because the author just doesn't seem too inclined to let me know whats really going on. With the previous books there always seemed to be enough information to understand what was going on. This book strikes me as being like a murder mystery where you're not sure if there's even been a murder, if it's being investigated, or if it's even a mystery to any of the characters.
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A mind without purpose will walk in dark places
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