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Whatcha readin now? (book, books, reading, read) (5 Viewers)

Last nite I finished Suttree by Cormac McCarthy. Really good. Hilarious too.

Gonna give Wool a shot as it seems to be getting a lot of love around here.

 
Recently read The Dinner based on a magazine review. Interesting but not great.

Now reading Two Graves, the latest Pendergast novel Preston and Child. I LOVED the first five or six of the series, but the last few were progressively more silly and poorly written. I thought I'd give the series one more chance, but it's just over. There's definitely a James Patterson type thing going on with these guys. :(

 
not sure if it's been mentioned in here, but I just finished Anthony Ryan's Blood Song, which is the first book in a planned new fantasy series. Awesome reading and I'm immediately jonesing for the next book - I think this is at least as good a debut (and for me, honestly, better) than Rothfuss' Name Of The Wind.

the tone and mood of it kind of reminded me a lot of Gene Wolfe's Book Of The New Sun stuff, plus some echoes of Alexandre Dumas and George R.R. Martin.
I follow fantasy novels pretty closely and had not heard of this book at all. Looked it up, saw that it had good reviews and was $5 for the Kindle. Everyone seems to compare it to Name of the Wind, which is my favorite fantasy series so I am going to jump in and read it. Whether all these NOTW comparisons are warranted or just a result of clever marketing, I'll soon find out.
Hopefully it's just marketing. I'll check it out, but the further from NOTW for me, the better.
I don't think it's much like NOTW, but that's probably going to be a common reference for debut fantasy novels these days. Blood Song is told from one main character's POV, and we meet him as a young boy and follow him to adulthood, but that's the end of the similarities to me. Blood Song is a lot more concerned with religious themes and has a more classic style to the story with more action and a darker feel than NOTW.
Finished this up. Great suggestion. Really enjoyed the book and am looking forward to reading the series. I can see how it could be compared to NOTW. I haven't read any Wolfe but I also think this book had shades on Peter Brett's Warded Man series as well.
I got about 20 pages into it today in my failed bid for an afternoon nap (reading usually puts me to sleep in these circumstances). I would say it doesn't resemble NOtW so much as it is an almost exact replica. I'm talking like McDowells vs McDonalds. Controversial anti-hero telling his story to a chronicler with some kind of war/fighting, somehow related to his past, is about to change his life and deal with his past, along with the reverence of his longtime somewhat famous sword. I don't know how much more similar it can be, which is bad for me as I hated NOtW. The way it started is making me nervous, but at least the past story, so far, isn't in 1st person.eta: ebooks are great. THough I couldn't find it on P2P anywhere, I got a legit 60 page sample to see if I want to splurge the $5. Might have been able to get it from the library, but this is way easier...

 
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Finished Stephen Hunter's The Third Bullet the other day. It's a Swagger novel about the Kennedy assassination. Pretty good angle on what could have happened. It's better than the last few Swaggers, but there are some massive plot holes.

I'm now just getting into Southern Gods by John Hornor Jacobs. I've never heard of this author before, but like the premise.

 
Finished up 5 over the weekend. Loved it. Starting 6-8 this week.
:hifive:
I read 6-8. I enjoyed them, but not quite as much as 1-5. Not bad by any means, just 1-5 set a pretty high standard to follow.
Finished 6-8 today myself. Thoughts:

Kind of knew what was coming with Senator Thurman, but was surprised Donald would kill Anna, who just seemed like she was the impressionable daughter tired of being led by her father's lies, and that her act of switching Donald and her father was some way of getting revenge. But, Anna's actions on Convention Day did lead to Helen dying and led to Donald's almost-300 years of misery. I did kind of speedread from the moment she was awoken to the end, so I may have missed something. It did seem that Donald did have some regrets about killing her, though.

Sounds like there could be more coming from this series based on what Juliette told Donald at the end. Will definitely check out. :thumbup:
 
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Finished up 5 over the weekend. Loved it. Starting 6-8 this week.
:hifive:
I read 6-8. I enjoyed them, but not quite as much as 1-5. Not bad by any means, just 1-5 set a pretty high standard to follow.
Finished 6-8 today myself. Thoughts:

Kind of knew what was coming with Senator Thurman, but was surprised Donald would kill Anna, who just seemed like she was the impressionable daughter tired of being led by her father's lies, and that her act of switching Donald and her father was some way of getting revenge. But, Anna's actions on Convention Day did lead to Helen dying and led to Donald's almost-300 years of misery. I did kind of speedread from the moment she was awoken to the end, so I may have missed something. It did seem that Donald did have some regrets about killing her, though.

Sounds like there could be more coming from this series based on what Juliette told Donald at the end. Will definitely check out. :thumbup:
I was not happy with him killing Anna, but he viewed her as the one that arranged the switcheroo (maybe correctly) that led to him/Helen being in different silos. I still thought killing her was over the top and not necessary. That being said, I don't know what they could have done if she was woke up, so maybe it was for the best.
 
Finished up 5 over the weekend. Loved it. Starting 6-8 this week.
:hifive:
I read 6-8. I enjoyed them, but not quite as much as 1-5. Not bad by any means, just 1-5 set a pretty high standard to follow.
Finished 6-8 today myself. Thoughts:

Kind of knew what was coming with Senator Thurman, but was surprised Donald would kill Anna, who just seemed like she was the impressionable daughter tired of being led by her father's lies, and that her act of switching Donald and her father was some way of getting revenge. But, Anna's actions on Convention Day did lead to Helen dying and led to Donald's almost-300 years of misery. I did kind of speedread from the moment she was awoken to the end, so I may have missed something. It did seem that Donald did have some regrets about killing her, though.

Sounds like there could be more coming from this series based on what Juliette told Donald at the end. Will definitely check out. :thumbup:
I was not happy with him killing Anna, but he viewed her as the one that arranged the switcheroo (maybe correctly) that led to him/Helen being in different silos. I still thought killing her was over the top and not necessary. That being said, I don't know what they could have done if she was woke up, so maybe it was for the best.
To me, it seemed like a college lover wanting to hold on to the one she's lusted after and keep him with her for the next few hundred years and doing anything to do it. Yeah, it was callous what she did, but killing her off just seems like lazy writing, especially since Donald showed regrets over it later, like Howey wrote himself into a corner. I honestly thought that Donald was going to forgive her, perhaps seeing Anna was against her father, the evil Senator, as well and wanted Donald to succeed with her. It was a surprise when Donald offed her, which maybe was just the author's intent, but like I said, it seemed awfully lazy.
 
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Hey, I don't read nearly as much as I used to so I am looking for a good, easy, to read books (not crime thrillers). Think the Hunger Games or Ready Player One for the ease of reading. Can someone throw out some recommendations?

 
Hey, I don't read nearly as much as I used to so I am looking for a good, easy, to read books (not crime thrillers). Think the Hunger Games or Ready Player One for the ease of reading. Can someone throw out some recommendations?
If it helps the last fiction books I read were the above two and The Rules of Civilty, The Art of Racing in the Rain and The Perks of Being a Wallflower.

 
Hey, I don't read nearly as much as I used to so I am looking for a good, easy, to read books (not crime thrillers). Think the Hunger Games or Ready Player One for the ease of reading. Can someone throw out some recommendations?
Hunger Games was an easy, fun read. Second two books in the series don't live up to the 1st, though.

Check out the Wool series. They're a series of short stories that are easy and enjoyable to read.

 
I'm reading Killing Pablo which is about the hunt for Pablo Escobar. Then it's on to the14th and final book of the Wheel of Time series.

 
Finished the Saunders story collection "Tenth of December," recommended by Krista and Uruk-Hai.I liked it a lot, thought it was very funny in an extremely dark way and was enjoying it more for the quality of writing and its sensibility, until the final story when the emotional impact of that particular piece unexpectedly drilled me and left the tears welling up in my eyes.
Also read this a little while back. I was moved by the first story more than any of the others. For some reason, his narration of Allison dancing down the stairs while thinking to herself struck me as a truly genius touch that I found moving. Also, I love that he threw in the kid with the "Prince Valiant" haircut in the last story. Didn't Don Gately of Infinite Jest fame also have a Prince Valiant 'do? Nice touch.

Just finished up The Art of Fielding. Liked it, but not essential.

eta* Also, I just searched this thread and found people who read The Royal Family by William Vollmann. I stopped reading about 1,000 pages in, and it turned out to be 1,000 pages too many. If "The Queen" peed in Henry's mouth again, I was also going to slap myself in the head with my Nook. I just don't really care how it ends at this point. Also read Whores For Gloria. I don't get the Vollmann love either. I remember reading some of his Rainbow Stories and finding them astute and entertaining, but that was a while ago.

 
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Hey, I don't read nearly as much as I used to so I am looking for a good, easy, to read books (not crime thrillers). Think the Hunger Games or Ready Player One for the ease of reading. Can someone throw out some recommendations?
Hunger Games was an easy, fun read. Second two books in the series don't live up to the 1st, though.

Check out the Wool series. They're a series of short stories that are easy and enjoyable to read.
Thanks, Ill give it a shot!

 
currently re-reading book one of the Rivers of London series by Ben Aaronovitch (book one is titled "Rivers of London"). I really like this series - it reminds me of the Dresden Files set in London. It's urban fantasy starring a cop with the ability to do magic and has a lot of deadpan humor, but I actually prefer Aaronovitch's writing style to Butcher's.

also finished "It's So Easy (And Other Lies)", Duff McKagan's autobiography - pretty cool book. Duff's an interesting guy and you don't have to be a big G'n'R fan (I'm not) to appreciate his story.

I'm waiting patiently for the third book in the Dagger and Coin fantasy series by Daniel Abraham - "The Tyrant's Law", being released in May. If you like modern epic fantasy, check that series out - it's pretty damn good.

 
not sure if it's been mentioned in here, but I just finished Anthony Ryan's Blood Song, which is the first book in a planned new fantasy series. Awesome reading and I'm immediately jonesing for the next book - I think this is at least as good a debut (and for me, honestly, better) than Rothfuss' Name Of The Wind.the tone and mood of it kind of reminded me a lot of Gene Wolfe's Book Of The New Sun stuff, plus some echoes of Alexandre Dumas and George R.R. Martin.
I follow fantasy novels pretty closely and had not heard of this book at all. Looked it up, saw that it had good reviews and was $5 for the Kindle. Everyone seems to compare it to Name of the Wind, which is my favorite fantasy series so I am going to jump in and read it. Whether all these NOTW comparisons are warranted or just a result of clever marketing, I'll soon find out.
Hopefully it's just marketing. I'll check it out, but the further from NOTW for me, the better.
I don't think it's much like NOTW, but that's probably going to be a common reference for debut fantasy novels these days. Blood Song is told from one main character's POV, and we meet him as a young boy and follow him to adulthood, but that's the end of the similarities to me. Blood Song is a lot more concerned with religious themes and has a more classic style to the story with more action and a darker feel than NOTW.
Finished this up. Great suggestion. Really enjoyed the book and am looking forward to reading the series. I can see how it could be compared to NOTW. I haven't read any Wolfe but I also think this book had shades on Peter Brett's Warded Man series as well.
I got about 20 pages into it today in my failed bid for an afternoon nap (reading usually puts me to sleep in these circumstances). I would say it doesn't resemble NOtW so much as it is an almost exact replica. I'm talking like McDowells vs McDonalds. Controversial anti-hero telling his story to a chronicler with some kind of war/fighting, somehow related to his past, is about to change his life and deal with his past, along with the reverence of his longtime somewhat famous sword. I don't know how much more similar it can be, which is bad for me as I hated NOtW. The way it started is making me nervous, but at least the past story, so far, isn't in 1st person.eta: ebooks are great. THough I couldn't find it on P2P anywhere, I got a legit 60 page sample to see if I want to splurge the $5. Might have been able to get it from the library, but this is way easier...
hmmm.... I can see where you're coming from, but I really didn't get the same feel that it was as close to NOTW as you did. There are similarities with the setup, but I felt like Blood Song goes in a different direction with its story and characters (edit: and Ryan's writing style has a lot more of a classical feel for me than Rothfuss). But hey, different strokes.... you gave it a shot :thumbup:

 
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not sure if it's been mentioned in here, but I just finished Anthony Ryan's Blood Song, which is the first book in a planned new fantasy series. Awesome reading and I'm immediately jonesing for the next book - I think this is at least as good a debut (and for me, honestly, better) than Rothfuss' Name Of The Wind.the tone and mood of it kind of reminded me a lot of Gene Wolfe's Book Of The New Sun stuff, plus some echoes of Alexandre Dumas and George R.R. Martin.
I follow fantasy novels pretty closely and had not heard of this book at all. Looked it up, saw that it had good reviews and was $5 for the Kindle. Everyone seems to compare it to Name of the Wind, which is my favorite fantasy series so I am going to jump in and read it. Whether all these NOTW comparisons are warranted or just a result of clever marketing, I'll soon find out.
Hopefully it's just marketing. I'll check it out, but the further from NOTW for me, the better.
I don't think it's much like NOTW, but that's probably going to be a common reference for debut fantasy novels these days. Blood Song is told from one main character's POV, and we meet him as a young boy and follow him to adulthood, but that's the end of the similarities to me. Blood Song is a lot more concerned with religious themes and has a more classic style to the story with more action and a darker feel than NOTW.
Finished this up. Great suggestion. Really enjoyed the book and am looking forward to reading the series. I can see how it could be compared to NOTW. I haven't read any Wolfe but I also think this book had shades on Peter Brett's Warded Man series as well.
I can see that too - I think the Warded Man series is getting better for me as it goes along. The first book was alright - good backstory, but I thought the quality of the writing and dialogue was a little spotty. Then I really enjoyed what he did with the Jardir story in book two and felt that there was a big jump in quality there, and book three continued that pace.

 
not sure if it's been mentioned in here, but I just finished Anthony Ryan's Blood Song, which is the first book in a planned new fantasy series. Awesome reading and I'm immediately jonesing for the next book - I think this is at least as good a debut (and for me, honestly, better) than Rothfuss' Name Of The Wind.the tone and mood of it kind of reminded me a lot of Gene Wolfe's Book Of The New Sun stuff, plus some echoes of Alexandre Dumas and George R.R. Martin.
You got me with Gene Wolfe. He is one of the best living writers. Period.

 
Next up: The Wind Through The Keyhole by Stephen King
A big "meh" from me. I was really looking forward to the story of our ka-tet, or the story-within-the-story of a younger Roland. But most of the book was the story-within-the-story-within-the-story. 5/10

Next up: Wool. I got the newly released paperback so I think it is 1 through 5. Pretty pumped based on reviews here.

 
Finished Prince of Thorns and am about halfway through King of Thorns, the first two books in the Broken Empire series (last one to come out sometime around August 2013). Entertaining, first person, fantasy type novel with anti-hero protagonist. Easy read and pretty fun if you're into a teenage anti-hero with motivations of revenge and death.

 
I'm reading Killing Pablo which is about the hunt for Pablo Escobar. Then it's on to the14th and final book of the Wheel of Time series.
I really liked Killing Pablo.I've recently finished "Devil in the White City" which was okay. I would have liked more murder and less fair."American Sniper" would recommend. Much better then "Lone Survivor"Currently reading "The Shack" This is a pretty good story about a griief stricken father who spends a week end with God,Jesus,and the Holy Spirit in the country side. I'm at the 3/4 mark and It's getting a little long winded. I'm hoping it wraps up soon.
 
I've probably got a queue of four or five books to read thanks to this thread. :thumbup:

Started Swan Song a few days ago. Not totally into it yet, perhaps because it reminds me of The Twelve a lot (young supernatural girl with messed-up mother in a post-apocalyptic world). But I like the writing style and can't wait to devote more time to it.

 
I finished "Southern Gods" the other day. Blurb was better than the book. The writing was good, but the plotting sucked and smacked of allegory(Memphis 1951): "Sam Phelps" (Sam Phillips) and "Helios Records" (Sun Records) among others. There was an amazingly huge info-dump about 3/4 of the way through (makes "The Council Of Elrond" seem like a one page outline). The characters were fairly well-drawn early but turned into tropes. Too many coincidences for my taste, too.

In any case, I think the guy is talented and hopefully he can improve. I'd give the book a "C".

On to "Six Gun Tarot", which is promising only 5% in.

 
I'm reading Killing Pablo which is about the hunt for Pablo Escobar. Then it's on to the14th and final book of the Wheel of Time series.
I really liked Killing Pablo.I've recently finished

"Devil in the White City" which was okay. I would have liked more murder and less fair.

"American Sniper" would recommend. Much better then "Lone Survivor"

Currently reading "The Shack"

This is a pretty good story about a griief stricken father who spends a week end with God,Jesus,and the Holy Spirit in the country side. I'm at the 3/4 mark and It's getting a little long winded. I'm hoping it wraps up soon.
Damn. I really liked Devil in the White City, including the Fair stuff. Maybe not the Fair drama as much as I was amazed by all the stuff that came to be because of the Fair like alternating current, the guy named Pabst that made the blue ribbon winning beer, the guy Ferris that designed a giant wheel, etc.

Finished the last Wheel of Time book and thought it was a fitting finish. The series got off the rails for the middle third, but finished pretty strong.

Now reading El Narco. It's pretty damn disturbing. In the first chapter, they interview this guy who talks about mass beheadings, murdering police officers and the like. The author mentions that in America he would be one of the scariest serial killers alive but in Mexico he's just one of thousands that have done the same thing.

I think I'm going to read "Read Player One" next. And then maybe this Andrew Jackson biography called "American Lion" that I've been thinking about reading for the last six months.

 
Reading Joseph O'Neil's Netherland. It's good. But it's like someone convinced 1970s Delillo he's English and transplanted him into post 9/11 NYC. The writing styles are identical.

I'm not complaining, but it's really weird reading sometimes.

 
Currently switching back and forth between Jim Butcher's Cold Days, the most recent Dresden book, and Ken Follet's Winter of the World. They're about as different as you can get, but I'm enjoying both of them. Since my last post a litte while ago I've powered through all of the Dresden series on the recommendation of a friend. After that I've got a ton of options thanks to all the recommendations on here - I think I'll give either Blood Song, Name of the WInd, or Book of the New Sun a go.

This thread rulez :tebow:

 
not sure if it's been mentioned in here, but I just finished Anthony Ryan's Blood Song, which is the first book in a planned new fantasy series. Awesome reading and I'm immediately jonesing for the next book - I think this is at least as good a debut (and for me, honestly, better) than Rothfuss' Name Of The Wind.the tone and mood of it kind of reminded me a lot of Gene Wolfe's Book Of The New Sun stuff, plus some echoes of Alexandre Dumas and George R.R. Martin.
$5 for a big with that many 5 star ratings? I'm game (i.e. bought it).

Right now I'm wading through Leviathan's Wake - scifi space opera type novel. Really, really good book. It is holding my attention better than anything since Endurance: Shackelton's Incredible Voyage (which was the best book I've read in years and years - cannot recommend it enough). Been a while since I've read a space type book, and this is a keeper.

 
Currently switching back and forth between Jim Butcher's Cold Days, the most recent Dresden book, and Ken Follet's Winter of the World. They're about as different as you can get, but I'm enjoying both of them. Since my last post a litte while ago I've powered through all of the Dresden series on the recommendation of a friend. After that I've got a ton of options thanks to all the recommendations on here - I think I'll give either Blood Song, Name of the WInd, or Book of the New Sun a go.

This thread rulez :tebow:
Add The Way of Kings to your list. Right up there with Name of the Wind. Thoroughly enjoyed both.

 
The Teleportation Accident by Ned Beauman. What a strange book. The book follows Egon Loeser, starting in 1930s Berlin, who only cares about getting laid and snorting coke. He is obsessed with Adele Hitler (no relation) and follows her to Paris and Los Angeles. Oh yeah, and he's a set designer obsessed with a 17th century set designer. It is a very funny book and seemingly right up my alley, especially the Berlin and Los Angeles sections. It's strange because while I would recommend it to the FFA, somehow the sum is less than the individual parts.

The Dinner by Herman Koch. Pretty good.

The Casual Vacancy by J.K. Rowling. OK novel, pretty dark and depressing.

Salvation of a Saint by Keigo Higashino. This was pretty good. A puzzle type mystery; I liked The Devotion of Suspect X (with some of the same characters) better.

 
Currently switching back and forth between Jim Butcher's Cold Days, the most recent Dresden book, and Ken Follet's Winter of the World. They're about as different as you can get, but I'm enjoying both of them. Since my last post a litte while ago I've powered through all of the Dresden series on the recommendation of a friend. After that I've got a ton of options thanks to all the recommendations on here - I think I'll give either Blood Song, Name of the WInd, or Book of the New Sun a go.

This thread rulez :tebow:
Add The Way of Kings to your list. Right up there with Name of the Wind. Thoroughly enjoyed both.
IMO...

1. The Name of the Wind

2. The Way of Kings

3. Blood Song

I haven't read any Wolfe but have read a ton of the fantasy genre. I know there are a few here who hated NOTW but I really enjoyed it. Both the NOTW and Way of Kings are pretty long investments for reading with the WOKs being like around 1000 pages.

 
Currently switching back and forth between Jim Butcher's Cold Days, the most recent Dresden book, and Ken Follet's Winter of the World. They're about as different as you can get, but I'm enjoying both of them. Since my last post a litte while ago I've powered through all of the Dresden series on the recommendation of a friend. After that I've got a ton of options thanks to all the recommendations on here - I think I'll give either Blood Song, Name of the WInd, or Book of the New Sun a go. This thread rulez :tebow:
Add The Way of Kings to your list. Right up there with Name of the Wind. Thoroughly enjoyed both.
IMO... 1. The Name of the Wind2. The Way of Kings3. Blood Song I haven't read any Wolfe but have read a ton of the fantasy genre. I know there are a few here who hated NOTW but I really enjoyed it. Both the NOTW and Way of Kings are pretty long investments for reading with the WOKs being like around 1000 pages.
Currently switching back and forth between Jim Butcher's Cold Days, the most recent Dresden book, and Ken Follet's Winter of the World. They're about as different as you can get, but I'm enjoying both of them. Since my last post a litte while ago I've powered through all of the Dresden series on the recommendation of a friend. After that I've got a ton of options thanks to all the recommendations on here - I think I'll give either Blood Song, Name of the WInd, or Book of the New Sun a go. This thread rulez :tebow:
Add The Way of Kings to your list. Right up there with Name of the Wind. Thoroughly enjoyed both.
IMO... 1. The Name of the Wind2. The Way of Kings3. Blood Song I haven't read any Wolfe but have read a ton of the fantasy genre. I know there are a few here who hated NOTW but I really enjoyed it. Both the NOTW and Way of Kings are pretty long investments for reading with the WOKs being like around 1000 pages.
And WoK is the first of 11 I believe. I didn't really like the world it's set in but it's a very impressive and thought out reality. Overall I liked it but I'm not sure if I want to continue the series until after a few books come out. NotW blows like the wind off a sewage treatment plant. The sequel is worse. I got a little into Blood Song but put it down in favor of Ready Player One. I really fracking hate 1st person.
 
mad sweeney, on 24 Apr 2013 - 16:20, said:NotW blows like the wind off a sewage treatment plant. The sequel is worse.
:lol: I loved it. Can't wait for #3. Funny that you hated the first enough to read the second...
 
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Way of Kings has been added, thanks. On a side note, I fully recommend all of the Abercrombie books. The entire series was fantastic from start to finish. The only negative I'd have towards them is that I read them too fast, which unfortunately brought me to the end too quickly :cry:

 
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About halfway through Pastoralia by George Saunders. Entertaining stuff, but I expected a lot more. He came highly recommended, and I've been meaning to read him for a long time, but it's all a bunch of quirkiness and caricatures and digressions. Not terribly impressed.

 
I liked NOTW and thought it was a great debut, but the sequel was pretty awful. Just seemed like Rothfuss doesn't have much of a realistic frame of reference for writing outside the university setting, and the Kvothe-Deanna subplot is boring, repetitive and makes little to no sense.

I really wanted to like Ready Player One, but I wasn't able to finish it - I didn't like the author's writing style very much and felt like the whole "future society obsessed with 80s pop culture" thing was kind of a dumb gimmick.

 
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I liked NOTW and thought it was a great debut, but the sequel was pretty awful. Just seemed like Rothfuss doesn't have much of a realistic frame of reference for writing outside the university setting, and the whole Kvothe-Deanna subplot is boring, repetitive and makes little to no sense.

I really wanted to like Ready Player One, but I wasn't able to finish it - I didn't like the author's writing style very much and felt like the whole "future society obsessed with 80s pop culture" thing was kind of a dumb gimmick.
I'm only in chapter 3 and already almost sick of it. The plot hasn't really taken off yet so I'm not ready to pass judgment yet, but especially since it's 1st person, it needs to step it up quickly if I'm going to finish it.

 
Way of Kings has been added, thanks. On a side note, I fully recommend all of the Abercrombie books. The entire series was fantastic from start to finish. The only negative I'd have towards them is that I read them too fast, which unfortunately brought me to the end too quickly :cry:
Consumed those a while back. Loved those, too.

 
mad sweeney said:
Possum said:
I liked NOTW and thought it was a great debut, but the sequel was pretty awful. Just seemed like Rothfuss doesn't have much of a realistic frame of reference for writing outside the university setting, and the whole Kvothe-Deanna subplot is boring, repetitive and makes little to no sense.

I really wanted to like Ready Player One, but I wasn't able to finish it - I didn't like the author's writing style very much and felt like the whole "future society obsessed with 80s pop culture" thing was kind of a dumb gimmick.
I'm only in chapter 3 and already almost sick of it. The plot hasn't really taken off yet so I'm not ready to pass judgment yet, but especially since it's 1st person, it needs to step it up quickly if I'm going to finish it.
I didn't like it in that it had so many implausible projections of the future I couldn't suspend disbelief.
 
Finished 14 based on a mention in this thread. I'd give it a B-. It was entertaining enough, but not what I expected so I was slightly disappointed.

Now onto The Night Ranger, the latest John Wells novel by Alex Berenson. Anyone who enjoys modern-day espionage/thrillers should try this series.

 
I don't read many books anymore, sadly, but I'm trying to get one down each month and recently finished "The Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving", which I really liked quite a bit. Right up my alley. Have to love a book that mentions a Bulgarian Gas Mask early in the reading. :lmao:

 
Hi. I don't read much; it's a shame. I am looking for suggestions - a goal of mine for this year is to read a few books, which I really haven't been doing much lately. I think I got through only 2 books in all of 2012. I asked for suggestions maybe 2 years ago in a different thread here and got some good results.

I much prefer non-fiction. I like general pop culture, sociology/psychology, economics, food, and sports, but that's not an exhaustive list. Some of my favorites, so you get an idea - I've read all (or almost-all?) of Malcolm Gladwell's books and loved them. Freakonomics was very good. I like Chuck Klosterman, Anthony Bourdain, Michael Pollan, and books about soccer. Basically, I like somewhat-intellectual topics that aren't a bore or a drag to get through.

I got a $40 gift card to Barnes and Noble for Christmas, so that's a good start for a handful of books. I am open to any and all suggestions. One that caught my eye while skimming the previous page was Boomerang by Michael Lewis, though I don't know a ton about it.
Freakonomics is pretty much my favorite book. I thought Predictably Irrational was very good.I also really enjoyed Made to Stick and Switch by Chip and Dan Heath. I've applied ideas from both of them at work. Were I to pick one, I think Switch was my favorite. But that may be just the subject. Right now I'm more in need of advice on creating change than I am coming up with memorable ideas.

Currently reading The War of Art, which is pretty damn motivating if you find yourself in the position of needing to get off your ### to make something happen. It's also a very quick read.

I generally keep a rotation going of history -> social economics/work stuff -> mindless entertainment. I think I'd spend too much of my time reading spy novels otherwise. The last history book I read was Devil in the White City, which was fascinating.
:goodposting:

 
Halfway through El Narco and it is depressing. Wish we could have a meaningful conversation about the drug war in this country but it isn't happening.

My expectations for Ready Player One have been lowered because of the last few posts in the thread. I don't read any sci-fi generally so I think I may not be as critical as others.

 
Hi. I don't read much; it's a shame. I am looking for suggestions - a goal of mine for this year is to read a few books, which I really haven't been doing much lately. I think I got through only 2 books in all of 2012. I asked for suggestions maybe 2 years ago in a different thread here and got some good results.

I much prefer non-fiction. I like general pop culture, sociology/psychology, economics, food, and sports, but that's not an exhaustive list. Some of my favorites, so you get an idea - I've read all (or almost-all?) of Malcolm Gladwell's books and loved them. Freakonomics was very good. I like Chuck Klosterman, Anthony Bourdain, Michael Pollan, and books about soccer. Basically, I like somewhat-intellectual topics that aren't a bore or a drag to get through.

I got a $40 gift card to Barnes and Noble for Christmas, so that's a good start for a handful of books. I am open to any and all suggestions. One that caught my eye while skimming the previous page was Boomerang by Michael Lewis, though I don't know a ton about it.
Freakonomics is pretty much my favorite book. I thought Predictably Irrational was very good.I also really enjoyed Made to Stick and Switch by Chip and Dan Heath. I've applied ideas from both of them at work. Were I to pick one, I think Switch was my favorite. But that may be just the subject. Right now I'm more in need of advice on creating change than I am coming up with memorable ideas.

Currently reading The War of Art, which is pretty damn motivating if you find yourself in the position of needing to get off your ### to make something happen. It's also a very quick read.

I generally keep a rotation going of history -> social economics/work stuff -> mindless entertainment. I think I'd spend too much of my time reading spy novels otherwise. The last history book I read was Devil in the White City, which was fascinating.
:goodposting:
We seem to have the same taste. I just added El Narco to my list, I have loved drug books ever since I read "Rush" some 20 years ago.

I'm currently into Mark Bowden's Doctor Dealer. I'm just fascinated by the life these huge dealers guys live. and the balls it takes to get there.

And I just started "Do the Work" I guess it's a spin-off of "The War of Art"

 
Next up: The Wind Through The Keyhole by Stephen King
A big "meh" from me. I was really looking forward to the story of our ka-tet, or the story-within-the-story of a younger Roland. But most of the book was the story-within-the-story-within-the-story. 5/10

Next up: Wool. I got the newly released paperback so I think it is 1 through 5. Pretty pumped based on reviews here.
by Hugh Howey?

I see part one is free for the kindle so I downloaded it. I hope this is what you are referring to.

 
Next up: The Wind Through The Keyhole by Stephen King
A big "meh" from me. I was really looking forward to the story of our ka-tet, or the story-within-the-story of a younger Roland. But most of the book was the story-within-the-story-within-the-story. 5/10

Next up: Wool. I got the newly released paperback so I think it is 1 through 5. Pretty pumped based on reviews here.
by Hugh Howey?

I see part one is free for the kindle so I downloaded it. I hope this is what you are referring to.
Yes.

Just realize that part 1 is very very short.

I haven't been able to keep my eyes open at night so I've barely ready much of this.

 
I'm in the middle of Sig-Gun Tarot. Blurb from Amazon:

Nevada, 1869: Beyond the pitiless 40-Mile Desert lies Golgotha, a cattle town that hides more than its share of unnatural secrets. The sheriff bears the mark of the noose around his neck; some say he is a dead man whose time has not yet come. His half-human deputy is kin to coyotes. The mayor guards a hoard of mythical treasures. A banker’s wife belongs to a secret order of assassins. And a shady saloon owner, whose fingers are in everyone’s business, may know more about the town’s true origins than he’s letting on.

A haven for the blessed and the damned, Golgotha has known many strange events, but nothing like the primordial darkness stirring in the abandoned silver mine overlooking the town. Bleeding midnight, an ancient evil is spilling into the world, and unless the sheriff and his posse can saddle up in time, Golgotha will have seen its last dawn…and so will all of Creation.

R.S. Belcher’s The Six-Gun Tarot is “an astonishing blend of first-rate steampunk fantasy and Western adventure.” (Library Journal, Starred Review).


http://www.amazon.com/The-Six-Gun-Tarot-ebook/dp/B00AEC8OVQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1367063847&sr=1-1&keywords=six+gun+tarot

It's really good and the author has a great imagination. My only problem is what other reviewers mentioned: He's got 1st-novel disease. I like his ideas, but he's crammed too many of them in a relatively short book. Each of the 4 or 5 main protagonists could've carried a book this size.

That being said, it's a hell of a lot of fun. Like WOOL, you're kind of dropped into the middle of the story and don't really know what's going on. There are some great characters (esp. Maude & Mutt). I'd recommend it to anyone who's into weird tales.

 

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