Read everything Asimov wrote that decade. Will never forget the Foundation trilogy (and beyond).
Read everything Asimov wrote that decade. Will never forget the Foundation trilogy (and beyond).
They are quick easy reads. If you can get to "61 Hours" it starts a 4 book arc moving to "Worth Dying For" to "A Wanted Man" to "Never Go Back".Nothing To Lose by Lee Childs. A Jack Reacher novel. I have a feeling I'm going to get addicted to the series.
The second one is also awesome. I always thought those two books would for an incredible movie.The Forge of God. Greg Bear. aliens come to blow up earth. takes place in the 90's. very good.
just picked it up and read a few pages. I like where it's going.The second one is also awesome. I always thought those two books would for an incredible movie.The Forge of God. Greg Bear. aliens come to blow up earth. takes place in the 90's. very good.
If you want to dive into the Pynchon, go back to his first three books and read them in order.: V., Crying of Lot 49, then tackle Gravity's Rainbow.Just finished this up. Was good not great. But was the first Pynchon I've read. Inherent Vice sounds interesting; heard Gravity's Rainbow is a wild read.Got Pynchon's Bleeding Edge for xmas. After the first few chapters it's feeling like old skool V./GR Pynchon, which is a good thing. It ain't Pynchon Lite, that's for sure.
I'm on "Nothing to Lose" right now too. I got hooked with the first one immediately and have really liked the series to this point, this is number 12. Big fan of Reacher.They are quick easy reads. If you can get to "61 Hours" it starts a 4 book arc moving to "Worth Dying For" to "A Wanted Man" to "Never Go Back".Nothing To Lose by Lee Childs. A Jack Reacher novel. I have a feeling I'm going to get addicted to the series.
You can blow through them pretty fast. Also "One Shot" was good - the Tom Cruise movie "Jack Reacher"
The Reacher series lost me around book 4, which I'm told was kind of a bumpy time for the series anyway. Maybe I should pick it back up, though.I'm on "Nothing to Lose" right now too. I got hooked with the first one immediately and have really liked the series to this point, this is number 12. Big fan of Reacher.They are quick easy reads. If you can get to "61 Hours" it starts a 4 book arc moving to "Worth Dying For" to "A Wanted Man" to "Never Go Back".Nothing To Lose by Lee Childs. A Jack Reacher novel. I have a feeling I'm going to get addicted to the series.
You can blow through them pretty fast. Also "One Shot" was good - the Tom Cruise movie "Jack Reacher"
I've read this, and a few other of his books. "A Fine Dark Line" was the best, but I haven't gone back for a while, as it seems like he writes the same book over and over in many ways.D_House said:Recently read Joe Lansdale's The Bottoms... Was on my to read list, probably from recs on here.
Depression-era murder mystery set in East Texas and told from the perspective of a 12 year old kid. Heavy handed on the racial themes, although obviously that played a big part in daily life back then. Very reminiscent (derivative even) of To Kill a Mockingbird.
Narration was also kind of confused - the events were alternately related as understood by a 12 year old and by that same 12 year old several years later as an elderly man in a rest home.... Overall I wouldn't recommend it, although I'll give Lansdale another try sometime as I know he has a cult following.
Just about finished with this one based on both your recommendations. Awesome book. Hard to put down.Finished this a couple of weeks ago, loved it. If the second book had been out already would have been on that immediately. I think it's due in a few months. The magic stuff is unique and interesting and intelligently influences the course of events in the book. There's a nice ensemble cast built up, with the story told from a few different characters first person POV, Tamas (mentioned above), his son Taniel (a high ranking soldier and powder mage) and Adamat, a sort of PI type working for Tamas on unravelling the plots and conspiracies behind the course of events.Here's some new fantasy stuff I've read recently:
Promise Of Blood by Brian McClellan (book one of a planned trilogy): I thought this one was excellent and would give it five stars out of five. It's a fantasy novel that's not set in the traditional medieval setting - instead, it's set in a fictional country called Adopest and the technology, weapons and government are very similar to the American Revolutionary War period. There are flintlock muskets, single-shot pistols, cavalry swords, horse and carriages, and executions take place by guillotine. Also, magic is real in this world and there are three levels - Privileged, who are basically sorcerers with serious powers that use special gloves to work magic and occupy high-ranking positions as nobility, royal enforcers, etc.; Knacked, who are people that just have one special talent, like for instance never having to go to sleep or having perfect memory; and the Marked, also known as powder mages, whose powers are based on gunpowder. They can blow up powder stores from distance or make bullets curve around walls, and they can snort the gunpowder to gain short-term increased strength and perception. The concept is really cool, and the writing is excellent - this is a debut novel but the guy writes like a veteran. The novel follows Field Marshal Tamas, a powder mage and Adopest war hero, as he leads a coup against the current king and nobility and the fallout that comes with that. I highly recommend this one - the next book comes out in May and I've already marked my calendar for it.
Plot driven with good and frequent action sequences, there's a wide cast of good minor characters all with their own secrets and agendas (see plots and conspiracies) which drive the story's direction. I'm looking forward to the second one, thanks for the recommendation.
I'm close to 100 pages into "She Comes Undone" pretty good so far. I kinda get a 40's/50's "Prozac Nation" feel to it,Well thanks to several of you! It was a good read. Will have to check out I Know This Much is True.Probably several of us. I Know This Much is True by the same author is as good or better as well.She's Come Undone by Wally Lamb.
Someone in this thread recommended it - about a third of the way thru and good (ableit dark) so far.
Now on to Jack Reacher #9 / One Shot
Still not available on Nook.If anyone is interested Sand Omnibus from Hugh Howey is on sale for $2. I loved Wool, so this is an instabuy.
missed it.If anyone is interested Sand Omnibus from Hugh Howey is on sale for $2. I loved Wool, so this is an instabuy.
It's worth it for the $5 or whatever it is.missed it.If anyone is interested Sand Omnibus from Hugh Howey is on sale for $2. I loved Wool, so this is an instabuy.![]()
Is this a Dust sequel?Vrana said:It's worth it for the $5 or whatever it is.Apes with Guns said:missed it.If anyone is interested Sand Omnibus from Hugh Howey is on sale for $2. I loved Wool, so this is an instabuy.![]()
I really enjoyed it. Not as good as Wool, but better than Shift and Dust imo.
Under the influence of their charismatic classics professor, a group of clever, eccentric misfits at an elite New England college discover a way of thinking and living that is a world away from the humdrum existence of their contemporaries. But when they go beyond the boundaries of normal morality their lives are changed profoundly and forever, and they discover how hard it can be to truly live and how easy it is to kill.
No. Start of a different series by the same guy.Is this a Dust sequel?Vrana said:It's worth it for the $5 or whatever it is.Apes with Guns said:missed it.If anyone is interested Sand Omnibus from Hugh Howey is on sale for $2. I loved Wool, so this is an instabuy.![]()
I really enjoyed it. Not as good as Wool, but better than Shift and Dust imo.
Oh! Also Red Rising by Pierce Brown is on sale for $2!
url=http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00CVS2J80?ie=UTF8&tag=randohouseinc70189-20&linkCode=xm2&camp=1789&creativeASIN=B00CVS2J80&Ref=Email_RHPG_4/10/2014]Red Rising on Amazon
The war begins...
Darrow is a Helldiver, one of a thousand men and women who live in the vast caves beneath the surface of Mars. Generations of Helldivers have spent their lives toiling to mine the precious elements that will allow the planet to be terraformed. Just knowing that one day people will be able to walk the surface of the planet is enough to justify their sacrifice. The Earth is dying, and Darrow and his people are the only hope humanity has left.
Until the day Darrow learns that it is all a lie. Mars is habitable - and indeed has been inhabited for generations by a class of people calling themselves the Golds. The Golds regard Darrow and his fellows as slave labour, to be exploited and worked to death without a second thought.
With the help of a mysterious group of rebels, Darrow disguises himself as a Gold and infiltrates their command school, intent on taking down his oppressors from the inside.
But the command school is a battlefield. And Darrow isn't the only student with an agenda
great price on the the opening book in Abercrombie's First Law series. If you like fantasy, and are looking for something different, drop $2 on this.
The Blade Itself on Amazon
Thanks! Both added to my collection of things to read.Oh! Also Red Rising by Pierce Brown is on sale for $2!
url=http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00CVS2J80?ie=UTF8&tag=randohouseinc70189-20&linkCode=xm2&camp=1789&creativeASIN=B00CVS2J80&Ref=Email_RHPG_4/10/2014]Red Rising on Amazon
The war begins...
Darrow is a Helldiver, one of a thousand men and women who live in the vast caves beneath the surface of Mars. Generations of Helldivers have spent their lives toiling to mine the precious elements that will allow the planet to be terraformed. Just knowing that one day people will be able to walk the surface of the planet is enough to justify their sacrifice. The Earth is dying, and Darrow and his people are the only hope humanity has left.
Until the day Darrow learns that it is all a lie. Mars is habitable - and indeed has been inhabited for generations by a class of people calling themselves the Golds. The Golds regard Darrow and his fellows as slave labour, to be exploited and worked to death without a second thought.
With the help of a mysterious group of rebels, Darrow disguises himself as a Gold and infiltrates their command school, intent on taking down his oppressors from the inside.
But the command school is a battlefield. And Darrow isn't the only student with an agenda
Man, I just bought this a couple of weeks ago.great price on the the opening book in Abercrombie's First Law series. If you like fantasy, and are looking for something different, drop $2 on this.
The Blade Itself on Amazon
"DOING HARM, by Kelly Parsons: best damn medical thriller I've read in 25 years. Terrifying OR scenes, characters with real texture." -- Stephen KingI just read Doing Harm. The author, Kelly Parsons, is a friend of mine from high school. He's always been really freaking smart, so I figured his first book, if nothing else, would be extremely well written. It is. It's also quite the page-turner. It's a medical thriller by a urologist who teaches surgery at UCSD med school, so he knows what he's writing about. His next book (already written and sold) is also a medical thriller, but I get the feeling that Kelly could write a riveting book in any genre he chose. He's got a pretty great day job, but he's a natural writer and I'd be a little surprised if he's not a full-time novelist within a few years. In any case, putting aside my bias as best I can, I recommend the book heartily.
Added to Wish List"DOING HARM, by Kelly Parsons: best damn medical thriller I've read in 25 years. Terrifying OR scenes, characters with real texture." -- Stephen KingI just read Doing Harm. The author, Kelly Parsons, is a friend of mine from high school. He's always been really freaking smart, so I figured his first book, if nothing else, would be extremely well written. It is. It's also quite the page-turner. It's a medical thriller by a urologist who teaches surgery at UCSD med school, so he knows what he's writing about. His next book (already written and sold) is also a medical thriller, but I get the feeling that Kelly could write a riveting book in any genre he chose. He's got a pretty great day job, but he's a natural writer and I'd be a little surprised if he's not a full-time novelist within a few years. In any case, putting aside my bias as best I can, I recommend the book heartily.
Added to Wish List"DOING HARM, by Kelly Parsons: best damn medical thriller I've read in 25 years. Terrifying OR scenes, characters with real texture." -- Stephen KingI just read Doing Harm. The author, Kelly Parsons, is a friend of mine from high school. He's always been really freaking smart, so I figured his first book, if nothing else, would be extremely well written. It is. It's also quite the page-turner. It's a medical thriller by a urologist who teaches surgery at UCSD med school, so he knows what he's writing about. His next book (already written and sold) is also a medical thriller, but I get the feeling that Kelly could write a riveting book in any genre he chose. He's got a pretty great day job, but he's a natural writer and I'd be a little surprised if he's not a full-time novelist within a few years. In any case, putting aside my bias as best I can, I recommend the book heartily.
I read Tartt'a first book The Secret History and was a bit disappointed but also have Goldfinch on my list.I recommended Goldfinch in here last year. Just won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.![]()
As a non-believer in the trinity, I'd be interested to know your take on this book.Been on a Joyce Carol Oates run lately. But about to start How Jesus Became God by Bart Ehrman, a very interesting writer on biblical and religious topics.
Have you read the spinoff books?great price on the the opening book in Abercrombie's First Law series. If you like fantasy, and are looking for something different, drop $2 on this.
The Blade Itself on Amazon