Dresden said:Finally had the time to finish Changes. It was a fun read.
It doesn't sound like it.
Dresden said:Finally had the time to finish Changes. It was a fun read.
thomaser said:Do you have a specific version of the Kalevala in mind? Perhaps på norsk eller svensk? I really wanted to read it a few years ago, but forgot about it until I saw your post. Thanks, it's now on my wish-list!
_Isaac said:It doesn't sound like it.
viciouskillersquirrel said:It's been a while since I've posted in one of these threads, so I'll post what books I've finished since then:
The Coming of the Third Reich (Richard J Evans) - Fantastic book about the political conditions in Germany during the Weimar years and the atmosphere that led to the Nazis gaining power. I knew the Nazis were thugs and that pre-1939 Germany was political chaos, but I never understood the depth and breadth of it fully until now.
The Third Reich in Power (Richard J Evans) - Goes on from its predecessor from Hitler's siezure of power right up to the invasion of Poland. It details how the Nazi party operated, Hitler's drive to exterminate Jews and political enemies, his drive to a war economy from the very beginning and the insidious methods of total control they wielded over every aspect of German life.
The Third Reich at War (Richard J Evans) - Rather than follow the battles, it followed life under wartime Nazi rule, the beginnings of and organisation of the holocaust, the way the economy was run and the internal power struggles within the Nazi party. The way the first two books set things up, the end comes as the obvious conclusion to a war that had been planned since the 20s.
These books have taught me more about Nazi Germany and WW2 Europe than any others I've read previously. They're fantastic and I heartily recommend them.
mac said:And during the time of it's release that was the status of everyone in college. It is certainly a book from a different era but it's impact can not be understated. Today we have a entire genre of literature, the young-adult novella, that simply repeats the story of a dissatisfied and disillusioned youth unable to find his place.
Combichristoffersen said:Really? Personally I thought they got progressively worse, with the first book being the best one.
viciouskillersquirrel said:It's been a while since I've posted in one of these threads, so I'll post what books I've finished since then:
The Coming of the Third Reich (Richard J Evans) - Fantastic book about the political conditions in Germany during the Weimar years and the atmosphere that led to the Nazis gaining power. I knew the Nazis were thugs and that pre-1939 Germany was political chaos, but I never understood the depth and breadth of it fully until now.
The Third Reich in Power (Richard J Evans) - Goes on from its predecessor from Hitler's siezure of power right up to the invasion of Poland. It details how the Nazi party operated, Hitler's drive to exterminate Jews and political enemies, his drive to a war economy from the very beginning and the insidious methods of total control they wielded over every aspect of German life.
The Third Reich at War (Richard J Evans) - Rather than follow the battles, it followed life under wartime Nazi rule, the beginnings of and organisation of the holocaust, the way the economy was run and the internal power struggles within the Nazi party. The way the first two books set things up, the end comes as the obvious conclusion to a war that had been planned since the 20s.
These books have taught me more about Nazi Germany and WW2 Europe than any others I've read previously. They're fantastic and I heartily recommend them.
Kuraudo said:I think it did a good job of displaying his depression, and I could certainly relate to that, but there didn't seem to be any reason for him to be depressed in the first place.
vareon said:Just finished Verne's Around The World in 80 Days and surprised at how good it was.
mac said:I consider Catcher in the Rye to be the the prototype for young adult literature. Does anyone disagree?
roosters93 said:Yeah I'm feeling that too and the third book just feels like a pt.2 to the second book.
JeTmAn81 said:Stieg Larsson is the shizzle fo sheezy.
Espionage in Sweden by Mikael Rosquist (Tempus, 1988); Säpo Chief 1962-1970 by P.G. Vinge (Wahlström & Widstrand, 1988); Secret Forces by Jan Ottosson and Lars Magnusson (Tiden, 1991); Power Struggle for Säpo by Erik Magnusson (Corona, 1989); An Assignment by Carl Lidbom (Wahlström & Widstrand, 1990); and - somewhat surprisingly - An Agent in Place by Thomas Whiteside (Ballantine, 1966), which dealt with the Wennerström affair.
Mårtensson left home at 7.40 that morning. He got into his Volvo and drove towards the city but turned off to go across Stora Essingen and Gröndal into Södermalm. He drove down Hornsgatan and across to Bellmansgatan via Brännkyrkagatan. He turned left on to Tavastgatan at the Bishop's Arms pub and parked at the corner.
When he had got home the morning after the attack on Lundagatan, he opened the shoulder bag and spread the contents on the kitchen table. There was a wallet with an ID card, about 600 kronor, 200 American dollars, and a monthly travel card. There was a pack of Marlboro Lights, three Bic lighters, a box of throat lozenges, a packet of tissues, a toothbrush, toothpaste, three tampons in a side pocket, an unopened pack of condoms with a price sticker that showed they were bought at Gatwick Airport in London, a bound notebook with stiff black A4 dividers, five ballpoint pens, a can of Mace, a small bag with makeup, an FM radio with an earphone but no batteries, and Saturday's Aftonbladet.
"So far, not a thing. Neither of the victims is known to us. They seem to have been a conscientious pair. The woman was going to get her doctorate in a few weeks. This case gets top priority."
For Bublanski, murder always had top priority.
Salazar said:Night's Dawn, by Peter F. Hamilton.
That would be my favourite from the list. I'd not read a series before it that genuinely filled out the (billowing, faintly silly) name 'space opera'. It's deeply exciting.
"So far, not a thing. Neither of the victims is known to us. They seem to have been a conscientious pair. The woman was going to get her doctorate in a few weeks. This case gets top priority."
For Bublanski, murder always had top priority.
Fanboydestroyer said:I'm making my way through Imajica by Clive Barker. I find it to be an interesting read. I'm not too far, around page 170, but from what I've read, I've found it to be quite entertaining. Next up is The Great and Secret Show also by Clive Barker. But then after that, well, I'm not sure.
What do you guys think I should read?
The first 3 Dune books by Frank Herbert?
The Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe?
The Bas-Lag novels by China Mievielle?
The Revelation Space Trilogy by Alastiar Reynolds?
The Night Dawn Trilogy by Peter F. Hamilton?
Tim the Wiz said:So now we know what the CSI: Miami writers read in their spare time. :lol
Dune and Book of the New Sun first. Mieville's Bas-Lag novels second. And the rest, if you must.
Karakand said:this is all actual stieg larsson writing i am not kidding
I actually read The Third Reich in Power first (picked it up at a thrift shop) and it was so good, I tracked down the other two. Apart from reading them out of order, I read them back-to-back. They're fantastically readable.Guileless said:So you read all three volumes back-to-back-to-back? That's a lot of Nazism. I have copies of all three that I have picked up for bargain prices, but I haven't started reading them yet. By all accounts it will be the definitive work in English for a long time.
You're not wrong.Blackace said:These are fantastic! The Third Reich in Power is one of the great reads about WWII Germany.
Kuraudo said:Fanboydestroyer, go for Bas-Lag! Perdido Street Station is the only thing keeping me sane right now.
Wouldn't the "actual" Stieg Larsson writing be written in Swedish? Or did he do his own English translations?Karakand said:this is all actual stieg larsson writing i am not kidding
Pretty sure translation and source language won't erase away the shopping list realism, which is his most offensive quality.Monroeski said:Wouldn't the "actual" Stieg Larsson writing be written in Swedish? Or did he do his own English translations?
Karakand said:this is all actual translated stieg larsson writing i am not kidding
So his work can be good in spite of the fact that you don't speak Swedish and thus can't truly understand his writing (man it must really suck to live a life of such scepticism I sure hope you've never heard of the brain in a jar) but it can't be bad in spite of the fact that I don't speak Swedish and thus can't truly understand his writing. Got it.benita said:Edit: Just saw you're reply. I see where you're coming from but it's unfair to rag on those passages unless we can get a Swede to verify that they're representative of the quality of his native writing.
Anyway who gives a shit. He may not be Martin Amis but the books are the most compelling page-turners i've read in a decade.
:lolKarakand said:So his work can be good in spite of the fact that you don't speak Swedish and thus can't truly understand his writing (man it must really suck to live a life of such scepticism I sure hope you've never heard of the brain in a jar) but it can't be bad in spite of the fact that I don't speak Swedish and thus can't truly understand his writing. Got it.
Kuraudo said:Good grief, that's awful. I'm baffled by how people like Larsson, Dan Brown, Stephanie Meyer etc can get published let alone gain popularity.
Edit: Fanboydestroyer, go for Bas-Lag! Perdido Street Station is the only thing keeping me sane right now.
Dresden said:
Probably the finest fantasy series I have ever read. That's saying something. I bought the paperback of The Judging Eye last week, and it was an incredible ride. It's weird how the great cover for it doesn't show up online, even the Amazon listing shows the wrong cover.
It ranks above--in my opinion--the works of the following authors:
Tolkien
G.R.R.Martin
Steven Erikson
Robert Jordan
Mervyn Peake
Chine Mieville
Gene Wolfe
Dan Simmons
Joe Abercrombie
and more. All of them my favorite authors. But Bakker is a god among men, as Kellhus was among the men of the Holy War.
It's odd, I always thought that the Book of the New Sun was the best he's ever written, but after a while I think Book of the Short Sun (which takes place after Long Sun--chronologically, and this isn't a spoiler, the books go Long Sun, Short Sun, and New Sun, which some fans call the Briah cycle) is the best book set in that universe. New Sun is full of hidden depths, but when your enjoyment of the book hinges on being able to plumb its depths--which is difficult at first, given how labyrinthine it can get--I'm not sure if I read on just to see if he mind-fucked Thecla. Admittedly, this was way back in high school. I should give it another read someday.Fanboydestroyer said:Actually I am kind of curious to hear the general. consensus on Gene Wolfe. I received The Book of the New Sun as a random gift from my dad. No idea why he gave it to me, and he himself never read it. Well I do plan on reading it, I was curious to hear what others thought of the book, as well as some of Wolfe's other books. I'm interested in reading The Wizard Knight, Book of the Long Sun, and The Solider Books.
Danoss said:Was just about to post this. I'm just starting to read this now.
seal_club said:just started this one:
looking forward to seeing where it goes.