• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

What are you reading? (January 2014)

Okay, I've read the first 3 books, particularly enjoyed the first but have one question.
I absolutely HATED how the 2nd and 3rd books had half their focus on one-off catalyst like characters instead of those within the Black Company. Does this trend continue?

Hmm I'm not quite sure I know what you mean. I can tell you that from book 4 on its like a whole new series and the POV switches at time. Does that answer your question?
 

Haly

One day I realized that sadness is just another word for not enough coffee.
1150206_10100696273086166_1331507640_n.jpg

Stealth bragging/pick up post.
 

Ratrat

Member
Hmm I'm not quite sure I know what you mean. I can tell you that from book 4 on its like a whole new series and the POV switches at time. Does that answer your question?
Characters like Shed, Bomanz and
Raven
who's job seem to be
ressurrect the Dominator and little else.
 

Windam

Scaley member
Doing a re-read of The Silmarillion. :)
Mfu0qEB.jpg


Hopefully I'll have enough time with school/work to finish it and then start/finish The Children of Hurin.
 

Haly

One day I realized that sadness is just another word for not enough coffee.
He's just jealous that he doesnt have two

I'm looking forward to the sequel: How To Live With Two Penises - Advice, Meditations And Wisdom For Men Who Have Two Much
 
One thing in particular BLEW MY MIND, and I don't really want to repeat it here, not sure if it is a spoiler since the book is 3 years old, but it wouldn't be something I'd want to know if I hadn't read the book yet, but it has to do with Shallan and I learned of it from reading the Wiki -- then had to go back to the book to find proof of what I read. I couldn't believe that I missed such glaring details!

Seems a lot of people missed that. I caught it by the second reference, and it also blew my mind. The more I consider it, the more I think it's the best book I read all year. Absolutely perfect.
 
Okay, I've read the first 3 books, particularly enjoyed the first but have one question.
I absolutely HATED how the 2nd and 3rd books had half their focus on one-off catalyst like characters instead of those within the Black Company. Does this trend continue?

Avoiding spoilers here, but let's just say the composition of the company changes immensely by the end of the next trilogy. The series seems to be more about the idea of the Black Company and what it represents than any particular character.

Has anyone read Zoo by James Patterson?

Take this with a grain of salt since I don't read Patterson, but I imagine the chief complaint is he's not actually writing the books anymore. He slaps his name on the cover to get sales and the person listed below him does all the writing. Been that way for awhile now.
 

Kwixotik

Member
Currently seeking: magical realist or fantasy novel (preferably not a long series), low in tropes, not oppressively grimdark, literary value is a plus

The last fantasy novel I read was The Name of the Wind, which I very much enjoyed reading. But, the Gary Stu protagonist and some of the least interesting side characters ever created are preventing me from reading the second novel.

Any recommendations?
 

BorkBork

The Legend of BorkBork: BorkBorkity Borking
Currently reading another of Ursula K. Le Guin's short stories collection: Orsinian Tales. It's not science fiction like most of her other stories, but rather takes place in a fictional Central European country.

How do you like them? I recently read a few from that world from her collection The Unreal and the Real, but I'm not sure if I'm missing any.
 
D

Deleted member 1235

Unconfirmed Member
half way through 'the way of kings'

it's really good. nice slow build and not much clarity to the magic systems, which I'm enjoying slowly learning about.

Currently seeking: magical realist or fantasy novel
I love anything about magic really, I recently read the night circus (well not that recently)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/9361589-the-night-circus?ac=1

and quite enjoyed it. reviews on goodreads appear pretty divisive though.
 

Donthizz#

Member
Currently seeking: magical realist or fantasy novel (preferably not a long series), low in tropes, not oppressively grimdark, literary value is a plus

The last fantasy novel I read was The Name of the Wind, which I very much enjoyed reading. But, the Gary Stu protagonist and some of the least interesting side characters ever created are preventing me from reading the second novel.

Any recommendations?

Check out Garden's of the moon by Steven Erikson.
 
Guys need a bit of advice regarding The Wheel of Time series.

I originally read up to book 11 years ago, then when book 12 was released I re-read the entire series again.

Now I still have books 13 and 14 left to go but I don't know whether to just read those two, to go back and read from book 10 or to start over again.

There's just so much going on that I'm afraid if I just read that 13 and 14 I won't have a clue what's going on. That being said, the last few books that I read, particularly 8-11 dragged on for so long I almost gave up the second time I read them.


Also as an aside, anyone who hasn't read "Magician" by Raymond E. Feist or "Legend" by David Gemmell, do it. Do it now.
 

Chipotle

Member
Just finished MaddAddam by Margaret Atwood. Enjoyed it and the two others from the trilogy. They're fun, jokey and easy to read.

Next is either a re-read of Crash by J G Ballard or my first read of Catcher in the Rye - both for university.
 

Mumei

Member
Anansi is a sequel of sorts to American Gods. Neverwhere is one of his earlier books and it kind of shows. I think the strongest of the three is Stardust. And you didn't mention it, but The Graveyard Book is my favorite thing he's ever written.

Stardust and The Graveyard Book are my favorite Gaiman prose works that I've read.

None of his prose work compares to Sandman!
 

Piecake

Member
Currently seeking: magical realist or fantasy novel (preferably not a long series), low in tropes, not oppressively grimdark, literary value is a plus

The last fantasy novel I read was The Name of the Wind, which I very much enjoyed reading. But, the Gary Stu protagonist and some of the least interesting side characters ever created are preventing me from reading the second novel.

Any recommendations?

The Master and Margarita by Bulgakov (Diana Burgin Translation)
 

SBH

Member
I have been going through my old books. Read half of this last night:
roy-shaw-prettyboy70qvm.jpg

I never understood people like this, so it's interesting to see what goes inside a head of one.
I went to a local bar on new year and a guy was trying to get me fight people with him for fun. I understand the fun of fighting in the ring/octagon, but drunk random people at a bar?
 

X-Frame

Member
Seems a lot of people missed that. I caught it by the second reference, and it also blew my mind. The more I consider it, the more I think it's the best book I read all year. Absolutely perfect.

I wish I caught it, or that I didn't read the Wiki and caught it myself the next time I read it, as this really changes so much about her character now for me.

And since the next book is her book, we should know what the storm happened! Haha.
 

Haly

One day I realized that sadness is just another word for not enough coffee.
Currently seeking: magical realist or fantasy novel (preferably not a long series), low in tropes, not oppressively grimdark, literary value is a plus

The last fantasy novel I read was The Name of the Wind, which I very much enjoyed reading. But, the Gary Stu protagonist and some of the least interesting side characters ever created are preventing me from reading the second novel.

Any recommendations?

Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell
House of the Stag
A Wizard of Earthsea
Mr. Fox - by Helen Oyemiyemi
 

ShaneB

Member
Marathoned a good portion of Ordinary Grace while travelling today and still some time to go. Really really loving it so far, has a bit of everything that I like.
 

Nymerio

Member
I'm about 70% through the first Wheel of Time book and the whole running away from dark riders thing is giving me crazy LotR vibes. Really enjoying it so far.
 

Ashes

Banned
Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell
House of the Stag
A Wizard of Earthsea
Mr. Fox - by Helen Oyemiyemi

I really liked Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell. Though I would add a cautionary - it may require some patience.

If I liked the first, is there a chance I would like that latter three? I really haven't read anything much in the vain of the former.
 
I'm about 70% through the first Wheel of Time book and the whole running away from dark riders thing is giving me crazy LotR vibes. Really enjoying it so far.

The Wheel of Time series is a tough one. It is great, beyond great it is fantastic. But you hit book 8 you have to get through one or two books before a second wind comes and the series can be enjoyably finished.
 

Haly

One day I realized that sadness is just another word for not enough coffee.
I really liked Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell. Though I would add a cautionary - it may require some patience.

If I liked the first, is there a chance I would like that latter three? I really haven't read anything much in the vain of the former.

No, those are all wildly different books that merely fit under the umbrella of "not another generic white male power fantasy set in changeless medieval Europe". They're good books in their own right but that's about it. Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell is pretty unique.

Mr. Fox is magic realism and is closer to Kafka/Murakami than anything else.
 
I really liked Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell. Though I would add a cautionary - it may require some patience.

Indeed. I'm a few hundred pages in, and after every chapter I am bewildered that I am still entertained, but the narrative voice and the creepy worldbuilding are doing it.
 

Donthizz#

Member
Malazan is a pretty long series. The first book actually turned me off the series though, I hear the sequels are much better.

What about A Song of Ice and Fire?

ice and fire is a must for fantasy readers IMO, also give Mistborn by sanderson a try, best magic/action I've seen in a fantasy series.
 

Woorloog

Banned
Malazan is a pretty long series. The first book actually turned me off the series though, I hear the sequels are much better.

What about A Song of Ice and Fire?

Malazan eh? The author's foreword claimed it is a book you either stop reading before halfway through, or you read it and read the rest of the series.
I read the first book, judged it good enough but not interested enough to get sequels.

A Song of Ice and Fire is very good, though it is still unfinished, and no one has any idea how long it takes before Martin gets it finished.
 
This may be the greatest book every written.

1521777_10100696718558436_580954423_n.jpg

oooooh, I suddenly remember this thing from a documentary I watching years ago. I don't know why reading that description triggered that association.

(I thought it was a novel at first, and not seriously about having a huge dick)

edit: on second though, it's not written by the same person, the association was just with a documentary. I do remember that his wife couldn't stfu about it though.
edit2: and now I want to read it.
 

Lafiel

と呼ぶがよい
1480658_583702445035420_640630222_n.jpg


All the stuff I'm planning on reading in the next 2-months till Uni starts all over again. Already finished 1984 and Galapagos which were both genuinely great. And the former has reinforced my opinion that anyone who argues against x politically because of stability reasons is a fascist.

Now Reading: (or re-reading) - Cats Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut! already read like 20-pages of it again. Sogood.gif.
 
I just finished reading The Fault in Our Stars by John Green, yes that story about kids with cancer. I cried lots as to be expected, but it wasn't particularly preachy and glamorous in its portrayal so that was a welcome change.

Might dive into "Robert Galbriath's" The Cuckoo's Calling next.

All the stuff I'm planning on reading in the next 2-months till Uni starts all over again. Already finished 1984 and Galapagos which were both genuinely great. And the former has reinforced my opinion that anyone who argues against x politically because of stability is a fascist.

Now Reading: (or re-reading) Cats Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut.

You never read 1984 and Animal Farm for school?
Cat's Cradle has been sitting on my shelf for years now, should probably get on that.
 

Error

Jealous of the Glory that is Johnny Depp
Just finished Shift. Superb ending. Love
how it all comes together at the end and connects with the ending of Wool
. Dunno if I liked it more than Wool though. Wool's premise was a very simple opressed vs opressors plot with tons of depth when it came to world-building and characters so it worked extremely. Shift is a lot more complex, there are more shades of grays and things are not as clear cut as they were in Wool.

So far I have enjoyed the fuck out of this series and can't wait to read its conclusion with Dust. This dude just know how to write compelling science fiction, a lot of times sci-fi writers get lost in the worlds they create and forget that you need good characters to carry the whole thing, that doesn't happen in this series each character in the books is superbly written and developed. Good show Mr. Howey.
 

Karakand

Member
After 4 years Goodreads finally fixed their reading challenge so that I can't set a goal of 0 books by entering in 0.5 books as my goal. :((((((((((((((((((((((

End of an era.
 

Nymerio

Member
The Wheel of Time series is a tough one. It is great, beyond great it is fantastic. But you hit book 8 you have to get through one or two books before a second wind comes and the series can be enjoyably finished.

So far it's really amazing, I'm almost done with the first book. It doesn't bother me that there may be a couple slow books, I'm pretty tolerant to things like that. And it looks like I have a couple books left before I hit them anyway.
 
I just finished re-reading Michio Kaku's 'Physics of the Future" again.
And I'm going to get started re-reading 'The Singularity is Near' by Ray Kurzweil again soon.

I've pre-ordered and am looking forward to reading Michio Kaku's 'The Future of the Mind' soon.
I'm sure it'll be a great book. And I've wanted a new Michio Kaku book for a long time.
 
Top Bottom