cantona222 said:I'm reading: Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus
I'm getting married soon. That's why I wanna learn about females.
Man......... I'm just starting to notice how they are from a different plant.
I'm looking forward to the "Shit I just got married, wtf did I do????"-thread. :lolcantona222 said:I'm reading: Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus
I'm getting married soon. That's why I wanna learn about females.
Man......... I'm just starting to notice how they are from a different plant.
I went to a lecture of this writer a while ago. Incredibly charming and intelligent man, and an extraordinary speaker. I really ought to pick up one of his books.Foob said:just bought this
Foob said:just bought this
http://rgr-static1.tangentlabs.co.uk/images/bau/97803409/9780340921579/0/0/plain/thousand-autumns-of-jacob-de-zoet.jpg[img][/QUOTE]
i really want to read this - i loved cloud atlas - but i vowed never to waste money on hardbacks a while back. please keep us updated on your impressions.
eznark said:Finished with the First Law trilogy. Taken as a whole, it starts out excellent, muddles around in the middle, then takes a dump on you in the end. I understand that was sort of the point and from a few chapters into the first book you can see how it's all going to end but I've never been a fan of books that shit on everything just for the sake of being different.
Pretty obvious there will be another series of books set in this universe (I guess there already is one?) and if so, I hope the flashes of light-heartedness that shone through in The Blade Itself come back and the bleak "everything sucks then sucks even worse later" tone of the second two books takes a bit of a back seat.
the scene with Bayaz and Glotka, where Bayaz sits down and wraps up every little thing neatly....utterly abysmal and insulting to the reader.
That said, it's mostly entertaining in a schlocky kind of way. Seems like Abercrombie wrote all the battles scenarios first, then figures out how to loosely tie them together with a story. At the very least you can tell he spent about 10x as much effort crafting the killing and torture scenes than he did anything else.
All three of those choices are easy reads. The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms is the most unusual in terms of style, prose and tone, but is one of my favourite reads so far this year. The Name of the Wind is the best of the three, but be prepared to wait for the final volumes of the trilogy. The Night Angel trilogy has the benefit of being finished, but I've not read it, so I can't give any in depth feedback.survivor said:Been reading LOTR: Two Towers. Great read so far. It was a hard decision to not see the movie first, but I decided it's better if I read the book then see the movie.
BTW I have been trying to expand my reading time this summer since I got a lot of free time. Out of these books which ones are quick and easy to read: Name of the Wind, The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, and The Night Angel Trilogy.
eznark said:uhhhh, how long have you been dating?
cantona222 said:I'm from Kuwait, here it's different. it's kind of "arranged" marriage. You may think it is weird, but it works. Here's how it is done in our conservative Muslim society:
Indeedfinowns said:But, the Bloody Nine was awesome right?
jonremedy said:Can anyone recommend some Hard SF? My favorite genre, and I'm struggling trying to find interesting stuff to read.
jonremedy said:Can anyone recommend some Hard SF? My favorite genre, and I'm struggling trying to find interesting stuff to read.
Probably Clancy's best book. The Hunt for Red October and Debt of Honor are quite good as well, but not as good as Red Storm Rising. IMO.Dreams-Visions said:Red Storm Rising.
I know I'm late, but what the fuck ever. Good so far.
Finished The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle a few months ago and this one's next up on my book purchases. I'm really excited!demon said:Should be finishing up Murakami's "South of the Border, West of the Sun" shortly.
Jedeye Sniv said:Recently started:
ContactHarvest.jpg
Not nearly as good as the Nylund books IMO, which I thought were really good pulp-SF with a good pace to them. THis seems a little slower but it still is entertaining. After this I have the Halo short story collection as well, getting my hype up before Reach comes out.
Sheep Chase is his worst book imo, the sequel (Dance Dance Dance) on the other hand is one of his better works. If you don't like it strange, though, it's possible that you won't like any of the other books by Murakami. Norwegian Woods is pretty much the only non-strange book he's written (which is a good thing imo, Murakami's novels live by being strange).Xater said:I loved Norwegian Wood, but this one was kinda disappointing. A bit too strange for my taste and it didn't flow very well although it was only 300 pages long.
wrowa said:Sheep Chase is his worst book imo, the sequel (Dance Dance Dance) on the other hand is one of his better works. If you don't like it strange, though, it's possible that you won't like any of the other books by Murakami. Norwegian Woods is pretty much the only non-strange book he's written (which is a good thing imo, Murakami's novels live by being strange).
You should give Hard-boiled Wonderland and the End of the World a try. Probably my favorite Murakami.
Xater said:Well there is nothing wrong with being strange but this book I thought was so strange that it got incoherent. I am still looking forward to giving some of his other more popular books a chance in the future.
Murakamis South of the Border, West of the Sun is not "strange" and insanely awesome. After the Quake aside from the last story (which i totally love) isn't strange either.wrowa said:Just finished The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo this morning. Yeah, I'm pretty late with that. Was a great book, though, better than I imagined. Can't wait to start reading the second one.
Sheep Chase is his worst book imo, the sequel (Dance Dance Dance) on the other hand is one of his better works. If you don't like it strange, though, it's possible that you won't like any of the other books by Murakami. Norwegian Woods is pretty much the only non-strange book he's written (which is a good thing imo, Murakami's novels live by being strange).
You should give Hard-boiled Wonderland and the End of the World a try. Probably my favorite Murakami.
Salazar said:Maynard Mack's Alexander Pope: A Life - which is terrific.
Dave Sim's Church & State Vol.1 - which is also extraordinarily good. I can't get enough Cerebus at the moment.
Christopher Hill's Some Intellectual Consequences of the English Revolution, which is a beautifully (controversially) compressed study of a boundless, depthless period.
innervision961 said:Currently Reading:
Carl Sagan - Varieties of Scientific Experience: A Personal View of the Search for God
I would definitely rate this one 5/5 stars, although I haven't finished it up quite yet, I just started it last night during my break at work and almost couldn't put it down. I know its been said a thousand times over, but this man was just so brilliant and eloquent. He is my favorite human mind ever, no doubt.
_Isaac said:http://i49.tinypic.com/dpwric.jpg[IMG]
This one.
[B]The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ[/B] by Philip Pullman[/QUOTE]
Woah, what's this about (besides Jesus :lol)?