Thanks!checkout Pandora's Star by Peter F Hamilton or Levaiathan Wakes by James Corey.
Just picked up Pandor'as Star. Big books scare me but we'll see how it goes.
Thanks!checkout Pandora's Star by Peter F Hamilton or Levaiathan Wakes by James Corey.
The Vorkosigan series by Lois McMaster Bujold.Any good sci-fi story suggestions?
Something with a cool futuristic world and that is easy to understand. Not too many over the top made up words.
I just finished The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers, and I loved it!
If you're looking for a space-opera with a character driven story (and amazing characters at that) with an adventure on a wormhole-tunneling spaceship crewed by multiple different alien species, then I highly recommend this book. Think Firefly, with some Mass Effect (although this is a civilian and unarmed spaceship, not a warship). Wonderful world building too in my opinion.
Time Traveler Wife isn't clicking as much as I expected to be. I have never been a big fan of romantic genre, and even with this great Scifi hook to it, my attention is beginning to wane halfway in.
You're dead to me.
This sounds so far up my alley it's almost out of my alley again.I just finished The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers, and I loved it!
If you're looking for a space-opera with a character driven story (and amazing characters at that) with an adventure on a wormhole-tunneling spaceship crewed by multiple different alien species, then I highly recommend this book. Think Firefly, with some Mass Effect (although this is a civilian and unarmed spaceship, not a warship). Wonderful world building too in my opinion.
Yeah, he's great and his works are so varied from what I've read so far.Wish I could go back and re-read Dick like I did back in the day. I read so many of them that I've lost track if there's any books that I haven't read. Could very well be that I've read them all but there are some I'm not sure about. Don't think I've read The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike, but I'm not sure.
A Scanner Darkly, Ubik, Time Out of Joint, The Divine Invasion, VALIS and The Man in the High Castle are all great works of fiction.
I don't see ASOIAF as high fantasy, it's pretty ground for the most part, magic being portrayed as a mysterious, subtle but a powerful force of nature is pretty great, never straight in your face. Right now I'm on the first book of the Farseer trilogy, I like it so far, but not as much as the Ice and Fire books.I'm finishing up the Farseer Trilogy with Assassin's Quest, and still reading 1984. These snow days aren't helping my class get through the book very quickly, either.
I've never been that big on high fantasy, but I liked the Song of Ice and Fire series and now the Farseer Trilogy. Maybe my tastes are changing.
I don't see ASOIAF as high fantasy, it's pretty ground for the most part, magic being portrayed as a mysterious, subtle but a powerful force of nature is pretty great, never straight in your face. Right now I'm on the first book of the Farseer trilogy, I like it so far, but not as much as the Ice and Fire books.
I'm glad I found this thread, by the way.
With magic slowly returning to the world, I'd say the last two books are going to lean more towards high fantasy, if they come out at all.Yeah, Ice and Fire is the very definition of low fantasy. It does occasionally tip towards the high when describing the situation in the north and dragons, but considering those are taken as parts of the world and not generated by magic, then you would have to say low.
You can finish the book without ever looking up Wikipedia, and still get nearly all of the terms. Names of people, houses, places are easy, just take them as they are, from the screenshots you took, some of them were immediately explained. Special objects takes time, because you need to piece the information together when the they are utilized in the book, and sometimes they have multiple functions.Finally reading Dune, or trying to at least. It's difficult. Right away there's like 20 new terms/lore items that are confusing me as if I'm supposed to know what the fuck...throw me a bone, Frank.
You can finish the book without ever looking up Wikipedia, and still get nearly all of the terms. Names of people, houses, places are easy, just take them as they are, from the screenshots you took, some of them were immediately explained. Special objects takes time, because you need to piece the information together when the they are utilized in the book, and sometimes they have multiple functions.
Right now I'm on the first book of the Farseer trilogy
That 'bleak apocalypse' thread inspired me to buy I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream. Can't believe its $8ish though. Seems like a really short story. Oh well, as long as its good.
Sorry to hear that. I even read all Farseer books but never enjoyed them thaaaat much. Fitz is a pretty poor 'hero' in my opinion. I just couldn't stand his crying anymore at some point. Seriously, he's the prototype of an Emo.
After reading Sanderson's Stormlight Archives and Reckoners I finally started with his Mistborn series. Don't know why I ignored Sanderson for so long.
That 'bleak apocalypse' thread inspired me to buy I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream. Can't believe its $8ish though. Seems like a really short story. Oh well, as long as its good.
I've started this, even though I was lukewarm on the first three books. My father in law bought me the first ten books because he knew I enjoyed fantasy, so he thought this would be a sure thing with me. It has swords! And magic! That moron who married my daughter will love it!
I'm only about a 100 pages in, and my teeth aren't grating as much as they usually do with Robert Jordan, so I'm not sure if the quality of writing has improved or I'm simply experiencing some form of authorial Stockholm Syndrome.
I'm also finishing up the first Sword Art Online light novel, which I'm enjoying quite a bit. The author knows how to move a story along. Unlike some other authors I could name.
Oh yeah, hehe, totally forgot. But constantly jumping back forth on a kindle would be very tiring.There's also the glossary in the back.
You know what, if Assassin's Apprentice still fails to attract me at the end of the book, I'm going to make the jump to Mistborn.Sorry to hear that. I even read all Farseer books but never enjoyed them thaaaat much. Fitz is a pretty poor 'hero' in my opinion. I just couldn't stand his crying anymore at some point. Seriously, he's the prototype of an Emo.
After reading Sanderson's Stormlight Archives and Reckoners I finally started with his Mistborn series. Don't know why I ignored Sanderson for so long.
Devoured the last half of Time Traveler's Wife today. A really solid book with only a few bores for some segments. I'd recommend anyone with a slight interest in reading it. 4/5
I'll probably start on Gaf's beloved, The Martian next. Then maybe I'll begin my (re)read on the Harry Potter series.
Woohoo!
Yeah, the beginning can be a bit slow to catch on, especially with all the names and words to keep track of and/or figure out. Glad you liked it.
So Goblin Emperor is the new thing? Adding it to the list.
Woohoo!
Yeah, the beginning can be a bit slow to catch on, especially with all the names and words to keep track of and/or figure out. Glad you liked it.
Goblin Emperor, huh? Color me intrigued. I'm also still looking for more practical male leads that get damaged in exciting ways, Cyan...
Seems like this thread is now about Goblin Emperor. Added it to my "to buy"-list. Will get there, eventually.
The Martian is the other book from this thread that I'm planning on picking up shortly.
Woohoo!
Yeah, the beginning can be a bit slow to catch on, especially with all the names and words to keep track of and/or figure out. Glad you liked it.
Currently working through GRRM's:
Afterwards,I'll be reading Dying of the Light and Tuff Voyaging. I might then revisit ASoIaF/Dunk and Egg.
Starting this one:
Just read this because I didn't find anything else and the cover caught my eye. Fun read. What I like about this short story is, that it doesn't spell everything out and that it lets you wonder about the world it's set in. The Forest sounds intriguing and I do wonder what happened that they had to move to such a place.
You're dead to me.
I have mood swings with this book. Read a bit more yesterday and felt engaged with it. Going to be a toss up between a three and four stars pending the last act.
I'm working through it now. It starts out really promising but quickly gets mired in its own referential nonsense. I'm hoping it picks up again towards the end, but the middle chunk is (for me) quite a chore.
Mumei is going to have a literary orgasm when he sees your post. But yes, it's a fantastic book.