*Akward silence*nakedsushi said:LOL, thanks. I'm actually the wife there.
That's one lucky dude. Congratulations!nakedsushi said:LOL, thanks. I'm actually the wife there.
Salazar said:Just culled my bookcases. About 300 books dumped. The air is fucking thick with dust.
Ditching my Goodkinds.
Mael said:I'm up to Book II now...
And well the understanding of the whole demons/fallen angels in the media is laughably stupid compared to what's found in the text....Even with a passing glance, I even think it's blattant enough as to warrant a thread actually.
Those are the printings I read when I was a kid. *bro fist*Fritz said:Dune Messiah
Sonicbug said:I have a huge book backlog right now though. HUGE. Im hoping to get some sun time in this summer to whittle the pile down.
adamsappel said:
-Kees- said:
hahah such an awesome book. i don't think i know anyone whose expectations it hasn't exceeded even though it is pretty supremely hyped-Kees said:confederacy of dunces
it's just non-fictionSnowman Prophet of Doom said:I don't know, I HATE reading multiple books at the same time. Once I start reading one thing, I either finish it or toss it aside.
Karakand said:it's just non-fiction
Just finished it a few hours ago. A bit depressing but good book.RickA238 said:Just finished this over the weekend (sorry for skipping ahead, GAF Bookclub):
that cover is aweeeeeeeesomeFrankenstrat said:at the moment, my physics textbook. However, since that's boring, here's what I will be reading in the near future:
Can't wait for it to be enshrined in the fraternity of great boring books.choodi said:I now know why I am having so much trouble with abercrombie's the blade itself!
It's because it is the first act in a three act narrative.
I am bored cause nothing is happening, but nothing is happening because this is the first act!
I assume the action heats up towards the end of the first book, and then gets really going in the second?
Tralfamadore64 said:I'm hoping I finish it in time to complete my rereading of my current favorite book before the month's out:
FutureZombie said:C.S. Lewis claims he was an atheist before finding Christ, but considering he never tackles a single difficult argument against Christianity, I find it difficult to believe he was ever anything more than apathetic. Disappointing book for a non-believer who was interested in hearing some strong arguments for Christianity.
catfish said:
started reading this, it's pretty good, a nice easy read with some magic in to fill my craving. I'm satisfied enough to continue on with the series until july 12 for sure.
It's about a wizard in modern day.
pooptacular said:Any good whodunit books that have come out recently? I'm a big fan of Agatha Christie and have read all of her books. Anything that is similar would be great, thanks in advance.
phisheep said:Not so many of those nowadays I'm afraid. It rather looks like the good old whodunit has vanished into more of the gory police procedural.
That said, my oldest bookshelf (which used to contain every Agatha Christie, now donated to my daughter) is currently crammed double deep with the following authors: Dick Francis (especially middle-period), Jeffrey Deaver, Lee Child, Ed McBain and David Baldacci.
Very few of those are real whodunit-type things (Francis' "Hot Money" probably comes closest, and is marvellous), so you might be better scouring the second-hand shops. I've just read all of Austin Freeman's Dr Thorndyke stories, which were fun; of course there is Holmes, and I'm tempted to dig out some of the other authors that Christie fancied (I think a Poirot soliloquy in "The Clocks" gives a useful list), but I haven't found anything (and especially not the usual 'heirs of Christie' in Ngaio Marsh/P D James/and whoever the other one is) to match her. And Dorothy Sayers makes me vomit.
Probably the ones I most enjoy are Ed McBain's 87th precinct stuff ("Money, Money" is spectacularly good).
Looking forward to see if anyone posts something more positive than this - I might find a new author.
EDIT: Oh, I forgot, if you find an Ellery Queen compilation it might well be worth a try. Haven't got any, and they are old, but I do remember enjoying them a lot.
pooptacular said:Whoa thanks alot for the suggestions. More detailed answer than I thought I would get.
nakedsushi said:Finished:
Dead Reckoning by Charlaine Harris
Better than the previous book in the series, but still not as good as the first three.
I feel like Harris is just hiring typing monkeys to churn these out now. This book was missing a certain something, but I'm not sure what. I thought this was going to be the final book the series, but it seems not. Ugh. I read it thinking I could finally end the series, but looks like I'll have to wait for the next one. Who knows, maybe I'll forget about it.
-Kees- said:A Confederacy of Dunces
choodi said:I now know why I am having so much trouble with abercrombie's the blade itself!
It's because it is the first act in a three act narrative.
I am bored cause nothing is happening, but nothing is happening because this is the first act!
I assume the action heats up towards the end of the first book, and then gets really going in the second?