YesNOnoNOYes
Member
the wasteland (book #3 of the dark tower series) by stephen king
Anyone read Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay? Is it worth my time?
I am generally pretty skeptical of single volume epic fantasy.
Anyone read Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay? Is it worth my time?
I am generally pretty skeptical of single volume epic fantasy.
Seconded. Kay is amazing. A Song for Arbonne and The Lions of Al-Rassan and his recent Children of Earth and Sky are also single volumes that are incredible. In general he has impressive high quality works. I think Ysabel is the only book of his I felt meh about.The answer to that question is: [FUCK] YES
Ongoing, The Heroes by Joe Abercrombie, I really wanna finish the standalone books this year so I can get ready for his new trilogy.
Well, no need to hurry, then. The new trilogy will hardly come out before 2019.
Oh that's true. For some reason I thought it was 2018, but you're right. Last I read about it he was still editing the new trilogy so this might take a bit longer.
The answer to that question is: [FUCK] YES
Seconded. Kay is amazing. A Song for Arbonne and The Lions of Al-Rassan and his recent Children of Earth and Sky are also single volumes that are incredible. In general he has impressive high quality works. I think Ysabel is the only book of his I felt meh about.
Thanks! I will give it a shot.
How much magic are in these books? I read a few synopses of his books on Amazon and they don't really touch on magic much.
I absolutely devoured Storm Front, the first book of the Dresden Files.
Why is there so much contempt for this book? I loved it: the atmosphere, the characters, the writing, the magic system. It's one of the most entertaining books I've ever read. As a big fan of games like Vampire: The Masquerade -- Bloodlines and Deus Ex, this book and its atmosphere were right up my alley. Very excited to read the rest of the series.
I absolutely devoured Storm Front, the first book of the Dresden Files.
Why is there so much contempt for this book? I loved it: the atmosphere, the characters, the writing, the magic system. It's one of the most entertaining books I've ever read. As a big fan of games like Vampire: The Masquerade -- Bloodlines and Deus Ex, this book and its atmosphere were right up my alley. Very excited to read the rest of the series.
I absolutely devoured Storm Front, the first book of the Dresden Files.
Why is there so much contempt for this book? I loved it: the atmosphere, the characters, the writing, the magic system. It's one of the most entertaining books I've ever read. As a big fan of games like Vampire: The Masquerade -- Bloodlines and Deus Ex, this book and its atmosphere were right up my alley. Very excited to read the rest of the series.
It's not so much that there is hate, but I haven't encountered anyone who wouldn't say it's the worst of the series main entries.
You have a great book series ahead of you if you like SF that much.
I always thought the second book was the one people didn't like in Dresden. I thought 1 and 2 were pretty alright personally, though.
I just read An Echo of Things to Come by James Islington. I liked the first book (The Shadow of What Was Lost), but this one was absolutely insane. So many things happened and Islington is trying to give Robin Hobb a run for her money when it comes to making his character's lives hell. One of my favourite books of the year and the wait for the final book is going to be brutal.
I read the first one back in late 2014.
Need to jump on the new one.
I just finished reading Seveneves by Neal Stephenson. First novel I've read in a long time, and I picked a doozy.
I was so torn on this book. The premise and much of the first two parts were fascinating and kept me turning pages relentlessly. But the third part felt packed with unnecessary stuff and VERY bad science, which is unusual because the first two parts seem fairly accurate.
I think there is a skeleton of a really good novel here, but it just gets bogged down at so many turns, and it just goes completely off the rails at some point.
Any other good sci-fi that's similar but a little tighter? I really loved the aspect of global disaster and problem-solving on a massive scale. It reminded me of The Martian with the stakes being WAY higher.
I think I forgot to update after I finished my last set of books. I'm now 25% or so in to The Pillars of the Earth on Kindle and about 80 pages or so into The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets Nest hard copy.
The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett
Liked it quite a bit. Fast paced, very focused in it's plotline, while stiling having big things happen in the background and most of all two extremely likable leads.Theft of Swords by Michael J. Sullivan
Very dissapoiting. I picked it up because I liked Chaika anime (which was based on the novel series by the same writer), but this was just dull, cliched and not-eventful. The only good thing about it was some of the world building. I might try second volumne if there's some promo to make it cheap, but otherwise I can't see myself continuing.Bluesteel Blasphemer: Volume 1 by Ichirou Sakaki
As always a very good thriller, but I'm still a bit dissapointed. Especially since it comes right after A Time To Die, which is one of two best in the series. Second protagonist hurt the novel, especially since she's nowhere near as interesting as Victor himself. It had the same problem previous book with her did, that each assassin had his own story, but because there were two of them neither got developed to full extrent. Still very fun read, just not among series' bestThe Final Hour by Tom Wood