The Leper Fairy wrote:The last Harry Potter book, but who (besides CovJr) isn't?
Me.
Some book called Fatal Revenant, you probably wont have heard of it...
But if you're all about the destination, then take a fucking flight.
We're going nowhere slowly, but we're seeing all the sights.
And we're definitely going to hell, but we'll have all the best stories to tell.
That Terry Pratchett one sounds good! I'm always quick to buy anything Pratchett writes, he seems almost unable to write a bad book (except Truckers, Diggers, Wings. Which were boring as hell, but I still read them for some reason.)
Something for me to read after A hat full of sky
[spoiler]If you change the font to white within spoiler tags does it break them?[/spoiler]
Most of what I am looking forward to is next year -
Ink - Hal Duncan Empire of Ice Cream - Jeffrey Ford Shriek: an afterword - Jeff VanderMeer Buring Girl - Holly Phillips Lies of Locke Lamora - Scott Lynch Thousandfold Thought - R. Scott Bakker Of Tales and Enigmas - Minsoo Kang Crystal Rain - Tobias Bucknell Killing with the Edge of the Moon - A.A. Attanasio The Jennifer Morgue - Charles Stross Ilario: The Lion's Eye - Mary Gentle Bonehunters - Steven Erikson Twelve Collections and the Teashop - Zoran Zivkovic Vengeance of Rome - Michael Moorcock Fain the Sorceror - Steve Aylett (PS release) Fugitives of Chaos - John C. Wright (Orphans of Chaos was terrific) A Shadow in Summer - Daniel Abraham
and as of yet unamed M. John Harrison project. Regarding 2005 products to still come out Adventure (edited by Chris Roberson), A Feast for Crows by George R.R. Martin,
Dragonlily wrote:I'm eagerly awaiting the fourth Temeraire book by Naomi Novik.
I happened upon her website a few weeks ago. The Temeraire series looks interesting. I'm not a huge fan of the Napoleonic Era, but I read an excerpt from one of the books and it seems like a unique fantasy concept.
I was eagerly awaiting TC Boyle's Talk Talk, but noticed it has been out for a few months now. I guess my wait is over
Proverbs for Paranoids #3.
If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about answers.