What fantasy/science fiction book are you reading RIGHT NOW?
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- Reave the Unjust
- Elohim
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- stonemaybe
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Just finished up with Neil Gaiman - American Gods (brilliant), Neverwhere (enjoyed very much but lacked the depth and history that i wanted!), and Anansi Boys (great, not sure about the ending)
Now, after lots of long hard thought, I've decided to take the plunge and see what all the fuss was about - just started The Da Vinci Code.
Now, after lots of long hard thought, I've decided to take the plunge and see what all the fuss was about - just started The Da Vinci Code.
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- A Gunslinger
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Just finished Ted Chiang's "Stories of Yourself and Others". An excellent thought provoking collection of short stories. Very cerebral stuff! I recommend it highly.
Don't know if it qualifies as fantasy but I'm reading a fictionalized account of Alexander the Great's campaign in Afghanistan told from a soldier's point of view. The book is written by "Gates of Fire" author Steven Pressfield and is aptly titled "The Afghan Campaign".
Don't know if it qualifies as fantasy but I'm reading a fictionalized account of Alexander the Great's campaign in Afghanistan told from a soldier's point of view. The book is written by "Gates of Fire" author Steven Pressfield and is aptly titled "The Afghan Campaign".
War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself. John Stuart Mill
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I have "Harrowing the Dragon" by Patricia McKillip in my backpack, but I haven't yet started reading it. I discovered that our library has many of her books, so I'm working my way through 'em. Good stuff -- SRD was right!
I *really* liked "Song for the Basilisk".



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- Spiral Jacobs
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Finished Look To Windward (great book, by the way) and my audio re-read of A Game Of Thrones. So I started a paper re-read of Excession and an audio re-read of A Clash Of Kings. I still like Martin, though I must say he's much too focused on what people are wearing. Not every person's description needs to start with the colour of doublet they're wearing, come on.
But the ending of A Game Of Thrones is fantastic.
Oh and I just received word that Latro In The Mist is on its way, yay!
But the ending of A Game Of Thrones is fantastic.
Oh and I just received word that Latro In The Mist is on its way, yay!
I just finished Steven Erikson's Reaper's Gale, and it should rank among this year's best fantasy books, if not the very best of the bunch!
One word of advice, though: Expect the unexpected! This one is packed with surprises!
Check out the blog for a spoiler-free review...
Patrick
www.fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com

One word of advice, though: Expect the unexpected! This one is packed with surprises!

Check out the blog for a spoiler-free review...
Patrick
www.fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com
- Spiral Jacobs
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- Phantasm
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Look to Windward - superb.Spiral Jacobs wrote:Finished Look To Windward (great book, by the way) and my audio re-read of A Game Of Thrones. So I started a paper re-read of Excession and an audio re-read of A Clash Of Kings. I still like Martin, though I must say he's much too focused on what people are wearing. Not every person's description needs to start with the colour of doublet they're wearing, come on.
But the ending of A Game Of Thrones is fantastic.
Oh and I just received word that Latro In The Mist is on its way, yay!
I used to use "O you who turn the wheel and look to windward, consider Phlebus, who was once handsome and tall as you." as a signature on a forum I belonged to.
OK, that was from another book, but still relevant.
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"This is Glasgow- we'll just set aboot ye"

- Phantasm
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Currently reading "Guardians of the lost", book 2 in the sovereign stone trilogy by Margaret Weiss and Tracy Hickman.
I enjoyed the Dragonlance series years ago, and was at a loss for something to read lately, and picked up the first book in the series at the library recently.
Not mind bogglingly fantastic, but enjoyable reading nevertheless.
I enjoyed the Dragonlance series years ago, and was at a loss for something to read lately, and picked up the first book in the series at the library recently.
Not mind bogglingly fantastic, but enjoyable reading nevertheless.
Quote - John Smeaton (Terrorists take note)
"This is Glasgow- we'll just set aboot ye"

"This is Glasgow- we'll just set aboot ye"

Just finished up reading Shadowplay, major disappointment, i enjoyed Shadowmarch so much more. Will probably start working on the Legend of Drizzt stuff, really like Salvatore, so stoked for the Orc King in the fall.
May you be in heaven half an hour before the devil knows you're dead.
F.E.M.A. "Ferocious Educational Medical Aptitude" -Esmer
"Honestly; by the end of the Chronicles Lord Foul isn't going to be the Despiser anymore (we all knew he had to come to an end), however I find it vexing that the only reason is because he feels unworthy of the title and resigns to let Linden take his badge, Illearth Stone, and the keys to Linden's Creche."-Revan
F.E.M.A. "Ferocious Educational Medical Aptitude" -Esmer
"Honestly; by the end of the Chronicles Lord Foul isn't going to be the Despiser anymore (we all knew he had to come to an end), however I find it vexing that the only reason is because he feels unworthy of the title and resigns to let Linden take his badge, Illearth Stone, and the keys to Linden's Creche."-Revan
That quote made me think that maybe Banks won't be writing any more Culture novels, as it's at the beginning of Consider Phlebas as well. I had thought that they could go on indefinitely, as he can practically come up with any premise and insert Special Circumstances as appropriate, though he might feel he was reworking an old idea. Certainly, The Algebraist was very good indeed, so maybe it is time to put the Culture down for a bit.Phantasm wrote:
Look to Windward - superb.
I used to use "O you who turn the wheel and look to windward, consider Phlebus, who was once handsome and tall as you." as a signature on a forum I belonged to.
OK, that was from another book, but still relevant.
I've been dipping into Bill King's first Gotrek and Felix omnibus for a while now. I remember loving the extracts from these stories when they were published in White Dwarf about twelve years ago. They do lack depth, but it's nice to get reacquainted with the Empire of Man which, unusually for Fantasy I think, is outwardly Germanic. Gotrek and Felix themselves are steeped in cliche, but likeable nonetheless and the cowardly Grey Seer Thanquol is a lot of fun. Where King was bound to a certain extent to what had previously been written about the Empire, it seems like he was able to let his imagination run wild with the Skaven. He fleshes out their underworld of power, intrigue, invention and cowardice very well and with wry humour evident throughout (a Skaven leader's "position of honour" in the rear of any troop formation still makes me chuckle).
Q. Why do Communists drink herbal tea?
A. Because proper tea is theft.
A. Because proper tea is theft.