What fantasy/science fiction book are you reading RIGHT NOW?
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- Fist and Faith
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- Worm of Despite
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Daniel? Ugh. And "pretty cool"?! Pff! Then again--you may like the later parts a lot more. The first part has a military-adventure tone (though far more realistic and literary than most stuff lumped in that milieu).Fist and Faith wrote:Finally started Flat Earth, by Daniel... No wait, David Williams. Some new author, I gather. A quarter through it, and it's pretty cool so far.
- Fist and Faith
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Have I ever mentioned that my son's name is Daniel? Anyway, yeah, I enjoyed the military-adventure. Just began the druggie-adventure last night. Alas, I didn't get far, because I'm a little under the weather. Perhaps this evening will work out better.
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Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

- danlo
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Just finished Jhereg the first Vlad Taltos book by Steven Burst an excellent fantasy writer who creates very believable worlds, some funny stuff too. Now I'm halfway through Yendi (the second). I can't believe so many fans missed this stuff when it first came out in the mid '80s--he was heartily endorsed by Roger Zelazny and a very young Tad Williams. And, like SRD he studies Shotakan karate. 

fall far and well Pilots!
- Vader
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After finishing Sheckley I felt ready to read a true genius of ... what is it? Surreal SF? Satirical fiction?
Paul Sladek - Keep the Giraffe Burning
books.google.de/books?id=WA4BTLP2L3cC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Keep+The+Giraffe+Burning&cd=1#v=onepage&q&f=false
Paul Sladek - Keep the Giraffe Burning
books.google.de/books?id=WA4BTLP2L3cC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Keep+The+Giraffe+Burning&cd=1#v=onepage&q&f=false
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Hahaha, in the end, almost all of his novels tie into one unifying story-line, sorta like the DT.
In fact, The Cat Who Walks Through Walls can be considered a sequel of sorts to TMIAHM. It's set 120 odd years after the Revolution which that book describes. (It's probably my all-time favourite of his as I've mentioned.)
Methusalah's Children, The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress, Revolt In 2100, Time Enough For Love, The Number of the Beast, and The Cat Who Walks Through Walls are the major parts of his Lazarus Long / The World As Myth storyline.
Many of his other books, notably Glory Road, The Space Family Stone series, Stranger in A Strange Land and The Man Who Sold The Moon are tangentially related, and characters make appearances occasionally in the main series. (No doubt there are others I'm missing that are also connected.)
His universes are alternate reality versions...some stories occur in some realities, others in others. Sometimes big events split a timeline into two...one where the event occurred, and one where it didn't.
(The Man Who Sold The Moon for example, was a timeline where the first manned mission to the moon wasn't carried out by a government agency (NASA) but by a private enterprise.)
A lot of the alternate realities intersect in later books, (starting with NotB) when some characters discover the existence of these alternates, and how to travel between them.
Cat is the 2nd last of the storyline. The last, To Sail Beyond Sunset, was published the year before he died.
--A
In fact, The Cat Who Walks Through Walls can be considered a sequel of sorts to TMIAHM. It's set 120 odd years after the Revolution which that book describes. (It's probably my all-time favourite of his as I've mentioned.)
Methusalah's Children, The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress, Revolt In 2100, Time Enough For Love, The Number of the Beast, and The Cat Who Walks Through Walls are the major parts of his Lazarus Long / The World As Myth storyline.
Many of his other books, notably Glory Road, The Space Family Stone series, Stranger in A Strange Land and The Man Who Sold The Moon are tangentially related, and characters make appearances occasionally in the main series. (No doubt there are others I'm missing that are also connected.)
His universes are alternate reality versions...some stories occur in some realities, others in others. Sometimes big events split a timeline into two...one where the event occurred, and one where it didn't.
(The Man Who Sold The Moon for example, was a timeline where the first manned mission to the moon wasn't carried out by a government agency (NASA) but by a private enterprise.)
A lot of the alternate realities intersect in later books, (starting with NotB) when some characters discover the existence of these alternates, and how to travel between them.
Cat is the 2nd last of the storyline. The last, To Sail Beyond Sunset, was published the year before he died.
--A
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- danlo
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I'm almost done with Teckla the third book in Burst's Vlad Taltos series and looking forward to buying the next three at the used bookstore today. It really is a fun little series-Taltos is a maniac and is always running off somewhere getting himself killed. It's a very interesting world with a lot of elements shared with Patricia McKillip and Tad Williams fantasies. The Dragearans are a lot like the Sithi yet less intelligent and more warlike, there also appears to be two other races we haven't met yet. Highly interesting religious views as well, kind of reminds me of what little Erikson I've been exposed to.
fall far and well Pilots!
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Just finishing up Jordan/Sanderson's bk 12 of the Wheel of Time. Enjoying it a lot. Annoyed I have to wait for 2 more books. If it wasn't for the fact that Jordan had already pulled himself together in book 11, I'd say Sanderson saved the series. Even though he didn't, still a good job on this book.
Next: The Man in the High Castle, by Phillip K Dick.
--A
Next: The Man in the High Castle, by Phillip K Dick.
--A
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Reading a collection of short stories by Frederik Pohl called Platinum Pohl. I'm enjoying it a lot... but it kinda makes me wish I had a short story collection of C. M. Kornbluth stories...
'Tis dream to think that Reason can
Govern the reasoning creature, man.
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Come back to tell you all, I shall tell you all!
"All creation is a huge, ornate, imaginary, and unintended fiction; if it could be deciphered it would yield a single shocking word."
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Govern the reasoning creature, man.
- Herman Melville
I am Lazarus, come from the dead,
Come back to tell you all, I shall tell you all!
"All creation is a huge, ornate, imaginary, and unintended fiction; if it could be deciphered it would yield a single shocking word."
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Pohl is one of the few writers I think I've read everything by [the others are SRD, Frank Herbert, Kurt Vonnegut]. I don't know why I like the stuff [Pohl's] so much, but I do.Orlion wrote:Reading a collection of short stories by Frederik Pohl called Platinum Pohl. I'm enjoying it a lot... but it kinda makes me wish I had a short story collection of C. M. Kornbluth stories...
Just started a re-read of "Snow Crash" last night.
Danlo...I think I've read Jhereg...it's the first of a series where the titles/plots
are sorta about "Clans" whose families relate to old powers/beasts, or something like that?
[spoiler]Sig-man, Libtard, Stupid piece of shit. change your text color to brown. Mr. Reliable, bullshit-slinging liarFucker-user.[/spoiler]
the difference between evidence and sources: whether they come from the horse's mouth or a horse's ass.
"Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation."
the hyperbole is a beauty...for we are then allowed to say a little more than the truth...and language is more efficient when it goes beyond reality than when it stops short of it.
the difference between evidence and sources: whether they come from the horse's mouth or a horse's ass.
"Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation."
the hyperbole is a beauty...for we are then allowed to say a little more than the truth...and language is more efficient when it goes beyond reality than when it stops short of it.
- danlo
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Something like that, there are 17 'houses' of Dargearans all named after and assuming the qualities of jehreg, dragon, teckla, druz, orca, phoenix and other such nasty beaties-the series has a very interesting hardcore debate between sorcery and witchcraft and, in Taltos (that I'm halfway through right now), a very brief appearance of a vampire...it just gets wilder and wilder...
fall far and well Pilots!
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