What fantasy/science fiction book are you reading RIGHT NOW?
Moderator: I'm Murrin
-
- Servant of the Land
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2007 3:52 pm
- Location: UK
Thanks.aliantha wrote:Welcome to Malazan, Horizonscan.Horizonscan wrote:Gardens of the Moon, by Erikson.
Picked it up from the library today because I couldn't fail to notice that the series is generally highly regarded on here and my local library actually had the first book! Not to mention SRD's endorsement.![]()
Almost 200 pages in and I'm very confused.



Big thank you to everyone who mention Malazan on here recently; it's all your fault.

- Avatar
- Immanentizing The Eschaton
- Posts: 62038
- Joined: Mon Aug 02, 2004 9:17 am
- Location: Johannesburg, South Africa
- Has thanked: 25 times
- Been thanked: 32 times
- Contact:
Dead House Gates makes it all worthwhile.
(Oh, we have a forum for Erikson and the Malazan Book of the Fallen btw.
'Ware spoilers though.)
--A
(Oh, we have a forum for Erikson and the Malazan Book of the Fallen btw.

--A
-
- Servant of the Land
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2007 3:52 pm
- Location: UK
- Fist and Faith
- Magister Vitae
- Posts: 25450
- Joined: Sun Dec 01, 2002 8:14 pm
- Has thanked: 9 times
- Been thanked: 57 times
Each book has a thread, and we're pretty good about not spoiling things. 
caam is still going at Gardens of the Moon, making good progress, and I just finished it for my third time. I started Deadhouse Gates again today. Oh my dear god I can't believe how excited I am to be reading this book again!!! Absolutely heart-pounding!

caam is still going at Gardens of the Moon, making good progress, and I just finished it for my third time. I started Deadhouse Gates again today. Oh my dear god I can't believe how excited I am to be reading this book again!!! Absolutely heart-pounding!
All lies and jest
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

-
- Servant of the Land
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2007 3:52 pm
- Location: UK
Argh, darn county library has managed to lose one of its two copies of Deadhouse Gates! Meaning I have to wait for the one that's currently on loan to be returned rather than the one they told me was just sitting on a shelf somewhere!
Yeah, I'm impatient. Maybe I'll add another reservation while I wait. Or maybe I should be good and get on with rereading The Chronicles before AATE comes out. 


- aliantha
- blueberries on steroids
- Posts: 17865
- Joined: Tue Mar 05, 2002 7:50 pm
- Location: NOT opening up a restaurant in Santa Fe
I was just whining over at the Hangar about the zillion-and-one retellings of the Arthurian cycle -- as if England doesn't have other myths to base a fantasy on. 



EZ Board Survivor
"Dreaming isn't good for you unless you do the things it tells you to." -- Three Dog Night (via the GI)
https://www.hearth-myth.com/
- aliantha
- blueberries on steroids
- Posts: 17865
- Joined: Tue Mar 05, 2002 7:50 pm
- Location: NOT opening up a restaurant in Santa Fe
I find that's true with Eco in general. For me, it helps to skim the pedantic bits and get on with the narrative.Avatar wrote:I liked it myself. Bit of a slog sometimes though.wayfriend wrote:Foucoult's Pendulum. Not worth mentioning, except last night I watched Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and I couldn't help thinking there needed to be more Templars.
--A



EZ Board Survivor
"Dreaming isn't good for you unless you do the things it tells you to." -- Three Dog Night (via the GI)
https://www.hearth-myth.com/
- wayfriend
- .
- Posts: 20957
- Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2004 12:34 am
- Has thanked: 2 times
- Been thanked: 6 times
Every once in a while I find myself desiring to immerse myself in Dan Brown type material. I don't know why ... I guess I am a bit Diabolical.aliantha wrote:I find that's true with Eco in general. For me, it helps to skim the pedantic bits and get on with the narrative.Avatar wrote:I liked it myself. Bit of a slog sometimes though.wayfriend wrote:Foucoult's Pendulum. Not worth mentioning, except last night I watched Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and I couldn't help thinking there needed to be more Templars.
--A
This book has it's points of fascination as it has it's dry spots. That's okay with me.
It has been very many years. This time, as I read it, I began to google some of the things I was reading about and didn't understand. Fascinating, very fascinating stuff. You could spend longer reading what you find on the web, and what that leads to, and what that leads to, than you do the book.
Casaubon would say that the internet was made for the Diabolicals.
Just for example, I kept reading in the book about this guy "Cagliostro", whom everyone seemed to know, and hence no one ever explained. So I looked him up, but got distracted and started reading about The Affair of the Necklace, which is an amazing story. Turns out there was a movie about it, now I have to watch it. And I still have to get back to Cagliostro.
.
- Vraith
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 10623
- Joined: Fri Nov 21, 2008 8:03 pm
- Location: everywhere, all the time
- Been thanked: 3 times
Heh...did you ever read the Patricia Keneally [sp?] series: King Arthur IN SPACEaliantha wrote:I was just whining over at the Hangar about the zillion-and-one retellings of the Arthurian cycle -- as if England doesn't have other myths to base a fantasy on.
If I recall correctly, their spaceships look like dragons!.
[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.
- wayfriend
- .
- Posts: 20957
- Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2004 12:34 am
- Has thanked: 2 times
- Been thanked: 6 times
I've read A. A. Attanasio's Arthur series, in which the unicorn is a being from outer space, the Norse gods are beings of magnetic energy living in the earth's magnetic field (which they call Yggdrassil), and Merlin is a demon created by the big bang.Vraith wrote:Heh...did you ever read the Patricia Keneally [sp?] series: King Arthur IN SPACEaliantha wrote:I was just whining over at the Hangar about the zillion-and-one retellings of the Arthurian cycle -- as if England doesn't have other myths to base a fantasy on.
If I recall correctly, their spaceships look like dragons!.
It's actually quite engaging and has earned my reread.
They're making a remake of Snow White now, and someone had the comment it's the fault of everyone who went and saw Alice in Wonderland and made it a box office success.
Arther stories are like that I think. As long as they keep selling, they'll keep writing more, it doesn't matter how many there are.
.
- aliantha
- blueberries on steroids
- Posts: 17865
- Joined: Tue Mar 05, 2002 7:50 pm
- Location: NOT opening up a restaurant in Santa Fe
Haven't read either one of those series -- and you guys are scaring me. Spacefaring dragonboats? Magnetic Norse gods in a magnetic World Egg?

I mean, I know Arthur gets a million retreads because it's a great story. But still.
And now I'm trying to figure out a role for Johnny Depp in a Tim Burton remake of Snow White, and failing spectacularly.



I mean, I know Arthur gets a million retreads because it's a great story. But still.
And now I'm trying to figure out a role for Johnny Depp in a Tim Burton remake of Snow White, and failing spectacularly.



EZ Board Survivor
"Dreaming isn't good for you unless you do the things it tells you to." -- Three Dog Night (via the GI)
https://www.hearth-myth.com/
- Dread Poet Jethro
- My quill pen is mightier Than the sword you drop
- Posts: 856
- Joined: Wed Sep 16, 2009 1:32 am
- aliantha
- blueberries on steroids
- Posts: 17865
- Joined: Tue Mar 05, 2002 7:50 pm
- Location: NOT opening up a restaurant in Santa Fe
What DPJ said, Somefather.
Altho...maybe if you used a bigger font. And italics.

Altho...maybe if you used a bigger font. And italics.



EZ Board Survivor
"Dreaming isn't good for you unless you do the things it tells you to." -- Three Dog Night (via the GI)
https://www.hearth-myth.com/