
Orlion wrote:It's more than that! We're fighting over Fist's soul! (such as it is).aliantha wrote:Sounds like the stage is set for a Watch Steel-Cage Death Match over Gormenghast.![]()

Moderator: I'm Murrin
Orlion wrote:It's more than that! We're fighting over Fist's soul! (such as it is).aliantha wrote:Sounds like the stage is set for a Watch Steel-Cage Death Match over Gormenghast.![]()
Wait...is that "A Canticle for Leibowitz" and The Illuminatus! Trilogy?"Fist and Faith wrote: Canticles... Illuminati... something else I can't remember off hand.
No worries, I agree strongly with the correct quote as wellLinah Heartlistener wrote:I agree with A.A. Milne.
(the un-misquoted version.)
It is a good winter mood book! The first time I read it, I was in Utah for my brother's wedding...V wrote:I probably will go along with O and do Gor., put off Malazan till spring/summer. I read the first chapter of Titus and it feels more like my winter mood.
Yup. That's the very crap I'm talking about. I quit Leibowitz part way into the second part of the book. One or two hundred pages of profoundly ignorant people looking at books and electrical diagrams, not knowing what any of it is, much less what it says. It's exactly like the seagull in The Little Mermaid. Except the seagull is supposed to be a joke. Enough of my life wasted.Vraith wrote:Wait...is that "A Canticle for Leibowitz" and The Illuminatus! Trilogy?"Fist and Faith wrote: Canticles... Illuminati... something else I can't remember off hand.
What IS wrong with your soul???
The first thing that came to mind was Grant Naylor's Red Dwarf novelizations (Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers and such) - they seem to be out of print, but that's not much of an obstacle in this day and age.Frostheart Grueburn wrote:
I may have gyrated too much in the Malazan vortex of intrigue and massive battles lately, but craving either for something grittier or just plain silly (akin to Discworld in space; yes I've read Douglas Adams...).
Err confusing how?Orlion wrote:I liked The Way of Kings, but I imagine Wildling is listening to the audio... which I imagine would be confusing!Rawedge Rim wrote:So far the Way of Kings has been an outstanding setWildling wrote:Finished Reckoners 2 and have started The Way of Kings: Book One of The Stormlight Archive.
Man, am I ever having a hard time getting into this one. It's jumping all over the place and I'm having a hard time giving a damn about finding out WTF is going on.
I only imagine it would be so, what with the bunching around, quotes at the beginning of the chapter, interludes, etc. But I also have only listened to one audiobook in my life time, so I probably just suck at listening to audiobooksFrostheart Grueburn wrote:Err confusing how?Orlion wrote:I liked The Way of Kings, but I imagine Wildling is listening to the audio... which I imagine would be confusing!Rawedge Rim wrote: So far the Way of Kings has been an outstanding setI have the Stormlight Archive ONLY on audio; one of my favorite readers dramatizes the story.
Sorus wrote:Edit2: Amazon believes that Diana Gabaldon is a good recommendation for people who read Red Dwarf in German. The robots will not be taking over today.
I think it also helps if you are welling to wade through hundreds of pages of nonsense... I mean, talk about padding!aliantha wrote:It helps with Illuminatus if you remember the '60s. And it's better if you lived through the '60s but *don't* remember them.![]()
I think Amazon is trying to push product based on potential new popular shows... it also shows that there may be no robots involved in the recommendation process at all!Sorus wrote:Edit2: Amazon believes that Diana Gabaldon is a good recommendation for people who read Red Dwarf in German. The robots will not be taking over today.
Uhh, well, I was more assuming that he was using hyperbole..Orlion wrote:No worries, I agree strongly with the correct quote as well![]()
It's gotten to the point where there is a small list of books that I try not to mention, for if my friends were to read and not like them, we could not be friends anymore
I don't see the connection to winter... Is the link the discussion of Cretans? Makes you think of the culture adjustment one makes for a vacation to Crete? And people go to Crete in the winter because the Mediterranean is warm?vraith wrote:I read the first chapter of Titus and it feels more like my winter mood.
More of that, kinda. The opening of the thing [which is all I've read now] gives both a feeling of endless size and endurance combined to create total confinement/imprisonment/permanent claustrophobication.Linah Heartlistener wrote: Or is it a sort of wintry despair
The Dickens comparison is often made, Peake also influenced other writers in at least some of their books... such as the one I am currently reading: Perdido Street Station by China Mieville!Vraith wrote:More of that, kinda. The opening of the thing [which is all I've read now] gives both a feeling of endless size and endurance combined to create total confinement/imprisonment/permanent claustrophobication.Linah Heartlistener wrote: Or is it a sort of wintry despair
That's winter for me.
On a side note/oddness [this happens to me with books sometimes...and I don't like it, really].
I am POSITIVE I read at least the first one, and I think the first 2, before.
I am SURE I had thoughts about it, liking it---I specifically recall thinking something like "This is kinda what "Edwin Drood" would feel like if Dickens knew how to write."
But so far, I don't remember a single word/incident/scene reading now having been read before. Complete blank/unfamiliarity.
Vraith wrote:I specifically recall thinking something like "This is kinda what "Edwin Drood" would feel like if Dickens knew how to write."
linna wrote:Or is it a sort of wintry despair that sets in because of the dark deeds of the aforementioned false teachers?
wacky.Vraith wrote:More of that, [well, just "a sort of wintry despair, " actually. -Ed] kinda. The opening of the thing [which is all I've read now] gives both a feeling of endless size and endurance combined to create total confinement/imprisonment/permanent claustrophobication.
That's winter for me.
On a side note/oddness [this happens to me with books sometimes...and I don't like it, really].
I am POSITIVE I read at least the first one, and I think the first 2, before.
I am SURE I had thoughts about it, liking it---I specifically recall thinking something like "This is kinda what "Edwin Drood" would feel like if Dickens knew how to write."
But so far, I don't remember a single word/incident/scene reading now having been read before. Complete blank/unfamiliarity.