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Yesterday I got [Dusk, a debut fantasy effort coming out the end of January from Bram Stoker Award winning author Tim Lebbon.[/u]
Latest Interview: George R.R. Martin
The Bodhisattva
Fantasybookspot.com
Check out the first issue of Heliotrope - featuring articles by R. Scott Bakker, Jeff VanderMeer and more!
"I think it's undignified to read for the purposes of escape. After you grow up, you should start reading for other purposes" - M. John Harrison
The Bodhisattva
Fantasybookspot.com
Check out the first issue of Heliotrope - featuring articles by R. Scott Bakker, Jeff VanderMeer and more!
"I think it's undignified to read for the purposes of escape. After you grow up, you should start reading for other purposes" - M. John Harrison
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I really enjoyed the three Kushiel books, as well her latest duology The Sundering, which is a sort of twisted Sil, where you wonder until the end who the good guys are (and whetehr or not there are nay good guys at all...)Murrin wrote:Kushiel's Dart, by Jacqueline Carey.
The sex in Kushiel can be rather eye opening.



Interesting. I have this book on loan from a friend. Should be reading it shortly. She tells me this first Kushiel book is the best of the three...or at least that it's a self-contained story that I can enjoy without needing to read the other two books.duchess of malfi wrote:I really enjoyed the three Kushiel books, as well her latest duology The Sundering, which is a sort of twisted Sil, where you wonder until the end who the good guys are (and whetehr or not there are nay good guys at all...)Murrin wrote:Kushiel's Dart, by Jacqueline Carey.
The sex in Kushiel can be rather eye opening.There's lots of S&M, and everytime I think the kinkiness can't be topped, something else will pop up.
But it is integrated into the story fairly well, so its not like reading pron or anything.
- duchess of malfi
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You could definately read it as a stand alone.
The most disturbing sex (to me anyway) was in the third book. Nothing in the first book could even begin to compare with this one rather nasty toy in the third book (thank God!!!
).
The Kushiel books are set in an alternate Europe, Middle East, and Africa (I don't think they left Europe in the first one). The Pagan religions are still being followed, right alongside of Judaism, which is still one with what we would call Christianity.
The main country in that Europe that the books tell the story of is an alternate France called Terre d'Ange. Their religion is very unique, and includes cults of angels. One of the angels is Kushiel. I don't want to get more into things than that, as I thought the religion was very interesting, and I do not want to get into big spoilers about it.
One of the central characters of the book is a girl marked by Kushiel as an anguisette, someone who receives supreme pleasure from pain. The girl is trained as both a spy and a courtesan. The kinky sex is integrated into the story as a natural consequence of her inclinations and training...


The Kushiel books are set in an alternate Europe, Middle East, and Africa (I don't think they left Europe in the first one). The Pagan religions are still being followed, right alongside of Judaism, which is still one with what we would call Christianity.
The main country in that Europe that the books tell the story of is an alternate France called Terre d'Ange. Their religion is very unique, and includes cults of angels. One of the angels is Kushiel. I don't want to get more into things than that, as I thought the religion was very interesting, and I do not want to get into big spoilers about it.
One of the central characters of the book is a girl marked by Kushiel as an anguisette, someone who receives supreme pleasure from pain. The girl is trained as both a spy and a courtesan. The kinky sex is integrated into the story as a natural consequence of her inclinations and training...
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Recently got:
The Lord of the Rings: A Reader's Companion by Wayne G. Hammond and Christina Scull - a very detailed almost annotated style of the trilogy, scheduled to be released at the end of December. Looks very informative thus far.
Dragon Champion by E.E. Knight
Deryni Checkmate (December) by Katherine Kurtz
The Rosetta Codex by Richard Paul Russo
Coyote Frontier by Allen Steele
Wicked Or What? by Sean Wright
Dark Tales of Time and Space by Sean Wright
Dusk by Tim Lebbon
The Lord of the Rings: A Reader's Companion by Wayne G. Hammond and Christina Scull - a very detailed almost annotated style of the trilogy, scheduled to be released at the end of December. Looks very informative thus far.
Dragon Champion by E.E. Knight
Deryni Checkmate (December) by Katherine Kurtz
The Rosetta Codex by Richard Paul Russo
Coyote Frontier by Allen Steele
Wicked Or What? by Sean Wright
Dark Tales of Time and Space by Sean Wright
Dusk by Tim Lebbon
Latest Interview: George R.R. Martin
The Bodhisattva
Fantasybookspot.com
Check out the first issue of Heliotrope - featuring articles by R. Scott Bakker, Jeff VanderMeer and more!
"I think it's undignified to read for the purposes of escape. After you grow up, you should start reading for other purposes" - M. John Harrison
The Bodhisattva
Fantasybookspot.com
Check out the first issue of Heliotrope - featuring articles by R. Scott Bakker, Jeff VanderMeer and more!
"I think it's undignified to read for the purposes of escape. After you grow up, you should start reading for other purposes" - M. John Harrison
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I'm looking forward to Dragon Champion. E. E. Knight is the author of the Vampire Earth sf series, a futuristic depopulated Earth "under new management," aliens with vampire-like qualities.
Knight's website is very informative and Knight is "hands-on" with his fans, usually showing up once or twice a week to answer questions and make other comments.
I'm anxious to see how he handles fantasy.
Knight's website is very informative and Knight is "hands-on" with his fans, usually showing up once or twice a week to answer questions and make other comments.
I'm anxious to see how he handles fantasy.
"I am, in short, a man on the edge of everything." - Dark Tower II, The Drawing of the Three
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- I'm Murrin
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Recently bought Umberto Eco's The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana .

Neuromancer (and Gibson) is cyberpunk (him and Sterling making it a vogue movement not long ago, and almsot a full blown new sub-genre) Marquez is characterized as Magic Realism.NeuroMancer is one of my all-time favourites. In fact, I'm convinced that it, and much of his other work, have directly contributed to the way that we're seeing the future of data communications technology evolving.
Isn't the Marquez book sorta sci-fi?...have it, must just read it.
I'll read it when he reads Tobias Bucknell's Crystal Rain, or admits Venom Cock is stupidI'm looking forward to Dragon Champion. E. E. Knight is the author of the Vampire Earth sf series, a futuristic depopulated Earth "under new management," aliens with vampire-like qualities.
Knight's website is very informative and Knight is "hands-on" with his fans, usually showing up once or twice a week to answer questions and make other comments.
I'm anxious to see how he handles fantasy.[/u]

Latest Interview: George R.R. Martin
The Bodhisattva
Fantasybookspot.com
Check out the first issue of Heliotrope - featuring articles by R. Scott Bakker, Jeff VanderMeer and more!
"I think it's undignified to read for the purposes of escape. After you grow up, you should start reading for other purposes" - M. John Harrison
The Bodhisattva
Fantasybookspot.com
Check out the first issue of Heliotrope - featuring articles by R. Scott Bakker, Jeff VanderMeer and more!
"I think it's undignified to read for the purposes of escape. After you grow up, you should start reading for other purposes" - M. John Harrison
- I'm Murrin
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Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818 text).
Last edited by I'm Murrin on Thu Dec 01, 2005 11:24 am, edited 1 time in total.