What are you reading in general?

For those who want to talk about other authors, but can't be bothered to go join other boards...

Moderator: Orlion

User avatar
Wyldewode
The Gap Into Spam
Posts: 6414
Joined: Fri Sep 08, 2006 4:37 am
Location: lost in the wood

Post by Wyldewode »

I just bought The Labyrinth by Kate Mosse. It was in the bargain section of Borders, and it looked interesting to me. I hope that I like it more than the average reviewer at Amazon.com.
Image

Image
User avatar
sgt.null
Jack of Odd Trades, Master of Fun
Posts: 48340
Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2005 7:53 am
Location: Brazoria, Texas
Has thanked: 7 times
Been thanked: 10 times

Post by sgt.null »

Lenin, Marx
Marx, Lennon
Good Dog...
User avatar
magickmaker17
The Gap Into Spam
Posts: 1589
Joined: Wed Feb 13, 2008 10:18 pm
Location: HOW DID YOU FIND MY VILLAGE!?!?!?!

Post by magickmaker17 »

Mortice Root wrote:Moby Dick - This is an odd book. I'm about halfway through. It goes between brilliant dialogue passages (some stuff reminiscint of Shakespheare) to mind numbingly boring passages about whale biology and inaccurate representations of whales in literature, to just wierd stuff (chapter's written as stage directions?!). Overall, though the good parts are worth slogging through the rest.
yeah, I recall trying to read Moby Dick when I was in middle school...I think 7th grade....I couldn't get through it. I should try again now that I'm a little more mature...
I live in my own little world...but its okay, they know me here!
User avatar
danlo
Lord
Posts: 20838
Joined: Wed Mar 06, 2002 8:29 pm
Location: Albuquerque NM
Been thanked: 1 time
Contact:

Post by danlo »

On the last chapter of Eckhart Tolle's A New Earth.
fall far and well Pilots!
User avatar
sgt.null
Jack of Odd Trades, Master of Fun
Posts: 48340
Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2005 7:53 am
Location: Brazoria, Texas
Has thanked: 7 times
Been thanked: 10 times

Post by sgt.null »

will be staring the gunslinger series today. (thank you jenn!)
Lenin, Marx
Marx, Lennon
Good Dog...
User avatar
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:

Post by Avatar »

Childhood Stories, a collection of childhood memories from prominent South African social and political figures from all walks of life.

--A
User avatar
Menolly
A Lowly Harper
Posts: 24184
Joined: Thu May 19, 2005 12:29 am
Location: Harper Hall, Fort Hold, Northern Continent, Pern...
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 15 times
Contact:

Post by Menolly »

Enjoy Sarge!

If you come into the King forum, beware the Fresh Journey threads, as they're full of spoilers.
Image
User avatar
sgt.null
Jack of Odd Trades, Master of Fun
Posts: 48340
Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2005 7:53 am
Location: Brazoria, Texas
Has thanked: 7 times
Been thanked: 10 times

Post by sgt.null »

Menolly wrote:Enjoy Sarge!

If you come into the King forum, beware the Fresh Journey threads, as they're full of spoilers.
i shall wait until i am finished then. :) thank you!
Lenin, Marx
Marx, Lennon
Good Dog...
User avatar
Khaliban
Watchman, Second Class
Posts: 3018
Joined: Sun Feb 22, 2004 5:55 am
Location: Evanston, IL
Been thanked: 2 times
Contact:

Post by Khaliban »

Native Son by Richard Wright and The Diary of Anne Frank. The truth hurts. It really, really, really hurts.
"This is the sort of bloody nonsense up with which I will not put."


Smashwords: Discovered Mate: A Tale of Desire and Chess

Some Stories: FanFiction or Archive Of Our Own
User avatar
Menolly
A Lowly Harper
Posts: 24184
Joined: Thu May 19, 2005 12:29 am
Location: Harper Hall, Fort Hold, Northern Continent, Pern...
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 15 times
Contact:

Post by Menolly »

Khaliban wrote:Native Son by Richard Wright and The Diary of Anne Frank. The truth hurts. It really, really, really hurts.
...aye...

Yet keep in mind, always...
Anne Frank wrote:I keep my ideals, because in spite of everything I still believe that people are really good at heart.
Image
User avatar
Zahir
The Gap Into Spam
Posts: 1304
Joined: Mon Dec 02, 2002 11:52 pm
Location: Los Angeles, CA

Post by Zahir »

I am halfway through The Night Watch by Sarah Waters. She is, imho, a truly excellent author and this is her first novel not set in the Victorian era (the others are--in publication order--Tipping the Velvet then Affinity and then my favorite, Fingersmith). I'm less engaged in this one, partially because I feel less familiar with the era depicted--London in 1944 then 1947--and also because she is focusing on more characters, rather than the one or two she's done previously.

Still, I am interested and find myself caring about what happened. The first third takes place in 1947 while now we're in a flashback--yet I'm genuinely puzzled how these people changed so in just three years.
"O let my name be in the Book of Love!
It be there, I care not of the other great book Above.
Strike it out! Or, write it in anew. But
Let my name be in the Book of Love!" --Omar Khayam
User avatar
Endymion9
<i>Haruchai</i>
Posts: 507
Joined: Tue May 01, 2007 10:54 pm
Location: Lost in a book somewhere
Contact:

Post by Endymion9 »

Just finished an short story collection, Wastelands, Stories of the Apocaypse. Good not great. I just like the atmosphere. Look post-apocalyptic fiction.

Reading Odd Hours by Dean Koontz now.
User avatar
SoulBiter
The Gap Into Spam
Posts: 9821
Joined: Wed Jun 02, 2004 2:02 am
Has thanked: 118 times
Been thanked: 14 times

Post by SoulBiter »

My kids bought me some books by Naomi Novik for fathers day. Ive never heard of these but since my kids bought them for me what am I to do?

I finished the first one and its not high-brow work by any stretch but thoroughly enjoyable.

His Majesty's Dragon (Temeraire, Book 1)
Throne of Jade (Temeraire, Book 2)

From Amazon: In this delightful first novel, the opening salvo of a trilogy, Novik seamlessly blends fantasy into the history of the Napoleonic wars. Here be dragons, beasts that can speak and reason, bred for strength and speed and used for aerial support in battle. Each nation has its own breeds, but none are so jealously guarded as the mysterious dragons of China. Veteran Capt. Will Laurence of the British Navy is therefore taken aback after his crew captures an egg from a French ship and it hatches a Chinese dragon, which Laurence names Temeraire. When Temeraire bonds with the captain, the two leave the navy to sign on with His Majesty's sadly understaffed Aerial Corps, which takes on the French in sprawling, detailed battles that Novik renders with admirable attention to 19th-century military tactics. Though the dragons they encounter are often more fully fleshed-out than the stereotypical human characters, the author's palpable love for her subject and a story rich with international, interpersonal and internal struggles more than compensate.
We miss you Tracie but your Spirit will always shine brightly on the Watch Image
User avatar
aliantha
blueberries on steroids
Posts: 17865
Joined: Tue Mar 05, 2002 7:50 pm
Location: NOT opening up a restaurant in Santa Fe

Post by aliantha »

I'm reading "What Happened" by Scott McClellan. I'm up to Hurricane Katrina right now. Interesting stuff.
Image
Image

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/
User avatar
danlo
Lord
Posts: 20838
Joined: Wed Mar 06, 2002 8:29 pm
Location: Albuquerque NM
Been thanked: 1 time
Contact:

Post by danlo »

I'm reading a very interesting book my Dad just sent me called The Right Kind of War by a Marine tommygunner (John McCormick) who fought many frontline campaigns in the Pacific in WWII. Amazing insider perspective. My Dad commanded a Landing Ship Tank in the Navy during the war and told me he'd probably not have come back if we didn't drop the bombs as he was scheduled for the first wave of the invasion of Japan.
fall far and well Pilots!
User avatar
wayfriend
.
Posts: 20957
Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2004 12:34 am
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 6 times

Post by wayfriend »

SoulBiter wrote:My kids bought me some books by Naomi Novik for fathers day. Ive never heard of these but since my kids bought them for me what am I to do?
I had never heard of them until Peter Jackson announced he's making them into movies.
.
User avatar
sgt.null
Jack of Odd Trades, Master of Fun
Posts: 48340
Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2005 7:53 am
Location: Brazoria, Texas
Has thanked: 7 times
Been thanked: 10 times

Post by sgt.null »

2nd book in the gunslinger series
20,000 leagues under the sea - jules verne (for our book club)
a whole slew of graphic novels from the lake jackson library.
Lenin, Marx
Marx, Lennon
Good Dog...
User avatar
Nav
Lord
Posts: 2137
Joined: Tue Nov 26, 2002 5:03 pm
Location: Surrey - Home of Baseball

Post by Nav »

I'm in full-on, schizophrenic reading mode at the moment. I'm currently partway through the following:

The Twin - Gerbrand Bakker
Deja Dead - Cathy Reichs
Crime and Punishment - Dostoevsky
The First Gotrek and Felix Omnibus - William King
The Picture of Dorian Gray - Oscar Wilde
The Star Fraction - Ken McLeod

I've also recently finished:

A Study in Scarlet - Arthur Conan Doyle
Love and other Near Death Experiences - Mil Millington
Matter - Iain M. Banks
The House of Suns - Alastair Reynolds

All of which I'd thoroughly recommend.
Q. Why do Communists drink herbal tea?
A. Because proper tea is theft.
User avatar
Loredoctor
Lord
Posts: 18609
Joined: Sun Jul 14, 2002 11:35 pm
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
Contact:

Post by Loredoctor »

Albert Speer - Inside the Third Reich.
Waddley wrote:your Highness Sir Dr. Loredoctor, PhD, Esq, the Magnificent, First of his name, Second Cousin of Dragons, White-Gold-Plate Wielder!
User avatar
Cleburne
Bloodguard
Posts: 991
Joined: Sun Dec 16, 2007 1:56 pm
Location: City of Verulanium, England

Post by Cleburne »

I was browsing in a local bookshop with a limited science fiction books and low and behold there was two books fron SRD one was WGW and the other which I didnt know existed (shame on me) was Daughterof Regals and other tales.I will start digesting it this afternoon .Have many of you read his short stories :?:
A lie well told and told often enough,I'm damned if the truth will ever catch up with it!
Post Reply

Return to “General Literature Discussion”