What are you reading in general?
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They're remarkably fun in the way that bad movies such as Sharknado are fun! Too bad that didn't translate to the movies.sgt.null wrote:I've decided to read the Twilight series.
That way I'm not a hypocrite in making fun of them.
"You make me think Hell is run like a corporation."
"It's the other way around, but yes."
Obaki, Too Much Information
"It's the other way around, but yes."
Obaki, Too Much Information
- sgt.null
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I have a Batman book (Inferno) to finish before Twilight.Rigel wrote:They're remarkably fun in the way that bad movies such as Sharknado are fun! Too bad that didn't translate to the movies.sgt.null wrote:I've decided to read the Twilight series.
That way I'm not a hypocrite in making fun of them.
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What really amuses me is that 50 Shades of Grey started out as Twilight fanfic.Rigel wrote:They're remarkably fun in the way that bad movies such as Sharknado are fun! Too bad that didn't translate to the movies.sgt.null wrote:I've decided to read the Twilight series.
That way I'm not a hypocrite in making fun of them.
--A
Interesting question. I had Wheel of Time AND pretty much anything by Sanderson recommended to me this year. I ummed and ahhed about what to read, eventually settling on the first Wheel of Time book, The Eye of the World. I did not like it one bit. It seemed juvenile and derivative. Not that that's necessarily a bad thing, but I wasn't expecting it. Unlike with my reread of The Sword of Shannara last year - then I was expecting it and I really quite enjoyed it.Avatar wrote:Never read any of his books apart from the WoT ones he finished. (Which I was not disappointed by.) Any good?
Onto Sanderson. It was a thing to decide where to start. It's not clearcut as with other fantasy writers. I decided on the Stormlight Archive and was hooked from the very beginning. I listen to the Audible versions and I got through the first two in a few weeks. It's original and incredibly rich. I have paused Oathbringer for now though as I'm listening to Scott Brick's narration of Lord Foul's Bane after finishing The Last Dark last week.
I highly recommend Stormlight Archive.
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Eh...I don't know if Kant suffers particularly in translation, (my German is nowhere near good enough to read the original), but I always found him nearly as tedious as Michel Foucault (in translation).
Now, I (first) read it back in the 90's so there was less for it to be derivative of perhaps. I generally enjoy the series a lot (with some caveats to be fair, like book 7-10 get progressively worse before the series picks up again), but that's probably mostly because of the epic world building and timeline.
--A
Funnily enough, we were talking somewhere (the Discord maybe?) about the upcoming WoT Amazon series, and I mentioned how book 1 was the most generic fantasy book of the series.Cams wrote:Interesting question. I had Wheel of Time AND pretty much anything by Sanderson recommended to me this year. I ummed and ahhed about what to read, eventually settling on the first Wheel of Time book, The Eye of the World. I did not like it one bit. It seemed juvenile and derivative. Not that that's necessarily a bad thing, but I wasn't expecting it. Unlike with my reread of The Sword of Shannara last year - then I was expecting it and I really quite enjoyed it.Avatar wrote:Never read any of his books apart from the WoT ones he finished. (Which I was not disappointed by.) Any good?
Onto Sanderson. It was a thing to decide where to start. It's not clearcut as with other fantasy writers. I decided on the Stormlight Archive and was hooked from the very beginning. I listen to the Audible versions and I got through the first two in a few weeks. It's original and incredibly rich. I have paused Oathbringer for now though as I'm listening to Scott Brick's narration of Lord Foul's Bane after finishing The Last Dark last week.
I highly recommend Stormlight Archive.
Now, I (first) read it back in the 90's so there was less for it to be derivative of perhaps. I generally enjoy the series a lot (with some caveats to be fair, like book 7-10 get progressively worse before the series picks up again), but that's probably mostly because of the epic world building and timeline.
--A
So I should read the second one?Avatar wrote:Funnily enough, we were talking somewhere (the Discord maybe?) about the upcoming WoT Amazon series, and I mentioned how book 1 was the most generic fantasy book of the series.
Now, I (first) read it back in the 90's so there was less for it to be derivative of perhaps. I generally enjoy the series a lot (with some caveats to be fair, like book 7-10 get progressively worse before the series picks up again), but that's probably mostly because of the epic world building and timeline.
--A
Oh hey, I read that years back, and really enjoyed it.Cord Hurn wrote:Currently reading A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, by Mark Twain.
I'm about halfway through The Girl on the Train and expect to finish it tomorrow. It's... rough. Horror stories like Stephen King writes are one thing, but horror like The Office or Idiocracy are magnitudes worse because you can picture it happening to you. The dysfunction that Rachel experiences... When I read it I think, "There, but for the grace of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, go I."
But I'm planning on pushing through to the end tomorrow.
"You make me think Hell is run like a corporation."
"It's the other way around, but yes."
Obaki, Too Much Information
"It's the other way around, but yes."
Obaki, Too Much Information
Girl on the Train was good but a touch more melodrama than I prefer. The literary version of a Lifetime movie
I picked up My Grandmother Asked Me To Tell You She's Sorry, about a 7 year old girl and her 77 year old grandmother, and I'm loving it so far. There are two major plot points I saw coming ahead of time, but I don't mind because the story is well told.
I picked up My Grandmother Asked Me To Tell You She's Sorry, about a 7 year old girl and her 77 year old grandmother, and I'm loving it so far. There are two major plot points I saw coming ahead of time, but I don't mind because the story is well told.
"You make me think Hell is run like a corporation."
"It's the other way around, but yes."
Obaki, Too Much Information
"It's the other way around, but yes."
Obaki, Too Much Information