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Still working through The Sound and the Fury.
While waiting in the airport on Saturday, I decided I needed something lighter (my plane was delayed for 5 hours, and I don't think I could handle 5 hours of Faulkner) so I started reading The Summoner, Part 1 of Chronicles of the Necromancer by Gail Martin. Maybe it's just because the book was unfortunately compared to Faulkner by virtue of juxtaposition, but it reads like a 6th grader's creative writing assignment. At least there's no confusion as to who the bad guy is; 15 pages in and he has assaulted a maid, beat up a little girl, and tortured a puppy. I kid you not. We get it. He's Eeeeevil. Please move on.

Comrade Anklebiter |

Finished Simon Schama's Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution.
Very well-written and jam-packed with details, but, well, the guy prefers Talleyrand and Charlotte Corday to Marat and Danton.
But I am not done with 1789 quite yet, gonna revisit my Georges Lefebvre books, maybe look for some of the 19th-century chronicles.
In the meantime, it's back to Conan.

geekgumbo |
I recommend a book called "Truth in Comady" to all of my gamer friends, and I re-read it often. Autors Del Close, Norna Halpern and Kim Johnson. Book on how to make Improv work. If you don't see the connection between gaming and improv you are dead to me. Read it!!!
Also reading "The Accidental City" by Powell- an early (1718-1803) history of New Orleans, as well as a number of Osprey books- mainly early firearm books. I really dislike how Pathfinder does gunpowder and am looking for a more historicly accurate idea of how to run guns. This starts at learning about early firearms, and going from there.

Doodlebug Anklebiter |

Well, the first third of Of Love and Shadows gets the Doodlebug Anklebiter seal of approval. In not named post-Allende Chile, a couple of young journalists (hot and sexy, of course) discover a little girl out in the countryside performing miracles. Magical realist hijinks ensue.
Meanwhile, in D&D-land, moved on to Conan the Usurper and am right in the middle of some kick ass faux-Indian-fighting (Conan as Natty Bumpo?).
Finally, in Vive le Galt!-land, re-reading Georges Lefebvre's The French Revolution: From Its Origins to 1793. Vive le Galt!

Aaron Bitman |

just finished randezvous with rama, by arthur c clarke. what a great book!
Yup. Not long ago, I joined a thread on these boards discussing the major ideas of sci-fi published in the late 60's and 70's. I named a bunch of books, and mentioned that of all of them, my favorite was Rendezvous with Rama. In those days, Clarke could really give you that certain sense of wonder, which I think is an major element of a lot of sci-fi.

loimprevisto |

C. S. Friedman's Madness Season is an interesting bit of Sci-fi that I'm not sure how to describe without dipping into spoilers.
I'm also reading The Essential Neruda, Selected Poems since I came across his work when I was learning Spanish and am trying to get back into practice with the language. Can anyone recommend any other Spanish language poets?

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Still working through The Sound and the Fury.
While waiting in the airport on Saturday, I decided I needed something lighter (my plane was delayed for 5 hours, and I don't think I could handle 5 hours of Faulkner) so I started reading The Summoner, Part 1 of Chronicles of the Necromancer by Gail Martin. Maybe it's just because the book was unfortunately compared to Faulkner by virtue of juxtaposition, but it reads like a 6th grader's creative writing assignment. At least there's no confusion as to who the bad guy is; 15 pages in and he has assaulted a maid, beat up a little girl, and tortured a puppy. I kid you not. We get it. He's Eeeeevil. Please move on.
I need something new to read. I finished The Sound and the Fury a couple weeks ago, and picked up The Summoner again a few times, but every time the prose makes my stomach turn. It's not often that I consider money spent on a paperback to be money wasted, but in this case, it is.
Hmm...

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Celestial Healer wrote:Would you like more pretentious highbrow shiznit, or more pedestrian fantasy stuff?
I need something new to read.
Hmm...
Since my pedestrian fantasy stuff did not go over well, maybe that's a sign I'm still in a pretentious highbrow shiznit frame of mind.
Might go for some Gore Vidal.

thejeff |
thejeff wrote:Aegypt by John Crowley. I've had my eye on this since I read and loved Little, Big years ago, but somehow never got around to it.Little, Big took me a really long time to get through, but was very rewarding. Now there is some quality prose. How is Aegypt thus far?
Similar. It's started off slow. I'm just starting to get to the neat magic realism stuff. It's all a matter of how the payoff at the end works out.

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Better Served Cold by Joe Abercrombie.
Finished The Heroes a couple weeks ago. Great characterization, but ultimately unsatisfying finish.
Currently picking my way through the Captain Alatriste books by Arturo Perez-Reverte. They're nice in that you really can read them in any order.

Drejk |

Timothy Zahn's Triplet. Some interesting ideas there.

Doodlebug Anklebiter |

Well, the first third of Of Love and Shadows gets the Doodlebug Anklebiter seal of approval. In not named post-Allende Chile, a couple of young journalists (hot and sexy, of course) discover a little girl out in the countryside performing miracles. Magical realist hijinks ensue.
Finished the 2nd third, and there has been nowhere near as much magical realist hijinks as I thought there was going to be based on the end of the 1st third. We'll see how the 3rd third pans out.

Matt_Scudder |

Matt_Scudder wrote:Currently reading Nothing Lasts Forever by Roderick Thorp, the crime novel which was made into the film Die Hard; and Lord of Silence by Mark Chadbourn, well-written fantasy.I had no idea Die Hard was based on a book.
Yippie-kye-aye, m@&$&*++##%#!
It's actually pretty good. The main character is a retired New York cop, and it's his daughter held hostage, not his wife. And it's much darker than the movie, all the great action though.