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-   -   What are you reading right now? (https://thetfp.com/tfp/tilted-entertainment/34052-what-you-reading-right-now.html)

Uncle Pony 10-19-2005 10:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by guthmund
I just finished Knife of Dreams by Robert Jordan.

Much, much better than the last two books, though this one felt a bit rushed. From what I understand (and I could be wrong, wrong wrong) the next book is the last book, which means all this has to be tied up in one final push of 600+ pages, which seems a bit hurried compared to all the other books.

It is supposed to be finished in one more book. I'll wait until Jordan gets the series done before I buy them though. Then I'll pick them up on Amazon for $2 apiece. He's probably going to die before he ever finishes that fuckin' series.

Right now I'm still thinking about finishing Deadhouse Gates by Steven Erikson. It's book two of The Malazan Book of the Fallen series. Book one was OK, but I'm having a tough time getting into book two. I'm a couple of chapters in already. I just have to get around to finishing it.

Telluride 10-19-2005 10:43 PM

I've just started reading Holy Blood, Holy Grail, by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln.

m0rpheus 10-20-2005 03:59 PM

Thud! the newest of Terry Prachett's Discworld series. A buddy of mine picked it up for me for my b-day.

cj2112 10-20-2005 04:54 PM

AutoCAD and its applications 2006 by Terence M. Shumaker and David A. Madsen....biggest.book.ever.

Atropos4 10-24-2005 08:36 PM

Chronicles of Narnia...again Preparing myself for the release of the movie.

Kadath 10-28-2005 04:25 PM

I've got about six in the fire right now, but the main one is China Mieville's Perdido Street Station. He's a very, very evocative and clever writer. his books are very good, but some of the imagery is extremely disturbing. Also I've got Lewis' Pelelandra, second in the Space Trilogy, Democracy in America and some crappy NJO book.

Atropos, my gf is reading Narnia for the first time in prep for the movie(s) -- she commented "They're very childish."

fresnelly 10-28-2005 04:43 PM

Just finished the original The Adventures of Pinoccio by C. Collodi (pen name of Carlo Lorenzini). Now I'm reading The Rule of Four, bu Ian Caldwell and Justin Thomason.

Pinoccio was fun and a little suprising. For example, he kills the talking cricket with a hammer in the third chapter.

The Rule of Four is a DaVinci Codesque thriller, but much more reserved. So far so good.

noodle 10-29-2005 06:32 AM

A Sack Full of Teeth, Grant Buday. Just picked it up. Finished and returned War Trash to the library, finally. Ha Ming, I think? Usually hate war books but I was strangely drawn to that one. Really like his writing style.

nukeu666 10-30-2005 07:13 AM

wheel of time book 8

Ishmal 10-30-2005 11:33 PM

i'm reading Harry Potter & the Goblet Of Fire for the hundreth time...

i started reading the series again so that i can read all six in a row.

Spoiler: i'm almost finished it,

i'm at the part where Harry & Cedric have grabbed the cup and Cedric is about to get killed.


i can't wait to finish it, cause i'm alot less familiar with the last two books!

Derwood 10-31-2005 10:25 AM

Just finished "Brave New World' and now moving on to "Uncle Tom's Cabin"

Hat 11-08-2005 09:09 AM

I finished A Feast For Crows (fourth in the Song of Ice & Fire saga and the only contemporary fantasy worth reading imo) by George R. R. Martin a few weeks ago, and just finished The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing.

I found the former to be a bit of a let down to be honest. As it's essentially half a book, it was missing half the characters, and I didn't enjoy the new POVs. Still fantastic, but it's the first in the series which seems to contain padding (not in the Wheel of Time sense though, at least this padding was still enjoyable :p). I say seems, because we only really got half a book, and until we get the other half, and the next book after that, it's impossible to really discount any of the apparent padding as, well, padding. Anyway, slightly less than genius is still very good.

As for The Fifth Child, well, I was pretty disappointed. I wouldn't say it's a bad book, but I think one really needs to be a parent to relate. The basic premise is this - David and Harriet are determined to achieve domestic bliss through a traditional blueprint of family life. So, they purchase a large house and have a multitude of children. By the fourth child everything's still going swell, and they appear to be living their dream. Enter the fifth child, a cold, violent, large and ugly child who only seems vaguely human. Sounds like an interesting premise, yeah? Unfortunately I found the writing style to be very dull. I thought the ideas presented were somewhat interesting, but ultimately drawn rather poorly. At the same time, I think I'd have found it more interesting if I was female, a parent, or married and wanted to have kids. Still, it's a short read so I can't complain.

RickB 11-08-2005 09:20 AM

Finally getting around to reading a book by Dan Brown. I'd thought I'd start with Angels and Demons and then move on to The DaVinci Code.

sailor 11-08-2005 11:11 AM

The Guns of August, by Barbara Tuchman. It's a history of the events leading up to, and the first month of, the first world war. It's supposed to be one of the best histories of this war ever written; I'll soon find out :)

avernus 11-08-2005 11:13 AM

Thinks.... by David Lodge.

Honestly couldn't finish Human Stain by Philip Roth, and I hate leaving books unfinished.

Kadath, I loved Perdido Street Station! His next book The Scar is set in the same world just after the events in PSS but I thought it was even better! His most recent book Iron Council is a bit disappointing though. King Rat, his first book, ain't a bad read if you like him as a author.

CBlend 11-10-2005 11:19 AM

Excel Data Analysis for Dummies by Stephen L. Nelson. Isn't my life thrilling? :)

sentimental_arm 11-22-2005 07:56 AM

Just read Daniel Dennett's Darwin's Dangerous Idea, pretty good. Am now starting Jean-Paul Sartre 'Being and Nothingness", the most technical philosophy book I've read so far in my life, has taken me 3 attempts to read the introduction. Hopefully all the long-windedness will have some value when chatting up existentialist women. cantona

Kostya 11-22-2005 10:22 PM

Quote:

Am now starting Jean-Paul Sartre 'Being and Nothingness", the most technical philosophy book I've read so far in my life, has taken me 3 attempts to read the introduction. Hopefully all the long-windedness will have some value when chatting up existentialist women.
Well, the use of the word technical here is a little misleading. Obtuse might be a little more accurate I think. Indeed quoting from Being and Nothingness is a good way to get to the heart of the smouldering 'indy' types.

Rise of Napoleon Bonaparte... meh, not fantastic, not bad though.

meembo 11-23-2005 04:56 AM

I saw Walk the Line on Monday, and I got Cash's autobiography, which is an awfully rambling kind of book of remembrances

Derwood 11-24-2005 08:22 AM

Catch-22 by Joseph Heller

Mantus 11-24-2005 08:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Derwood
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller

I've been trying to finish that book for a year now...it gets so tedious...

At the moment.

Half a Life by V. S. Naipaul

Charlatan 11-24-2005 08:32 AM

I am reading Elanor Rigby by Douglas Copeland... and I swear that the main character, Liz, is based on Maleficent.

snowy 11-24-2005 02:49 PM

Just finished the saga "The Thorn Birds" by Colleen McCullogh. Pretty good read...entertaining if nothing else, though I did learn a lot about sheep stations in Australia.

Toaster126 11-24-2005 04:16 PM

I'm reading Fahrenheit 451 again right now. Before that I read Brave New World for the billionth time.

I need to read something not about a future messed up society next, I think.

Sho Nuff 11-25-2005 12:00 AM

Imperial Hubris: Why the West is losing the War on Terror. Probably one of the most sober albiet one sided assesments of the war on terror Ive read.

Kadath 11-25-2005 06:14 PM

Palahniuk's Choke. I'm about halfway through and I'm already having to take breaks as the torment grows thicker.

rthmchgs 12-01-2005 07:13 AM

Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. So far so good, only about 1/4 done with it. To me it is not written to be complete fiction like other books with magic, this seems like it could almost be possible....maybe I am completely wrong....

DHS 12-12-2005 07:26 AM

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury.

Derwood 12-12-2005 08:09 AM

The Green Mile. Stephen King could make a career writing non-horror prison novels...

Coppertop 12-12-2005 09:45 AM

http://hopefulamphibian.blogs.com/ph...85603428_1.jpg

maleficent 12-12-2005 09:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Charlatan
I am reading Elanor Rigby by Douglas Copeland... and I swear that the main character, Liz, is based on Maleficent.

how truly frightening.. Do I need to pick up a copy of this book?

Gee after reading the reviews on Amazon.. I'm thinking no, and i'm thinking i shoudl be really insulted... If only I had more energy..

pixelbend 12-12-2005 09:57 AM

Reading "The Mediterranian Caper" by Clive Cussler. I just now found the Dirk Pitt series. Pretty interesting, for downtime books.

Locke 12-14-2005 11:51 PM

The Gunslinger by Stephen King. Time to start on this set.

SecretMethod70 12-15-2005 12:11 AM

Requiem for a Dream - Hubert Selby, Jr.

So far, the book is quite excellent, though it takes a bit of getting used to the writing style. Paragraph breaks are not very common and there are no quotation marks or indications as to who is saying what when something is being said other than picking up on each character's speaking style.

SecretMethod70 12-17-2005 03:44 AM

Update:
I'm further into the book and if you've seen the movie, the book is just as crazy from a literary perspective. I swear to god, I recently read an 8 page long "paragraph" in which one "sentence" went on for at least 2.5 pages (I didn't bother to look and see exactly how long the sentence is). It's really quite effective at creating a certain "feel" though, I'm enjoying it a lot.

snowy 12-17-2005 09:58 PM

Just finished rereading some of my favorites out of the "Anne" series of books by LM Montgomery: Anne of Avonlea and Rilla of Ingleside. I'd tkae up reading Anne of the Island if I could find it, but it's gone missing... :(

Instead I'm going to start reading Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond. I think it will be interesting.

Coppertop 12-18-2005 08:57 AM

Schrödinger's Cat by Robert Anton Wilson

snowy, I've been wanting to read Guns, Germs & Steel for a while now. Can you give us (okay - me) a review when you're done?

aKula 12-18-2005 10:07 AM

Tolstoy's war and peace. I'm really enjoying it as I like reading books set in that era. Needless to say it is well written.

Sgoilear 12-19-2005 05:31 AM

Battle Royale by Koushun Takami.

highthief 12-19-2005 06:22 AM

"Scotland: From Prehistory to Present" - by Fiona Watson.


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