Recently read:
American Gods by Neil Gaiman
I enjoyed it a lot, as I do most of Gaiman's writing. The characters are enjoyable, and the world feels rich and nuanced. That said, I enjoyed Changer by Jane Lindskold more, which is a very similar concept. American Gods felt, at points, like it was some sort of comparative religion test, making references that I only barely got, and made me wondering if missing something. It felt like it was working too hard at being cryptic. It pulled the "we're going to hint at the identity of this character, and it's going to be obvious to people who know enough mythology, but you've got to figure it out on your own" one too many times. Changer saved that for characters in the shadows, whose identities weren't fully revealed yet, and whose hidden identity mattered to a mystery. American Gods it was just a "wink" to people who know their myths.
Other than such academic hipsterism, I struggled with the dark tone of American Gods. While not bad, in and of itself, it just didn't appeal to me at this point in my life. The tone doesn't ring untrue, and certainly is used well to examine the themes of the book, and there's a lot of truth to the way characters act like assholes, but it was often oppressive enough to rub me the wrong way. There are moments of hope, enough to have kept me going, but it's a pretty bleak book on the whole.
I Shall Wear Midnight by Terry Pratchett
This one is part of the Discworld series, more specifically a Tiffany Aching and the Wee Free Men story. I loved it, and I highly recommend everyone read Discworld. There is some amazing satire of humanity, especially religion and government, in this story. Tiffany is one of my favorite characters in the series, probably second only to Sam Vimes. There are some great plot twists in Midnight, and I laughed out loud at many points.
Reading:
The Harry Potter novels by J.K. Rowling
I'm still re-reading the first four books in the series. I read these back when the first came out, but was unable to finish when Harry Potter suddenly was considered "evil" by my mother and older sister, who shredded our hard-bound copies of the first four books. I'm really enjoying going through these again, and I'm eager to finish the Goblet of Fire so that I can move on to completely new territory for me.