"A man's not dead while his name's still spoken."I know how you feel. If I had my choice, Sir Terry would live forever.
#GNUTerryPratchett
"A man's not dead while his name's still spoken."I know how you feel. If I had my choice, Sir Terry would live forever.
Just finished this. I quite liked it, although I wish he'd have written the next Dresden book instead!I have been trying to read Jim Butcher's new steampunk book "The Aeronaut's Windlass," which is a good enough book, but I am really struggling to stay focused on it. Part of this is because my attention span has been shitballs lately, part of it is just being less attached to brand new characters. It takes me FOREVER to get hooked into new book series.
I have a friend reading through Dresden for the first time. He just finished Blood Rites. Every time he finds out something new he tells me about it so excited. I love that part of reading new books. Jim Butcher posted the first sentence of the next book quite a while ago and I was super excited.Just finished this. I quite liked it, although I wish he'd have written the next Dresden book instead!
Every other nerd I knew growing up was very heavily into The Wheel of Time, and I distinctly remember that when ASOIAF appeared it was hailed as a pretty fucking good ersatz, and everyone also got into it, so that alone might've seeded the fandom pretty well.I am reading A Game of Thrones. Haven't seen the show, and have remained fairly spoiler free. It's a nice story, but some of graphic text could be toned down a bit. I only have 75 pages to go, and I find it quite distracting to be at work today. I am surprised that it came out in '96. When did it get so popular? I assume b/c of the show.
I started reading ASOIAF when Dragon Age: Origins came out, because it was noted as the major inspiration for the game.Every other nerd I knew growing up was very heavily into The Wheel of Time, and I distinctly remember that when ASOIAF appeared it was hailed as a pretty fucking good ersatz, and everyone also got into it, so that alone might've seeded the fandom pretty well.
Me too. Actually I think the last Jordan book (which he wrote after he found out he was dying) was a vast improvement over the previous few, and I've heard so many good things about the Sanderson ones that brought the story to a close, it's just by the time the Sanderson books started coming out it'd been so long since I read the Jordan books I'd forgotten so many characters and developments mired in hundreds of pages of useless overly-descriptive babble that..I still haven't finished Wheel of Time. I finished the first Brandon Sanderson one and thought it really revitalized the series, I just haven't gotten the last two volumes yet.
I liked Armada more than Ready Player One, but in both cases I found Cline's nostalgia-gasms to be going a little too heavy handed for my taste.
I'm hoping the movie for Ready Player One isn't quite so heavy handed. Spielberg's attached so it hopefully won't be god awful.Reading 'ready player one', given by my ss. Bout half way through, it's a pretty fun read. It's sad that this is supposed to be a somewhat-realistic crapsack future, but already I see some ways in which our actual world is worse. Book is fun though
I could not get into that. Among other things, the science in it annoyed me.Anyway, onwards to the other book my SS sent me....The Martian.
I read the first one in the fall, I liked it. Ending was great. I'll probably order the 2nd one on Amazon soon enough. I have 3 other books left to read, with the first almost done.I just finished Scott Lynch's third book in the Gentleman Bastards series Republic of Thieves. I enjoyed reading it because Locke and Jean are some of my favorite characters. I think Lynch is a very good author. The book was actually the blending of two stories: one from the past and one currently occurring. The character of Sabetha was featured, but I didn't feel like I knew much more about her besides she's got a hot & cold personality. If you didn't like the other two books enough to seek out the third, then I wouldn't recommend running out to get it. If you're like me and have become attached to the characters and their escapades, then by all means read it.
Jesus! Doesn't that come out today? Did you get the Kindle version at midnight?Just stayed up all night binging Bands of Mourning. Oops?
Well technically I got it at 10pm (MST), but yes.Jesus! Doesn't that come out today? Did you get the Kindle version at midnight?
Le Guin has a bit of a reputation. I find that it's completely deserved, even if I think she's an excellent writer. If you want something from her that's a bit different than the norm, look for the short story Nine Lives. I'm going to need to go through The Lathe of Heaven at some point in the future for my "Introduction to Science Fiction" class.Reading The Handmaid's Tale. It has at several points made me angry, in a way that sci fi should.