Dresden Files = Victory. That is all.
Going Postal isn't a bad place to start either, if you want to get a look at his much later works.Judge not the Discworld by Color of Magic. That book is almost a parody of fantasy books of the time and doesn't really capture what becomes great with the series. I recommend the watch series which starts with Guards! Guards! or the Death series which technically starts with Mort, but gets better with Reaper Man and on. The witches can be fun too, but start with Wyrd Sisters as Equal Rites is still an early book and only has Granny Weatherwax in it.
Just finished it, myself. I couldn't put Catching Fire down. In fact, as soon as I finished the last chapter of it, I was like "NO! Come on! You can't end a book like that!" I stormed into my living room, put CF back in the trilogy box and immediately pulled out Mockingjay, reading the first chapter or two. Holy crap, are these books impossible to put down.Finished Mockingjay last night. I didn't mean to, but anyone who's been reading these books knows how well stopping goes...
Anyway.
Holy shit, that was harsh. So many people died. Sober, brutal... I had really hoped Katniss would have a chance to get over all this, but from the epilogue, it seems she stays broken. Realistic, but sad.
Probably the weakest of the series, but still good.
I've been meaning to pick up this series. I haven't read ANYTHING about it, but I saw the first book at Indigo last year and made a mental note to come back for it when I finished.... whatever it was I was reading at the time. But now everytime I enter a bookstore, they only have the second or third book. Never the first. (First world problem.)Couldn't finish Revenge of the Dwarves. The Dwarves and War of the Dwarves were good... but the author suddenly makes the protagonist act VERY out of character in the third book, and so many important things happen/people die BETWEEN BOOK 2 AND 3 that it feels like the actor who played so-and-so got fired between seasons of a TV show, and when the next season starts up "Oh, soandso died 4 years ago." THIS IS A BOOK, YOU CHOWDERHEAD. TELL THE STORY OF HIS DEATH, DON'T JUST START REFERRING TO HIM IN THE PAST TENSE LIKE A FIRED ACTOR!
Who "enters a bookstore?" Psf.I've been meaning to pick up this series. I haven't read ANYTHING about it, but I saw the first book at Indigo last year and made a mental note to come back for it when I finished.... whatever it was I was reading at the time. But now everytime I enter a bookstore, they only have the second or third book. Never the first. (First world problem.)
Just finished it, myself. I couldn't put Catching Fire down. In fact, as soon as I finished the last chapter of it, I was like "NO! Come on! You can't end a book like that!" I stormed into my living room, put CF back in the trilogy box and immediately pulled out Mockingjay, reading the first chapter or two. Holy crap, are these books impossible to put down.
Okay, putting the rest in spoilers, including responding to the Quotester here:
-I liked the sober, realistic ending. It was a war, after all. No one walks away from a war like that unbroken. It was a bittersweet ending. I knew she'd wind up with Peeta in the end, but really didn't expect their reunion with his hands around her throat! Goddamn these books and their cliffhangers!
-I was nearly in tears when she broke down yelling at Buttercup near the end.
-Thought for sure Finnick was going to make it to the end. Of the group, I figured everyone but him, Katniss, Gale, and Peeta would survive. Everyone else may as well've been wearing red shirts.
-Still trying to work out her reasoning for killing the new president. I guess it was the whole, "We don't lie to each other" line from Snow? I'm still a little unclear.
But yeah, overall, I thought this was no stronger or weaker than the other two. Of course, I read it and Catching Fire in a frigging whirlwind, so they kind of mesh together for me. It's sort of like ploughing through a season of 24. You don't remember which episode was which at times.
It was okay. Lots of interesting ideas, but Huxley didn't really tell a story with it, so it was more of "Here's this world" than 1984's "Here's this world and the people to whom it does horrifying things."You what book I read a while ago in high school? Brave new world. Man...that was some deep ass satire. Anyone else read it?
That's a good analyzation of the story to tell you the truth. Plus I did find one character's sudden character change weird. But hey, he ended having "sex-hormone" chewing gum so I at least had a good laugh.It was okay. Lots of interesting ideas, but Huxley didn't really tell a story with it, so it was more of "Here's this world" than 1984's "Here's this world and the people to whom it does horrifying things."
It's much easier to divide it up into various "series". It helps you keep track of certain characters.The Discworld books are one of those things where I totally would love to read them, but there's just so much out there that it's extremely intimidating to a new reader.
You can start anywhere. It does not matter. You can pick up any book and you'll be okay. Pick one that sounds interesting and go with it.The Discworld books are one of those things where I totally would love to read them, but there's just so much out there that it's extremely intimidating to a new reader.
I can understand that, with the way we've been trained by LOTR, Wheel of Time, Pern and so many other "serious" series. This is a comedy series, that's delved more and more into social commentary (but that's fine), that honestly the rules don't even stay the same from book to book. Pick a title that sounds interesting, or is just there right in front of you, and start reading.The Discworld books are one of those things where I totally would love to read them, but there's just so much out there that it's extremely intimidating to a new reader.