05-28-2011, 01:39 AM | #9526 |
Can one read too much?
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Earlier today I finished Gillian Flynn's Dark Places. Recommended for those who like twisted, King-like thrillers, but I'd suggest reading her first book Sharp Objects before this one - the plots aren't related, but this one'd be harder to get into I think.
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05-29-2011, 08:20 AM | #9527 |
It's Dr. Penguin now!
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Ok, I just finished a book called "Promise Kept"- it's a dystopian kind of novel about the world after the "Passing." I found some good and some "needs work" in it. My review is here.
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05-29-2011, 08:24 AM | #9528 |
whimsical
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Well I'm on Mortal Instruments series now, halfway through the 2nd book already. Not that I hate it, but I don't like it very much.
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05-29-2011, 08:45 AM | #9529 |
Hi There!
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I was thinking that maybe i'm still traumatized and couldn't concentrate on reading. But now I think maybe it is just a lousy book. Maybe it is time for a rofl comedy?
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05-29-2011, 09:14 AM | #9530 | |
Resident Curmudgeon
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Quote:
I'm reading a Star Trek book that's somewhat heavy going. But I'm not sure yet what I'll be reading after that. Will it be the book Club selection, will if be another In Death mystery? Another Women's Murder Club mystery, another Discworld story? I have no idea just yet. |
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05-29-2011, 09:39 AM | #9531 |
Maria Schneider
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05-29-2011, 09:42 AM | #9532 |
Wizard
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Try Christopher Moore. I find his stuff hilarious (Fool is a favorite), a hilarious and ribald recounting of King Lear from the point of view of Lear's Fool. Also, if you want to move to Florida, Carl Hiaasen would be funny and appropriate.
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05-29-2011, 09:43 AM | #9533 |
Close to the Edit!
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Funny, Hiaasen came straight to mind for me too. Not out and out comedy, but written with tongue firmly in cheek, and with a humorous and jaded view on what motivates people.
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05-29-2011, 10:02 AM | #9534 | |
Indie Advocate
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Quote:
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05-29-2011, 10:20 AM | #9535 |
Hi There!
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It was a Discworld book, but it STUNK! It was "The Amazing Maurice..." Long title, but more interesting than the story. I will skip it, and check ou Hiasson. Thanks for the idea!
I wonder if the library has his books? |
05-29-2011, 02:20 PM | #9536 |
Maria Schneider
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Hiassen never did a thing for me...not necessarily bad mysteries, but his humor always seemed forced. I only read one of his books though, so it may not have been representative of his cache.
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05-29-2011, 02:34 PM | #9537 |
Connoisseur
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I just finished reading A Reason To Believe by Gov. Deval Patrick. It's a good book but not worth all the hype it's been receiving IMO. I read it in hardback format since May has been a terrible month for me as far as eReaders go. I lost my Kindle 3 and my nook 1st edition has started having issues. Thankfully Barnes & Noble is replacing it for me.
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05-29-2011, 02:59 PM | #9538 | ||
Wizzard
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I finished Frederik-without-a-C Pohl's 1975 memoir The Way the Future Was, which I got from Baen's 10-books-for-$40-USD Pohl bundle, and it was excellent.
In between the usual anecdotes about growing up in New York during the Depression and being one of the early SF founding fans etc., Pohl's had the rare experience of being both an aspiring amateur and a paid professional writer, as well as a magazine editor and a literary agent, which is kind of like a hat trick of publishing industry involvement. He's got some great insight (still relevant to today's amateur aspiring professional writers, I should think), on how the needs and expectations of all those three jobs vary, and how he tried to make them intersect maybe a little more than they would have otherwise. Also, he's got some great publishing industry stories, from the apparently awesome rejection slips from the now-defunct sf magazine Wonder*, to John W. Campbell's tips on how to get Robert A. Heinlein to write a story for his magazine†. Plus he wrote advertising copy to promote books and such for many years (which explains the thoroughly satirical bent of some of the stories in the Best of Frederik Pohl collection I've also been reading) and he has some really funny anecdotes about coming up with winning sales-copy‡. Highly recommended for sheer entertainment value regardless, but especially so if you have any interest in science fiction fandom/publishing history and/or the mechanics of how writers/editors/literary agents and the publishing industry interact. Plus it's got examples of Pohl's own early Vogon-esque poetry. I don't know if this is the only volume of autobiography that Pohl wrote, but I'd gladly pay for another. And I think he won the fan writer Hugo last year for his blog, which I'll have to check out now. Baen's e-book edition has this minor weird thing where the footnotes are placed after the paragraph in which they're footnoted, which is perfectly readable, but within tables for some inexplicable reason, which is slightly less readable, especially when the footnoted matter (e.g., the Vogon-esque poetry doesn't fit into one "page" on the Kindle's display). * Came with a checklist of about 30 things that had gone wrong with your story in the editor's eyes, with the appropriate stuff checked off, e.g. Quote:
‡ Free examples for a coffee-table artbook on huntable wildlife: Quote:
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05-29-2011, 04:17 PM | #9539 | |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Next up, something light I bought in a fictionwise sale back in mid 2009. New Moon by Stephenie Meyer. I found the first book better than I'd expected, and the second is looking interesting. It certainly seems that becoming a (Stephenie Meyer) vampire is all upside at the moment, so it's not surprising that the heroine is keen to become one. |
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05-29-2011, 04:34 PM | #9540 | ||
It's Dr. Penguin now!
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DANG! That is *exactly* what I was going to write, ** and all! I might have said "It is" instead of "It's," though Quote:
Now I'm itching to read "Handmaid's Tale" again. ---filterin' away.... |
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