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2013 - What are you reading? - Page 57

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SafeWord
Profile Joined February 2010
United States522 Posts
January 11 2013 00:46 GMT
#1121
Just finished reading the Book Thief. May was that an amazing book, having Death as the narrator made it even better.

Next I'm planning to choose between Einstein's Dreams and Metro 2033. Has anyone read them?
Who needs players when you have God?
se7en247
Profile Blog Joined April 2008
United States487 Posts
January 11 2013 02:09 GMT
#1122
[image loading]
Currently reading this. Half way through and I really like it. Sanderson has become one of my favorite authors.

[image loading]
Going to read this next. Another Brandon Sanderson book. Absolutely loved the first three Mistborn books, so I'm looking forward to this.
I didn't come to play..I came to win. Now lets play.
TheFish7
Profile Blog Joined February 2012
United States2824 Posts
January 11 2013 02:23 GMT
#1123
[image loading]

I was really prepared to hate the first one, but I actually came away really liking it and wanting more. So I'll be finishing up the series (shouldn't take too long) before either jumping into a new series or picking up where I left off, about 2/3 of the way through Memories of Ice.

[image loading]

Anxious to see what happens, but I can really only pick one series since they are both soo long... hmm, which one to choose

[image loading]
~ ~ <°)))><~ ~ ~
SafeWord
Profile Joined February 2010
United States522 Posts
January 11 2013 02:26 GMT
#1124
On January 11 2013 11:09 se7en247 wrote:
[image loading]
Currently reading this. Half way through and I really like it. Sanderson has become one of my favorite authors.

[image loading]
Going to read this next. Another Brandon Sanderson book. Absolutely loved the first three Mistborn books, so I'm looking forward to this.


Mistborn books sound interesting o.o
Who needs players when you have God?
decado90
Profile Blog Joined December 2012
United States480 Posts
January 11 2013 02:58 GMT
#1125
On January 11 2013 11:23 TheFish7 wrote:


Anxious to see what happens, but I can really only pick one series since they are both soo long... hmm, which one to choose

[image loading]



I'm going to give you some good advice, and say do not read the Sword of Truth series. The first book is good and an effective stand alone and I would reccommend it, but the series goes downhill quickly.
"Be formless like water"- Bruce Lee
hasuprotoss
Profile Blog Joined March 2004
United States4612 Posts
January 11 2013 03:16 GMT
#1126
On January 11 2013 11:58 decado90 wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 11 2013 11:23 TheFish7 wrote:


Anxious to see what happens, but I can really only pick one series since they are both soo long... hmm, which one to choose

[image loading]



I'm going to give you some good advice, and say do not read the Sword of Truth series. The first book is good and an effective stand alone and I would reccommend it, but the series goes downhill quickly.


Not to mention from Book 5 onwards you get a steady hammering of Ayn Randian philosophy. If you really want to learn the short of this book (warning, does contain spoilers but it's hilarious to read if you don't want to get into this awful series) read this website:

http://sandstormreviews.blogspot.com/2006/08/goodkind-parodies.html

As for the actual topic (which is now outdated!) Here we go:

Just read:

[image loading]

Really good, cannot wait to find the second book (or for Lynch to finish the third!)

Currently reading:

[image loading]


Steven Erikson described it as "Vietnam War fiction on peyote." The series is extremely gritty and action-packed. It is also apparently one of the first fantasy novels that went outside the scope of the protagonist being the prince/king/what have you and brought it down to a more "believable" level.

Reading next:

[image loading]

I've heard that this series is a kind of difficult read. Apparently R. Scott Bakker developed the world that the series is set into several years before and doesn't spend a ton of time really bringing the reader up to speed. It's one of those books that I've read that you need to read twice to really make sure you understand everything. But the reviews I've seen of it have generally been rather positive, so I'm willing to give it a try!
http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/index.php?viewdays=0&show_part=5 <--- Articles Section on TL
Dirkzor
Profile Blog Joined June 2011
Denmark1944 Posts
January 11 2013 08:58 GMT
#1127
On January 11 2013 09:46 SafeWord wrote:
Just finished reading the Book Thief. May was that an amazing book, having Death as the narrator made it even better.

Next I'm planning to choose between Einstein's Dreams and Metro 2033. Has anyone read them?


The book thief is an amazing book! One of the best I've ever read... I cried while reading the ending... =(
"HOW THE FUCK ARE YOU ON TOP AGAIN???? HOW DO YOU KEEP DOING THIS????" -Julmust (also, thats what she said)
Salteador Neo
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
Andorra5591 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-01-11 10:21:43
January 11 2013 10:17 GMT
#1128
Hah so many of us reading the same books :D

My last 2 were The Way of Kings (sick one) and The Alloy of Law (just ok).

Now I'm halfway through The Lies of Locke Lamora. Now things are getting interesting finally.

Next is gonna be the Black Company.

On January 11 2013 11:58 decado90 wrote:
I'm going to give you some good advice, and say do not read the Sword of Truth series. The first book is good and an effective stand alone and I would reccommend it, but the series goes downhill quickly.


I didn't even find the first one that good tbh. Specially compared to the fantasy monsters I read before it. After reading some reviews about the whole saga it was obvious I had to drop it.
Revolutionist fan
TOCHMY
Profile Blog Joined June 2010
Sweden1692 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-01-11 12:59:28
January 11 2013 12:57 GMT
#1129
+ Show Spoiler +
On January 09 2013 17:11 Pathology wrote:
Starting the new year with Warhammer 40k Horus Heresey series in no particular order. Was always interested in warhammer books but never got into it. Seems interesting so far. As for reading dune...

Show nested quote +
On January 09 2013 14:36 johnnywup wrote:
On January 08 2013 13:53 hp.Shell wrote:
[image loading]
Dune - Frank Herbert (about 10 pages in)
I've always wanted to read this series. It's apparently science fiction's supreme masterpiece saga in terms of world lore. The main character is about to travel to Dune, so there will be space travel. It seems my visions of the book as "Star Wars had Luke never left Tatooine" are completely false. It's nice to finally pick it up and have it in my hands.

As for the order I'll probably finish them, TCV -> D -> 1491 is the current idea. It's fun to bounce between them when I get bored.


Ahh i've always wanted to read dune. I'm a huge science fiction fan, but it's really intimidating for me to start a series :/



Please do it. The prequels to the series as well as the later novels that cinch everything off are done by Mr Herbert's son and a co Author (Kevin Anderson I think?). They have a much different feel but I gobbled them up regardless because I love the universe. The first Dune book to me was the best. The others were all enjoyable for different reasons but the first captured my imagination and still hasn't let go. It might be intimidating but at the very least give the first novel a chance and see where you go from there :D



You should at least try to read the Horus Heresey in order. The series do have a linear plot from book to book.

I read the Horus Heresey up until the Ultramarines book, think it was book 7 or 8. Maybe 9. Book 1 and 2 were great, 3 was good. Fulgrim was good aswell. The rest, not so much...

+ Show Spoiler +
On December 11 2012 19:35 TOCHMY wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +
On November 06 2012 16:40 TOCHMY wrote:
Currently reading this: [image loading]

Haven't gotten far yet, but so far it's been good. I recommend reading the other works of Lian Hearn, the books of the Otori Clan: [image loading]

Awesome series.


Finished:
[image loading]

This was OK. I dunno, I never felt any connection to the characters, and the general plot was very vague. Also, this book is a perfect example of "show, don't tell" since it felt that the author almost held a history lesson combined with stories about her friend... I dunno how to explain it really.

I kinda recommend the book anyways, but only cuz I love meiji era and japan in general.

Currently Reading:
[image loading]

Now this book I really like. Such a difference in story telling and writing by Scott Lynch compared to Lian Hearn(author of the book above). It's a fantasy book about thieves and the main char is exceptionally good at that particularly profession

Will Read Next:

[image loading]

The follow-up of The Lies of Locke Lamora.



Just finished:

[image loading]

This book was OK. The first book was better. This one had so many plot twists, wich I guess is part of the whole thing, with the thievery and acting from Locke's part, always doubleplaying people. But it was a bit much maybe. Still enjoyed it though! Scott Lynch is a great writer.

Currently reading:

[image loading]

I'm 120~ pages in atm. Enjoying it so far! This is the first book by Murakami that I'm digging in to. Planning to read all of his work.

Will read next:

[image loading]

After I finished the game Sleeping Dogs, I was craving for more eastern asian gang stories! I asked in this thread and a nice fellow named Br0kensword recommended me this book. Don't let me down, Br0kensword!
Yoona <3 ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Look! It's Totoro! ☉.☉☂
teamamerica
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
United States958 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-01-11 13:27:10
January 11 2013 13:15 GMT
#1130
Bakers books are pretty fun reads - only problem is waiting on the next book in the series @_@. Last book I finished was 'Let the Great World Spin' by Colum McCann. Highly recommend.

Books I read through 2012 were:
Hyperion and Fall of Hyperion (Dan Simmons) - highly recommend (almost on par with Dune and Foundation for me)
The Eternity Artifact (L.E Modesitt)- highly recommend
----
The Forever War (Joe Haldeman) - ok but not as satisfying as aforementioned books. Maybe I'm just missing it because I didn't live through Vietnam? + Show Spoiler +
Got to the end and was just really disappointed


Trying to work my way through Neuromancer atm but not feeling it too much. Probably going to quit and read Ringworld or Tree of Smoke instead. Or, you know, maybe read a textbook or something...

edit: man looking through this thread - so jealous of all the people who haven't read Dune or Foundation before! Rereading just isn't the same. For Dune I'd say read at least the second one as well, if not the 3rd and 4th. I stopped at the 4th because the books were becoming slightly repetitive imo. 'Robots of Dawn' series (Asimov) and 'Rendezvous with Rama' (Clarke) are also books I'd recommend to any fan of science fiction.
RIP GOMTV. RIP PROLEAGUE.
Deleted User 137586
Profile Joined January 2011
7859 Posts
January 11 2013 13:28 GMT
#1131
People won't like this, but I"m reading Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand.

[image loading]

I didn't know much about the book or Ayn Rand, it was given to me by a pretty girl at a party which compelled me to read it. I found out later that this book in particular is likely to have fan-girls that gift it to other people (which made me feel somewhat less special).

I'm currently half-way through and I'm enjoying it quite a bit. It's a complex book (at least until now) and terribly well structured (I'm a bit of a formalist nerd, my favourite books of all time are War and Peace and the Decameron).

It's also a collection of lovely phrases and quotations. Things which will ring in your ears for a while, even when you've already asked the next question that dampens the joy of discovery. But the most important one is: Who is John Galt?
Cry 'havoc' and let slip the dogs of war
teamamerica
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
United States958 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-01-11 13:51:09
January 11 2013 13:50 GMT
#1132
On January 11 2013 22:28 Ghanburighan wrote:
People won't like this, but I"m reading Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand.

[image loading]

I didn't know much about the book or Ayn Rand, it was given to me by a pretty girl at a party which compelled me to read it. I found out later that this book in particular is likely to have fan-girls that gift it to other people (which made me feel somewhat less special).

I'm currently half-way through and I'm enjoying it quite a bit. It's a complex book (at least until now) and terribly well structured (I'm a bit of a formalist nerd, my favourite books of all time are War and Peace and the Decameron).

It's also a collection of lovely phrases and quotations. Things which will ring in your ears for a while, even when you've already asked the next question that dampens the joy of discovery. But the most important one is: Who is John Galt?


I have a question for people who read this and 'The Fountainhead'. I found them to be really similar (maybe because I read Atlas Shrugged a few years ago and The Fountainhead last year so some details got fuzzed out), similar to the point that if you read one you might as well not bother reading the other. edit: anyone else come away feeling the same?
RIP GOMTV. RIP PROLEAGUE.
Diavlo
Profile Joined July 2011
Belgium2915 Posts
January 11 2013 23:30 GMT
#1133
On January 11 2013 12:16 hasuprotoss wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 11 2013 11:58 decado90 wrote:
On January 11 2013 11:23 TheFish7 wrote:


Anxious to see what happens, but I can really only pick one series since they are both soo long... hmm, which one to choose

[image loading]



I'm going to give you some good advice, and say do not read the Sword of Truth series. The first book is good and an effective stand alone and I would reccommend it, but the series goes downhill quickly.


Currently reading:

[image loading]


Steven Erikson described it as "Vietnam War fiction on peyote." The series is extremely gritty and action-packed. It is also apparently one of the first fantasy novels that went outside the scope of the protagonist being the prince/king/what have you and brought it down to a more "believable" level.



The black company books suffer from two big flaws in my opinion.
A. It's pretty poorly written, especially the dialogues which often switch tones and intensity without any hint that its happening until the change is important. For example, two characters engage in what seems to be a friendly chat and suddenly one of them gets furious or has his feelings hurt without you noticing anything wrong in either the dialogue or the way the characters behave while talking.

B. Despite the fact that its kinda refreshing that the heroes of the books are not particularly the main protagonists of the conflicts happening in the world of the black company (although that changes throughout the series) and belong to a more realistic crowd than most fantasy heroes, they are also both less likable and harder to root for than said heroes.

For fantasy lovers like myself I would rather recommend Robin Hobb books like The Farseer Trilogy above The black company.

As for what I read recently, appart from a lot of Carl Hiaasen books, this was really really good:

[image loading]




"I don't know how many years on this Earth I got left. I'm gonna get real weird with it."
DuckS
Profile Joined September 2010
United States845 Posts
January 12 2013 01:01 GMT
#1134
In the middle of a few.

[image loading]

Really in-depth view on the history of the Russian revolution, from Trotsky himself.

[image loading]

In Beyond Good and Evil, Nietzsche basically throws together all of his condensed points and philosophies, and organizes them by chapter. Pretty straight forward, as opposed to his usually allegorical style.

[image loading]

A guide to make econometrics a hell of a lot easier.



I have a hard time finishing a lot of books after picking them up once I get a good idea of what they're trying to say. I hop through a lot. This list would be 5x longer if I included books I still technically haven't finished yet. It's kind of annoying, actually.
"You foiled us this time Americans, but your liberty will not protect your Marilyn Monroe forever - our Queen must FEED!" - Deleuze
Cambium
Profile Blog Joined June 2004
United States16368 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-01-15 03:20:31
January 15 2013 03:19 GMT
#1135
On November 24 2012 19:10 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On November 03 2012 18:01 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On July 22 2012 21:53 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On June 03 2012 23:39 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On May 09 2012 13:32 Cambium wrote:
Just finished:
[image loading]

Read this in five days after watching the movie. It was a surprisingly good read; book three was lacking, but it wasn't terrible. The writing style sucked, there was almost no character development, and the plot was linear; but overall, it was fun and enjoyable.

Reading:
[image loading]

I've been putting this off since last year hoping that I would catch a paperback version, but I finally gave up and started reading it. So far so good, a lot more engaging than book four to say the least.

Next up:
[image loading]

It's either going to be this, Ready Player One or 1Q84, but this book won out, and the others have to wait.


Just finished:
[image loading]

This was a surprisingly good read after great disappointment with Feast. A lot of actions and changes in and outside of the Westeros. This is probably my favourite after Clash.

Reading:
[image loading]

Next up:
[image loading]



Just finished:
[image loading]

1Q84 was okay.... the first book was really good with a lot of character development, then things got pretty boring/strange/weird (typical) from the 2nd book. Too many loose ends at the end, didn't feel very satisfied after finished reading the book.

Reading:
[image loading]
Pretty interesting so far, but nothing spectacular has happened.

Next up:
[image loading]



Just finished:

In the Garden of Beasts
[image loading]
The was a exceedingly dry book with very no real crescendos, and tells a story through a very matter-of-fact narration. I actually managed to finish this book despite wanting to give up multiple times along the way. One of the biggest draws was the book's literary value: the sentences and paragraphs were extremely well written, and the prose had a very consistent tempo (even though very very slow) and flowed very well. I was reading more for the language lesson than the story itself.

I don't recommend this book unless you have a very keen interest in WWII history.

Ready Player One
[image loading]
Having suffered through the book above, I desperately needed something refreshing and easy to read, and nothing fit the bill better than Ready Player One. In comparison to Garden, this book was almost purely plot driven, and the overall prose was akin to Harry Potter (i.e. extremely easy to read/terrible). There are a ton of geeky buzzwords planted throughout the book that resonated with my inner nerd, a cheap trick, but worked very well.

The plot is very contrived, the world is taken almost directly from Second Life and Snow Crash, the love story is childish, and the ending is predictably vanilla Disney. However, the book is very entertaining. I didn't find any deeper meanings in the book; to me, it was almost like watching a Transformer movie: just turn off the brain and enjoy the ride.

11/22/63
[image loading]

This was the first Stephen King book I have ever read, and I actually loved it. The writing style was mature yet simplistic (a nice balance between the two books above), and the story had so many twists and turns, and most importantly, the story had a reasonable and logic ending; although predictable at times, it still managed to draw me in just to see how events actually pan out. I felt very engaged reading this book, and didn't even realize how long it was until I had finished it (I read books on Kindle). There was a very nice mix of internal struggles (within and amongst the main characters) and explicit and implicit battles against the supernatural/laws of physics (?? sci-fi elements). The pace was fast throughout, and the character development was great. Undoubtedly, there are a lot of plot holes in the story due to the sci-fi-esque nature of the story, but those can and should be overlooked.

I would actually set aside hours before bedtime to read this novel, and often lost sleep because I didn't want to stop.

Reading

Lost in Shangri-La
[image loading]

This book is exactly like In the Garden of Beasts except it doesn't even have exceptional prose. I read over 50% of the book, and I think I am going to give up.

The story is immensely interesting, but the author goes on **very big** tangents to describe every person who is remoted related (up to three degrees of separation) to the main characters invovled including childhood, education, career, etc. where their histories have absolutely nothing to do with the main story line. I feel the whole book could be summarized in three chapters: crash, survival, and return to base (this is just my guess, and I have no idea what will happen) rather than hundreds of pages of nonsense. There is likely more filler than the actual story.

I will not finish this book.

Up next:
The Art of Fielding
[image loading]
or...
+ Show Spoiler +

Embassytown
or
Reamde
or
Destiny of the Republic


Just finished:
The Art of Fielding
[image loading]

This was a really fun and easy read. The plot is driven by a college baseball team; and the main characters' lives are intertwined in very delicate ways. There are lots of twists and turns in the plot, and I didn't particularly like the ending although it did tie everything together nicely (to me, the author just took a short cut).

Next
Destiny of the Republic
[image loading]


Gave up on:
Destiny of the Republic
[image loading]

Another exceedingly dry book, I really don't know why I even started reading it.

Reamde
[image loading]

I read over 60% of this book, and finally decided to give it up as well. I've really enjoyed Stephenson's previous works like Snow Crash, and to a lesser extent, The Diamond Ages. This book is excruciatingly long at over 1000 pages, and there were just passages after passages about irrelevant events that neither add anything to character development nor drive the plot forward. As a native speaker of Mandarin Chinese, I found the random Chinese phrases and names (loads of those) in the book as gimmicky nuisances, as they served no purposes other than to appeal to the 'nerdy' crowd who'd perchance find random Chinese phrases fascinating and chic.

The story itself was decent, but the book was just too long and uninteresting for the most part.

Reading:
Mao's Great Famine
[image loading]

So far so good, I've always had a keen interest in North Korean and Chinese histories.

Next
The Fault in our Stars
[image loading]
When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it.
itkovian
Profile Blog Joined March 2011
United States1763 Posts
January 16 2013 07:12 GMT
#1136
Just read Miracle in the Andes by Nando Parrado. The survival story of a plane crash into the mountains, told through the personal and emotional experience of Parrado. It was interesting to read about how they survived the ordeal, and it was even more interesting to see how Parrado dealt with the incident on a personal level. His tenacity was remarkable, and his reflection on the way the mountains changed his thoughts on life was pretty insightful.

A short, inspiring read. I would recommend it to almost anyone.
=)=
farvacola
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States18826 Posts
January 16 2013 07:15 GMT
#1137
On January 11 2013 22:50 teamamerica wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 11 2013 22:28 Ghanburighan wrote:
People won't like this, but I"m reading Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand.

[image loading]

I didn't know much about the book or Ayn Rand, it was given to me by a pretty girl at a party which compelled me to read it. I found out later that this book in particular is likely to have fan-girls that gift it to other people (which made me feel somewhat less special).

I'm currently half-way through and I'm enjoying it quite a bit. It's a complex book (at least until now) and terribly well structured (I'm a bit of a formalist nerd, my favourite books of all time are War and Peace and the Decameron).

It's also a collection of lovely phrases and quotations. Things which will ring in your ears for a while, even when you've already asked the next question that dampens the joy of discovery. But the most important one is: Who is John Galt?


I have a question for people who read this and 'The Fountainhead'. I found them to be really similar (maybe because I read Atlas Shrugged a few years ago and The Fountainhead last year so some details got fuzzed out), similar to the point that if you read one you might as well not bother reading the other. edit: anyone else come away feeling the same?

Yes, this is why if one is interested in understanding Ayn Rand they need only read Anthem; it really saves one the trouble of slogging through a lot of text
"when the Dead Kennedys found out they had skinhead fans, they literally wrote a song titled 'Nazi Punks Fuck Off'"
sam!zdat
Profile Blog Joined October 2010
United States5559 Posts
January 16 2013 07:18 GMT
#1138
I wish somebody had told me that in 7th grade...
shikata ga nai
adiga
Profile Joined July 2011
495 Posts
January 16 2013 08:00 GMT
#1139
Finished reading
[image loading]

Waiting for
[image loading]
to arrive and start reading it.
The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second best time is now.
nunez
Profile Blog Joined February 2011
Norway4003 Posts
January 16 2013 08:14 GMT
#1140
reading walden by thoreau. this guy needs to lighten up, YOLO.
conspired against by a confederacy of dunces.
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