Robert E. Howard Readers discussion
What else are you reading?
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Jim
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Mar 24, 2018 11:56AM

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https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
In Dubious Battle by John Steinbeck was another 5 star read earlier this week. It's especially timely now with all the talk of the economic divide & the 1%. I'd like to beat my English teachers who managed to turn me off this author with The Red Pony. His writing is fantastic, yet I wouldn't try another book by him for over 2 decades because of early trauma. Anyway, here's my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

The one I am currently reading is "Paradise Sky" by Joe R Lansdale. I have to read anything by him I don't love. This is a fictionalized biography of Nat Love or Deadwood Dick usually billed as the greatest African American Cowboy.

I read most of the Alien Nation TV book series recntly, they were all good, with more depth and interesting issues than I remembered.


Mid world I reckon is one of his best. Although Total Recall was a fun read.

He also wrote Splinter of the Mind's Eye which was supposed to be the second Star Wars movie, but they changed their minds. It was pretty good.

He also ghost-wrote the original Star Wars: From the Adventures of Luke Skywalker novelization.
I read a ton of ADF novels when I was young -- he was a staple of the paperback spinners in the public library. My favorite was probably Midworld.
Myself I'm currently reading Chains of the Heretic by Jeff Salyards, which I'm quite enjoying although the narrator, Arki, is pretty much the exact opposite of a Howardian hero. (He's a scribe from a very sheltered upbringing, sent to travel with a company of hard-bitten mercenaries and record their adventures, which he does quite unsparingly.)

Nice! Matheson is often forgotten but his Twilight Zone episodes are some of the best ever written (along with those by Charles Beaumont. I have The Shrinking Man on my shelf but have never read it - the movie was one of my favorites as a kid.
I recently read Nexus by Ramez Naam and loved it. It's about using nanotechnology in the near future to create "post-human" enhanced brains capable of superhuman intelligence and also capable of linking with other brains of like kind. Naam really explores the possibilities and potential abuses of this technology from many different angles. I was reminded a lot of Michael Crichton whose cutting edge research and fast moving plots made his better books unputdownable.

I don't know why lectures suddenly aren't books. They have an ISBN & are distributed by libraries & resellers as books. They often come with an ebook full of notes. I've spent a lot of hours reading & writing reviews for them here. I often refer to those in discussions of other books by the same author here in various groups.
I've never been happy with they way GR has handled audio books. Listing the number of CDs or tapes as pages was stupid from the start & yet they don't list the number of files as pages. They should just list a minute per page, IMO. I think that's close to an average reading speed & would work for me. As it is, I never pay attention to that data.
Anyway, could you please send an email to support@goodreads.com & ask them to keep lectures as books? Apparently this is a staff decision & maybe if enough of us complain they'll change their minds. Making the author a narrator would be fine, but deleting them entirely really sucks.


If you haven't read more Tarzan books I suggest reading the first 8 books (maybe excluding Jungle Tales which is unrelated short stories). 7 and 8 (Untamed and Terrible are the best two in my opinion and are related.

If you haven't read more Tarzan books I suggest read..."
Thanks for your suggestion, Michael. This moment, I'm also re-reading The Son of Tarzan - which I readed 4 years ago. I also readed Tarzan and the Ant-Men (too bad the book didn't show much of Tarzan's grandson) and Tarzan at the Earth's Core (IMO, the best ERB's Tarzan book I ever readed!). My next read will be "Terrible", BTW.


https://getpocket.com/explore/item/a-...

BTW, Alan Dean Foster donated a postcard signed by H P Lovecraft to REH. He had it through his family somehow. I don't remember the details. It is displayed a the REH Museum.


I have his adaptations of Krull, The Black Hole, Star Trek logs (adaptations of the animated series), Star Trek the Motion Picture, and Star Wars. I think the only original of his I own is Splinter of the Mind's Eye.
Neat that he had a postcard from REH to HP Lovecraft. It never would have occurred to me that there was a connection between his family and one of theirs.


He also did the book version for the Arne Schwarzenegger version of Total Recall, which I thought a great read.
There are two book versions of the first episode of Alien Nation, one based on the tv episode, the other on the pilot. Different plot and focus for each. One from human, the other from alien point of view.

https://www.theguardian.com/books/201...

I have an hour drive to and from work each day, and I fill that time with audiobooks (I need to listen to something, so I may as well listen to books!).
I do find it frustrating that a passage I really like can't be marked for quoting later.
I haven't listened to any REH audio yet - worried that the reader won't do the material justice.

It's not like the old days of fumbling with CDs or cassettes in the car & worrying about rewinding or dirty media. There's also a much larger selection & I can carry them with me. If I'm on a tractor, I just put on ear protectors. Also, my software (Smart Audiobook Player) allows me to listen at any speed from .5x up to 2.5x in increments of .1 without distorting the voice.





Is this novelization closer to Phillip K. Dick's "We Can Remember It For You Wholesale"?


Books mentioned in this topic
Midworld (other topics)Nexus (other topics)
The Shrinking Man (other topics)
The Man Who Used the Universe (other topics)
Star Wars: From the Adventures of Luke Skywalker (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Michael Crichton (other topics)Richard Matheson (other topics)
Charles Beaumont (other topics)
Ramez Naam (other topics)
Jeff Salyards (other topics)
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