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2015 ToB Competition Discussion
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Janet
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Jan 11, 2015 12:51PM

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PREACH. should definitely come with a valium rx.

I LOVED The Bone Clocks. Absolutely loved it. The only thing that irked me was the ending, but the rest was delightful!

I have the same problem - my books always seem to all come in at once. And now that I can put ebooks and audio book holds from my library it gets even crazier. Thanks for mentioning the sale on My Brilliant Friend. I bought it today and it looks really good.
Based on the feedback here and my gut, I think I'm going to put Wittgenstein Jr and A Brief History of Seven Killings in the category of books I'm only going to read if they make it past the first round.

The more I get into A Brief History of Seven Killings . . . yeah, it's even more violent than An Untamed State. No surprise, I mean the title is a big hint, right?
I have a sneaking suspicious that these two are going to face each other in the first round and man do I pity the judge that has to read these back to back.
Think I'll take a breather before tackling the rest and see if I can get in a more amenable "readerly" mood.




Yep, so am I. I was going to read something else but then I realized the ToB is about 40 days away and I've only read one of them.

http://www.themillions.com/2015/01/ju...




Yes, Katie! I'm only 35% and I finally feel like it's getting good. This book is going to make for some great discussions, and I'm glad I'm reading it. I'm looking forward to seeing where it's going. I've been doing a lot of highlighting :).

I'm about 30% of the way in, and it's a little Goldfinchy for me.. (not a good thing). But rather than just carry a painting around for years, there are some attempts at art happening!

Not one of the characters struck me as particularly well developed (don't say arthur, he's just a collection of cliche's) and there's no dramatic tension whatsoever.
so there's at least one book i hope gets beaten in the first round.

I wish I hadn't read it because it was on so many "Best of..." lists, so I could have just appreciated the awesomeness without expecting so much.
With that said, S11 was basically everything I want in an End of the World book. I got a sense of the quiet expanse left behind when the electricity fails and 99% of the population dies, which I miss in apocalyptic books with lots of noisy action. I sat in a sort of unsettled, eerie spell for the duration of my reading. It worked for me. I liked the star trek reference, too?

I wish I hadn't read it because it was on s..."
ahhh, see, those were the biggest failings for me....first off, pandemics don't work the way she describes, they just don't, not the timing, nor the devastation, so it seemed poorly researched, and secondly, electricity is pretty easy, so the idea that it would disappear at all, let alone take 15 yrs to recoup, is also kinda silly. so, for me, it was exactly the opposite of what an end of the world scenario would be like. the lack of plausibility took away from an otherwise pleasant story about interconnectedness, celebrity and a fun touring shakespeare troupe.


Oh, that was because the evil nano was (were?) controlling the electricity! haha

I immersed myself in its dystopian future so wasn't overly mindful of the "is this possible or not".
And I think Okay, there are a few Shakespeare references in it, so it's 'literate', is a little mean ... along with the plays of Shakespeare, the role of the graphic novel and the Bible are deftly woven into the narrative. And I don't think it set out to be a Great Literary Work (save me from The Marriage Game!)
However, much as I thoroughly enjoyed it as a great example of speculative fiction, and I voted for it for my Zombie round book, I don't think it will take home the Rooster (but hope it survives longer than the first round!)
Keep away from the koolaid!


Yes, unfortunately I watched all of it. Ben Edlund was writing for it, so I had to. :D

I am not quite through (87%), but your gripes very closely mirror mine. The characters aren't that interesting or particularly well drawn, the collapse of society as she describes it is not remotely plausible (epidemiologically, technologically, even socially), and the writing is good enough but not stirring. I do not understand the hype at all.
I'll be with you, rooting for an early Station 11 exit. Unless, of course, it is totally redeemed by its ending. So far, Redeployment is still, far and away, my favorite contender so far.

http://www.themillions.com/2015/01/ju......"
Thanks for the link - I found myself liking more UK covers than US.





I'm in the middle of Annihilation and it's leaving me flat. No interest in finishing out this series.

I just purchased the first in the series for Kindle ($2.99 yesterday). If I like it, I will try to finish the series for ToB. I had earlier read her "Troubling Love" as a toe in the water and was unmoved. James Wood's opinion carries weight with me, so I am going to give the Neapolitan series a go.
That would likely mean I don't finish others, but I am fine with that.



Finished All the Birds, Singing last night, which wasn't at all what I expected it to be (it's been on my list since the beginning of the year). I liked it, though, and it's a very quick read -- which is certainly an advantage in ToB books.
Started Wittgenstein Jr. this morning and have An Untamed State, A Brief (hah. Longest book in the Tournament.) History of 7 Killings, and Adam on deck.
I'm intentionally leaving the Ferrante until last, so that if I have time I can read the entire trilogy. I'm really uncomfortable reading the third book of a trilogy first, but if I have to I have to. However, once I finish what I have at home (see above), I'll be half way there and also I'll be finished with all the longest books, so I predict I'll have the time to read all three.
So far nothing's blown me away, but that was true of this stage last year, too. It took People in the Trees and, to a lesser extent, How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia to ramp it up for me.


Also I hope they won't make that a pairing because it's so predictable to lump those two books together. I contradict myself? Well, then I contradict myself! ;-)

I detest reading things out of order... but knowing that this is the way the judge will probably read it, makes me interested to try it as a stand-alone as well. I can't wait to see how the judge approaches this one.
I'm reading A Brief History of Seven Killings right now and it really is a slow going one (dialect and character changes every chapter) but so far really worth the read.
I'm also LOVING "Redeployment" as an audiobook, not sure if anyone else selected that format for that one?? Highly recommend that one as a "listen".


I will soldier on with The Bone Clocks...lol. Thanks everyone for the encouragement.

Ace wrote: "Janet wrote: "I'm 142 pages into The Bone Clocks and getting bogged down.....not loving it as much as the beginning. Should I slog on or try something else?"
Life is short, but no..."
I took BONE CLOCKS on a 2-week vacation and read it every night in a motel room. I might have given up had I had something else to read. But I didn't so I persevered and am glad I did. Some parts are better than others and I particularly did not care for Section 5. It is a book that grows on you after completion. If I hadn't yet read it and was trying to read as many TOB books as possible, I'd quit. FYI, of the books I have read, I prefer CLOCKS over WITTGENSTEIN JR, SILENCE ONCE BEGUN, ALL THE LIGHT WE CANNOT SEE and UNTAMED STATE. I put it second only to ALL THE BIRDS, SINGING. Regarding WITTGENSTEIN: I read the Wikipedia article about him after I read the book. I should have read it beforehand.


so, i haven't read all of this new yorker article yet (because i haven't read Annihilation yet), but the bit i read was interesting, and may be of interest to ToB fans:
'The Weird Thoreau': http://www.newyorker.com/culture/cult...
"If Jeff VanderMeer’s Southern Reach trilogy has a moral, it has to do with the dignity of the search for even partial truth."

I just purchased the first in the series for Kindle ($2.99 yesterday). If I like it, I will try to finish the series for ToB. I had earlier read her "Troubling Love" as a toe in the ..."
I feel the same way as you do. I just finished the first book and will start the second one tomorrow. After reading the first book I can't imagine reading the third as a stand alone - you would miss to much back story.

I will ..."
I haven't really noticed. I find myself tuning out the military babble when it happens but so far I have only done that with 2 of the essays (maybe that was the military jargon that got to you too?)

I also didn't like Annihilation at all. I laughed when I saw it made the long list. This is a book that should have been right up my alley, but for whatever reason it didn't resonate.
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