Fantasy Aficionados discussion
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What Are You Currently Reading?
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Mar 01, 2011 08:59AM

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Lol mmmmm saucy!
MrsJoseph, it was like a week and a half. I'd be hard pressed to read 6 or 7 books in a week unless I was on vacation. Monster Hunter Vendetta is a great read as well by the way. I don't think you'll be disappointed. I went ahead and read Mistborn because I'd wanted to read it even tho it lost for the March epic fantasy read. I'm glad I did. Highly enjoyable. I'll check out
The Song of the Lioness Quartet. Thanks for the recommendation!
Becky, I've read the first 5 but not the last 2 of the Dark Tower series. They definitely get progressively better but gosh that first book was hard to make it through. I hope the last 2 books are great :)
MrsJoseph, it was like a week and a half. I'd be hard pressed to read 6 or 7 books in a week unless I was on vacation. Monster Hunter Vendetta is a great read as well by the way. I don't think you'll be disappointed. I went ahead and read Mistborn because I'd wanted to read it even tho it lost for the March epic fantasy read. I'm glad I did. Highly enjoyable. I'll check out
The Song of the Lioness Quartet. Thanks for the recommendation!
Becky, I've read the first 5 but not the last 2 of the Dark Tower series. They definitely get progressively better but gosh that first book was hard to make it through. I hope the last 2 books are great :)



Funny enough, I love the poem the series is based off of.

It's just faulty, that's all. ;)

Wizard & Glass is actually my least favorite of the Dark Tower series, MrsJ. There are parts I really love, but then I think that there are parts that really drag on... My favorite is the last book in the series, with book 5 (Wolves of the Calla) a close 2nd.
And it's funny that you should mention King not making his readers wait, because there was a huge gap between books 3 and 4... And lots of impatient readers! LOL

I was thinking of the 10+ year gaps that a lot of authors like. One good example (not getting on GRRM) is Auel's The Clan of the Cave Bear series. She started that series before I was born I think...she's just now getting ready to release the final book in the series...I caught up to her publishing schedule in high school (or earlier).


They were pretty good from what I remember. My major issue with them is the main female character, Ayla. She's just a little too unbelieveable for words. I'm a fantasy reader and even I was like, "Come on!!! Really??!" Once you get past the eye rolling and you hold yourself back from tossing the book across the room, you'll enjoy yourself.

I have a friend in real life who keeps urging me on to finish the series. I might, but my tbr pile is massive with books that I prefer to read.
There is a desire to finish the series, though. Who knows. Maybe one day.

If you didn't like those two, you probably wouldn't like the rest of the series much better...

..."
I really enjoyed the Gunslinger - have you ever read the Poem "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came?" http://www.darktowercompendium.com/po... It's a great poem and I think that I loved the series more because I'd already read this poem.





There needs to be two sides of a coin, I am just trying to provide the tails to everyone's head.





I know what you mean.

I just finished Iron Kissed by Patricia Briggs, and I loved it. Started Hellboy: The Ice Wolves by Mark Chadbourn.

I am reading The Iron Duke and plan to move on to A Clash of Kings now that there is a release date for A Dance with Dragons


MrsJoseph, I can't wait to see what you think.

Now reading Best Served Cold; I'm halfway through that and loving it.
After that, I think I'll give A Game Of Thrones another try. I found it hard going last time.


The followup series is just as good as the Belgariad and his Sparhawk books are great too.

Eddings' best attributes were dialog (he could have written successful sitcoms, snappy as it was), characterisation, and very identifiable character voices. Likewise sitcom characters, they are a bit exaggerated, but enjoyably so.


The Idiot
Ayn Rand and the World She Made
The Elegant Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory
The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos


Also finished within 24 hours, Perfume: The Story of a Murderer. Now, this is my kind of book! Recommended by my friend Sparkle, who is trying to get me to read Spinoza again. My review for Perfume is at:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
I'm starting Fear of Knowledge: Against Relativism and Constructivism, a monthly read at the Philosophy forum, next. It's not Spinoza, but I think I'll learn something.

Have you read Kushiel's Dart yet? It has some different moments. Also, there's always Octavia Butler. She did some strange but wonderful books. Some of it is rather disturbing but it's always good. I would recommend ...all of them but Blood Child is a little strange.
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