Fantasy Aficionados discussion

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Achive > What Are You Currently Reading?

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message 2451: by Jason (new)

Jason (darkfiction) | 3204 comments I'm still slugging through Dance with Dragons. It's slow going as I didn't get much time to read this weekend. But now I'm alternating between reading it and listening to it. Hopefully I'll be able to go through it faster now.

Yes, that's right. I own three friggin' copies of this book. LOL. A physical dead tree copy, an eBook, and the audio version.


message 2452: by [deleted user] (new)

Jason wrote: Yes, that's right. I own three friggin' copies of this book. LOL. A physical dead tree copy, an eBook, and the audio version. ..."

Haha...bases are covered!


message 2453: by Jason (new)

Jason (darkfiction) | 3204 comments Jennifer wrote: "Jason wrote: Yes, that's right. I own three friggin' copies of this book. LOL. A physical dead tree copy, an eBook, and the audio version. ..."

Haha...bases are covered!"


Hopefully! LOL


message 2454: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments No. He's actually 6'2", gorgeous, and with a full head of wavy hair. He's a metro-sexual, so he takes great care of himself, frosts his hair, etc. Too metrosexual for me, though. I like my guy no frills. But I was stuck with the gorgeous dude through a match-up. What can I do? I can't eat him. Those hair gels don't taste good. He's single now, too, girls.


MrsJoseph wrote: "Does he wear horn-rimmed glasses? ..."


message 2455: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments Oh, I am tossing aside Elantris because it is too light in tone. A cannibal needs dark and sinister things. Light things give me the hives. I am reading The Beach, which is really good and dark for me. If anybody can suggest any fantasy that is stirring like LOTR with a terrific hero's journey line and dark in flavor, let me know. I better read a fantasy to replace Elantris, or else you'll ban me from here. With 1000 members, it's a good place to get my livestock. The people at Horrors taste a little bitter and acrid.


message 2456: by Chelsea (new)

Chelsea (rocktopusjones) | 338 comments Aloha wrote: "Oh, I am tossing aside Elantris because it is too light in tone. A cannibal needs dark and sinister things. Light things give me the hives. I am reading The Beach, whi..."

The Darkness That Comes Before may suit your needs! The Way of Shadows doesn't dodge the nastiness of life, either.


message 2457: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments Thanks, Chelsea. What about The Way of Kings? I heard it was really good.


message 2458: by Chelsea (new)

Chelsea (rocktopusjones) | 338 comments I have now begun A Clash of Kings. Tell me, when does Sansa die? My cousin and I are reading the books together, and we agree that we can't stand this character.


message 2459: by Chelsea (new)

Chelsea (rocktopusjones) | 338 comments Aloha wrote: "Thanks, Chelsea. What about The Way of Kings? I heard it was really good."

Haven't had the pleasure of reading that yet. Are you liking Elantris? It left me kind of "eh." Not bad, not great. I'm looking forward to reading more of Sanderson so that I can get a fair estimation of his writing, since Elantris was an early effort.


message 2460: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments Elantris left me with a "eh", too. That's why I'm tossing it aside.


message 2461: by Jenny (new)

Jenny (jennyc89) Chelsea wrote: "Aloha wrote: "Oh, I am tossing aside Elantris because it is too light in tone. A cannibal needs dark and sinister things. Light things give me the hives. I am reading [book:The Beac..."

The Nigh Angel trilogy was my favorite series I read last year! They were my favorite books period last year. I have Perfect Shadow, the prequel novella, but I haven't read it yet.


message 2462: by Valerie (new)

Valerie (versusthesiren) | 357 comments Re-reading A Storm of Swords. (view spoiler)


message 2463: by Chelsea (new)

Chelsea (rocktopusjones) | 338 comments Jenny wrote: The Nigh Angel trilogy was my favorite series I read last year! They were my favorite books period last year. I have Perfect Shadow, the prequel novella, but I haven't read it yet. "

High five!


message 2464: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments Aloha wrote: "Oh, I am tossing aside Elantris because it is too light in tone. A cannibal needs dark and sinister things. Light things give me the hives. I am reading The Beach, whi..."

I haven't read it yet but Empress is supposed to be rather dark.


message 2465: by Mach (new)

Mach | 572 comments Go with the The Darkness That Comes Before it is dark and philosophical at the same time.


message 2466: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments Thanks, guy and gal!


message 2467: by Kevin (new)

Kevin | 284 comments Chelsea wrote: "Aloha wrote: "Thanks, Chelsea. What about The Way of Kings? I heard it was really good."

Haven't had the pleasure of reading that yet. Are you liking Elantris? It left me kind o..."


It really shows that Elantris was Sandersons first novel imo. I've read all his books with Elantris being the last one, and though not bad, it didn't leave me with that 'I've just read a great book' feeling I did have from all his other works.

His writing gets better with each book he releases. You really notice the upward trend imo. Mistborn: the Final Empire is still my favourite book of his though, but that has more to do with the awesome that is Allomancy and the fact that I really loved Vin as a character.

The Mistborn books are much darker in tone than Elantris. Sanderson's characters, though not pure white and black, never reach that level of moral greyness of an Abercrombie or Martin. There's also little to none graphic shit, sex and gore.

Warbreaker has the same lightness as Elantris, but it is much better written and the characters have a lot more meat on their bones imo.

The Way of Kings is the culmination of everything he has learned in writing his previous novels and working on WoT. It's a real feat of worldbuilding imo. The main thing working against it is that it is the first novel in massive series and leaves a lot more questions open than it answers.


message 2468: by Traci (new)

Traci Reading Fool Moon. Like it better than the first book which I liked.


message 2469: by Kevin (new)

Kevin | 284 comments I'm currently reading Songs of Love and Death: All-Original Tales of Star-Crossed Love a short story collection I picked up because it has a Robin Hobb story I hadn't read yet >.> The list of other contributing authors is rather impressive too imo.

There're a couple of stories in here that are a bit to pulpy romance for my tastes, but I've had a couple of very nice surprises too. Overal it's a really good collection.


message 2470: by Jenny (new)

Jenny (jennyc89) Chelsea wrote: "Jenny wrote: The Nigh Angel trilogy was my favorite series I read last year! They were my favorite books period last year. I have Perfect Shadow, the prequel novella, but I haven't read it yet. "

..."


*High five back*


message 2471: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments Thanks, Kevin. I have The Way of Kings. I'll see whether I like it.


message 2472: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments I added The Darkness That Comes Before to my reading list because I like dark and philosophical.


message 2473: by Amanda (new)

Amanda (daughterofoak) I have a pile of books sitting in a corner waiting for me, but I have been so busy this month. I also blame Goodreads ;)
I used to read one or two books a day...now I'm taking forever to get through my pile.
I'm going on a birthday/anniversary trip this weekend, but when I get back I'm going to finally sit down and read. First up: Monstrous Regiment by Terry Pratchett, then The Chosen by Ricardo Pinto.


message 2474: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments I started The Fire Rose yesterday.


message 2475: by Tiffany (last edited Jul 19, 2011 11:28AM) (new)

Tiffany Majors | 35 comments Traci wrote: "Reading Fool Moon. Like it better than the first book which I liked."

I'm listening to this one, too. Liked the first one enough to move on and I'm glad I did. This one is very good.

Halfway through The Name of the Wind.


message 2476: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl Landmark (clandmark) | 861 comments MrsJ, I'm starting to read The Eyes of the Dragon by Stephen King. Hopefully, it's as good as you say it is.

That's really awful about your copy of The Summer Tree. I also hate when people write in books or bend the corners of the pages. Argh!


message 2477: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl Landmark (clandmark) | 861 comments Tiffany wrote: "Traci wrote: "Reading Fool Moon. Like it better than the first book which I liked."

I'm listening to this one, too. Liked the first one enough to move on and I'm glad I did. This ..."


I'm just about done The Name of the Wind and have sort of mixed feelings about it. What do you think of it so far?


message 2478: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments Cheryl wrote: "MrsJ, I'm starting to read The Eyes of the Dragon by Stephen King. Hopefully, it's as good as you say it is.

That's really awful about your copy of The Summer Tree. ..."


I really enjoyed The Eyes of the Dragon but don't forget it's [King's version of] YA.


message 2479: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments Tracey wrote: "The writing didn't feel like him to me.

Then again, iirc it wasn't dotted with *! and &^@! and $@*!, and there were no mangled/rotting/half-eaten corpses, so that might explain that."


*snicker*


message 2480: by Christine (new)

Christine I am reading A Feast for Crows. The beginning is a little confusing having unfamiliar characters but the writing is still compelling this far into the series.


message 2481: by Jenny (new)

Jenny (jennyc89) So I'm finished The Case of Charles Dexter Ward which I did not like and Starship Troopers which I did like. I'll be able to get started on A Dance with Dragons in the next day or so, but until then I've started Homeland.


message 2482: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments I love Starship Troopers.


 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) I'm listening to Heroes of the Valley right now. Pretty interesting with a very mischievous young hero.


message 2484: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments I'm starting Planet of the Apes and I can see that I'm really going to get into it. I'm pausing on The Beach until I get my jonesing for SciFi out of the way. I'm an emotional reader. I can't focus on anything else if I'm in the mood for something. Currently, it's SciFi. You fantasy folks will still let me hang around for my livestock, right? I promise I'll read a fantasy later. SciFi is fantasy with all the technogeeky stuff. Besides, I think Planet of the Apes is more fantasy than SciFi, maybe a SciFi Fantasy.


message 2485: by Mach (last edited Jul 20, 2011 04:19AM) (new)

Mach | 572 comments Have you seen the movies? The Beach, and The Planet of the Apes?


message 2486: by Traci (new)

Traci Maybe I find apes and monkeys freaky anyway but Planet of the Apes really freaked me out, actually truthfully it was more the human/animals that did. The movies don't do the original story justice IMO.


message 2487: by Aloha (last edited Jul 20, 2011 04:28AM) (new)

Aloha | 940 comments I haven't seen The Beach. I want to wait on that until I've finished the book. I saw all of the Planet of the Apes that were out, the Charlton Heston, and the one that was done a few years ago with Mark Wahlberg. I think I learned English from the old Planet of the Apes movie series. That and reruns of Gilligan's Island.


message 2488: by Traci (new)

Traci I think I learned I was female with the old Charlton Heston movie. =)


message 2489: by Scott (new)

Scott | 165 comments Cheryl wrote: "MrsJ, I'm starting to read The Eyes of the Dragon by Stephen King. Hopefully, it's as good as you say it is."

I read The Eyes of the Dragon about 25 years ago. It is still on of my favorite King books. When I read it, I was really surprised that King had written a fantasy book. Up to that point, I had only read horror stories by him.


message 2490: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl Landmark (clandmark) | 861 comments Tracey wrote: "The writing didn't feel like him to me.

Then again, iirc it wasn't dotted with *! and &^@! and $@*!, and there were no mangled/rotting/half-eaten corpses, so that might explain that."


LOL! That is Stephen King's usual style, isn't it? He definitely has a very vivid, weird imagination, which is probably why he appeals to me as a writer. You never know exactly what he'll come up with next!


message 2491: by Traci (new)

Traci Reading Wizard of the Pigeons. So far it's okay but I do see very little of Robin Hobb in the writing. Maybe a hint in one of the characters. Not much story yet.


message 2492: by Kevin (new)

Kevin | 284 comments Traci wrote: "Reading Wizard of the Pigeons. So far it's okay but I do see very little of Robin Hobb in the writing. Maybe a hint in one of the characters. Not much story yet."

The Lindholm stories are very different from the Hobb ones. They might as well be two different authors. The only thing they have in common is a heavy focus on character development.

I've read Wizard of Pigeons and I have mixed feelings about it. Mostly because there isn't a lot of story, and a lot of what goes on is psychological and methaphorical. It's very different from the Hobb style epic fantasy. It took a while before I 'got' what it was about and now I think I 'get' it, I'm still not sure I actually like it.

I absolutley loved most of the Lindholm shorts in The Inheritance though.


message 2493: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments When I was at the ConnectiCon convention, an anime artist raved about Anne McCaffrey's Dragonriders of Pern series, comparing it to LOTR. Anybody got an opinion on that? I just got it.


message 2494: by Scott (last edited Jul 20, 2011 09:55AM) (new)

Scott The two original trilogies are excellent, yes.
(The Dragonriders of Pern and The Harper Hall of Pern)


message 2495: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments Thanks, Scott.


message 2496: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments Thanks, Tracey. Since I have ADD, especially after being at Goodreads and being introduced to so many terrific books, it's doubtful I'll follow a series until #8. I'm happy to know it's great until then.


message 2497: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments I stand to be corrected, on the Harry Potter series, I looked forward to every single book and was sad that it ended.


message 2498: by Aloha (new)

Aloha | 940 comments Thanks, Tracey. I do mostly eBooks and audios. I will only do paper if a book is not available in any other format. I have bad eyesight when it comes to reading, and need to be able to adjust font and lighting. I can read on paper, but it irritates me after a little while depending on the type and background color.


message 2499: by Tiffany (last edited Jul 20, 2011 10:46AM) (new)

Tiffany Majors | 35 comments Cheryl wrote: "Tiffany wrote: "Traci wrote: "Reading Fool Moon. Like it better than the first book which I liked."

I'm listening to this one, too. Liked the first one enough to move on and I'm gl..."


I finished The Name of the Wind last night and I liked it. I like Kvothe: his mind, intelligence, innocence, determination and desperation make him a compelling character for me. I'll definitely move on to The Wise Man's Fear but after I picked up Incarceron again last night and I am definitely going to finish it before I move on to the next part of Kvothe's story. Plus, I want to think about book 1 for a few days before I move on. Bast scared me there at the end! So I'm definitely up for a read if you want to.


message 2500: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl Landmark (clandmark) | 861 comments I agree with you, Tiffany, about Bast at the end of The Name of the Wind. I thought, holy cow, what the heck was that all about?!


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