Glens Falls (NY) Online Book Discussion Group discussion
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ABOUT BOOKS AND READING
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What are U reading these days? (PART SEVEN) (2011) (ONGOING THREAD for 2011)






Never After was good for the type of book it is.
I started The Brass Dragon by Marion Zimmer Bradley late last night and I couldn't put it down, I've been up all night reading it. MZB is one of my favorite authors and last night reminded me why that is.

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"Ms Bradley was editing the final Sword and Sorceress manuscript up until the week of her death in September of 1999.
"Probably her most famous single novel is The Mists of Avalon. A retelling of the Camelot legend from the point of view of Morgaine and Gwenhwyfar, it grew into a series of books; like the Darkover series, the later novels are written with or by other authors and have continued to appear after Bradley's death.
"In 2000, she was posthumously awarded the World Fantasy Award for Lifetime Achievement."
"--from Wikipedia"
FROM: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/...
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PS-See my review at:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Many readers enjoyed the book although there were others who didn't. That's horse-racing. :) Actually it points out how different we all are in our reading tastes.

The Brass Dragon went well, I enjoy it and breezed through it. Now I'm onto Vampire of the Mists, the first of an open-ended long running series called Ravenloft.



Checking just now to see if the link worked, I saw that I gave the book one star. I'll let that stand!

"J.K Rowling's real name is actually Joanne Rowling. The 'Kathleen' part was taken from her grandma because publishers didn't think boys would read a book by someone with a female name, and J. Rowling sounded too boring."
(From a quiz at http://www.funtrivia.com/)
"Although she writes under the pen name "J. K. Rowling", pronounced like rolling, her name when her first Harry Potter book was published was simply "Joanne Rowling". Fearing that the target audience of young boys might not want to read a book written by a woman, her publishers demanded that she use two initials, rather than her full name. As she had no middle name, she chose K as the second initial of her pen name, from her paternal grandmother Kathleen Ada Bulgen Rowling."
FROM: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rowling,....


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Ca...
I love the piece on the back cover. The second sentence is:
"...Life is full of choices. Right now, yours is whether or not to buy the autobiography of a mid-grade, kind of hammy actor..."
Drop the 'kind of' - he is a ham. You may know him as Sam on "Burn Notice". Well, he started out doing the Evil Dead trilogy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Evil...
directed by Sam Raimi, the guy that did the Spiderman films. Almost everything Campbell has done is very campy & fun. He was in a couple of TV series, "Briscoe County Jr." & "Jack of All Trades". (I'm getting all seasons of both on DVD soon - end of year sale on Amazon. Yippeee!)
If you like grade B movies, he's your man. Marg & Erin usually won't watch anything he's in, unfortunately. They have no taste in TV.

Today I watched "The Holiday" (2006), a romantic comedy. Cast includes: Cameron Diaz, Kate Winslet, Jude Law, Eli Wallach, Jack Black and others.
http://www.netflix.com/Movie/The-Holi...
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0457939/
I gave it 4 stars out of 5. It kept me interested all the way through with an interesting plot and good acting. Light, feel-good entertainment. Jude Law was very appealing. The outdoor scenes in the UK were very pretty.


I felt the same way, Jackie. The plot went in directions I hadn't expected, even though the ending was fairly predictable.
Enjoy re-watching, Nina.

So far, I'm close to 50 pages in, and I'd say it's flubbed its second chance; Arnold is thought to have influenced the SF of Edgar Rice Burroughs, but as a writer, he's not in ERB's league. However, I'm here and my TBR piles are in my office at work (where I have more bookshelf space), it's cold outside, and I don't work again until Tuesday. :-) Sooo, this time I may as well finish the thing, and give it a review!


ERB = Edgar Rice Burroughs
REH = Robert E. Howard
I wound up downloading all of ERB & REH's works that were available. That's about 100 books & stories for ERB & almost 150 for REH. (I collect ebooks so I can put them on my Sony eReader when I want. ) They're just text - OK for most people but one of the things I loved about these books & authors is the cover art. Frank Frazetta did most of the ones my father had. Some were also done by Boris Vallejo. Both of them have gory, barbarian warriors, scantily clad, voluptuous women & horrific monsters in their paintings - perfect!
REH's stories have been extensively edited. He was prolific, but had a very short career. The Lancer editions of his books were what I cut my teeth on & came to love. Lin Carter & L. Sprague de Camp did most of the 'editing' on these editions. They took great liberties, often finishing partial stories that were bare fragments or changing stories around to fit in a specific hero & pad out a book. (There is one story that is nearly identical for both Kull & Conan.)
Still, I loved these stories. About 20 years ago, when my copy of King Kull died, I got a new, later edition. That publisher had faithfully published just what Howard wrote on Kull, I believe. I hated it. It took a while, but I finally tracked down the Lancer edition a couple of years ago. Yeah, I'm devoted to some authors...
;-)

One of the nice things about print books is that your bookmark shows you just how far along you are, e.g., you know when your nearing the end because you can actually see that there are just a few pages left to read.
PS-I love your devotion to books and authors.

He called it "this dreary meander of a memoir". I got a kick out of those words. :) Keillor has a wonderful way with words!
The review is at:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/19/boo...


On page 94, she says: "... he asked me what I've got against horror writers. I said there was real horror in the world. ... I said we needed to feel revulsion for these things, needed to be galvanized into action against them... but that his books merely made us accustomed to horror, as a recreation. ... [people] would become habituated to horror. It would deaden the sense of terror they needed to stay alive. They would catch a kind of leprosy of the spirit, an inability to feel."
Food for thought.



So far, it is quite good.

So far, it is quite good"
About Night Train to Rigel, a GR reviewer said: "This is a very good science fiction/private detective mystery novel, a rare combination. The aliens are convincing, the plot is tight, the detective and his his side kick are engaging, and it's an altogether fun ride."
FROM: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Many of the reviewers called this book fun. Have fun, Mary JL. :)

It certainly does if they're not exposed to real violence. Unfortunately, too many parents won't smack a kid any more or let them see where their food comes from. No, they just protect & coddle them from the real world until they suddenly wind up out in it. A dose of reality would work wonders.


I've got about 40 pages left on This Immortal. I'm enjoying it.

;-)


Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption (2010).
Excerpt from GR description:
"Driven to the limits of endurance, Zamperini would answer desperation with ingenuity; suffering with hope, resolve, and humor; brutality with rebellion."
It should make a good movie, Katherine.
PS-Here's an excerpt from a good GR review of "Unbroken":
"After his plane plunges into the Pacific Ocean, he survives 47 days on a disintegrating raft, only to spend the rest of the war being starved and tortured in a series of Japanese POW camps."
FROM: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

The writing style isn't fancy; it's straight forward. However, what makes the story interesting is the presentation. The author starts out by introducing several different groups of characters separately in different chapters. After you've read the particular problems of those different groups of characters, the author brings them together to intermingle in each other's lives and to change the direction of those lives. This was a plot device of Irving Wallace years ago. I always enjoyed it.
The story should have ended with Chapter 29. I was satisfied by then. However, the author added a short epilogue-type ending which seemed anti-climactic. By that time, I had lost interest. I would rather have had things left to my imagination instead of having the unexciting and predictable future developments spelled out for me.
Funny how we lose interest at certain points.

It can be seen at:
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/4...
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It's nice to know Howard's work is on Project Gutenberg, and for folks who like to read online, that's wonderful! (I'm not in that number, though; and while I could run print copies of individual stories and put them in a binder, I'm lazy and cheap --I prefer to have a publisher do all that work, and a library buy a copy. :-) I know, I'm spoiled!)