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  • Lazy Leopard
    replied
    I too tend to read just about everything Terry Pratchett puts out. Currently BBC radio is doing an adaptation of "Nightwatch" late on Wednesday evenings. I expect I'll want to re-read the book at some point, if only to see how well they've adapted it.

    I'm booked for this year's Discworld Convention in the UK. I was expecting it to be large enough to be fun and small enough to be friendly, but it looks like turning into a huge convention. It's already got over 700 members. This year's Eastercon has topped a thousand members, too, so it looks like I'll be doing two big conventions this year. I guess that'll make up for last year and the year before, when all the Cons I went to were small.

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  • Kathy Li
    replied
    Knieve, I have a friend who loves that series. I read the first one, and it was entertaining, but somehow didn't grab me all that much. I've heard the series gets better, though. Very goofy and fun, and definitely not in the same vein (ha ha) as Anne Rice and that lot.

    Vashmata, yeah, loves me Terry Pratchett and not just the Discworld books. I also really love the Bromeliad Trilogy (Truckers/Diggers/Wings). I am really tempted to show up at the Discworld Convention next year in Arizona.

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  • vashmata
    replied
    I finished reading Mort, Interesting Times, The Last Continent, Equal Rites, Witches Abroad and Wyrd Sisters, I started reading a bit of The Wee Free Men, and I'm 2/3 through Pyramids. All these books are by Terry Pratchett of course. (If there was a smiley good enough to describe how I feel while reading these hilarious books then I would put it - I think it is stronger than ectasy).

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  • knieve
    replied
    The Southern Vampire Novels by Charlaine Harris is a good series to read if you are into vampires and other mystical creatures.

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  • Kathy Li
    replied
    I have been spending more hours than I ought to reading a techno-thriller/detective/horror series cowritten by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child: the Agent Pendergast series. I'm not sure I'd recommend it for you guys, since it can get awfully gore-and-guts strewn in places when the monsters pop out of the walls. And Still Life With Crows made even my hardened-by-too-many-CSI-episodes guts churn. But they're darn good reads (and don't let the fact that the first one got turned into a lousy movie put you off).

    However. One of the really cool facets of the series is that Douglas Preston is an archeologist, and is very familiar with the Museum of Natural History in NYC. And they use it as a setting for a lot of their books. In fact, Preston and Child first met when Child was an editor at St. Martin's, and asked Preston to write a book about the museum.

    It's called Dinosaurs in the Attic and I think most folks here would love it. It's old enough that I found it in the public library. It tells not only the history of the museum, but also the individual stories of the characters who made it what it was in the early days (although he skips over Margaret Meade--he prefers telling us the story of the guy who trained Margaret Meade), and their collecting expedition adventures, and the stories of some of the artefacts, as well as starting out the tour by taking a boring tiny brown beetle and why it's in the collection and how its history makes it something special and valuable.

    It's fascinating stuff. Highly recommend it. Just be warned there are some strong images in it (and obscene stuff if you're fluent in Latin ) mostly because of the fact that a lot of what gets collected are biological specimens. So if finding out how skeletons get prepped is gonna squick you, you may wanna stay away. But if you're at all interested in anthropology, archeology, history, or comparative biology, it's a blast.

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  • Rubywolf
    replied
    I'm halfway through Shirley Jackson's short story collection, The Lottery. It's very exciting. It's also very modern, even though it was written a long time ago. I would call it timeless.

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  • Kathy Li
    replied
    I'm glad you're enjoying Shoeless Joe, Emi. An old friend of mine prefers it to Field of Dreams. Kinsella wrote a lot of baseball stories.

    I'm working my way through Linnea Sinclair again, now that I finished Scalzi's Android's Dream (which was absolutely terrific, but you already know that). Sinclair reminds me of McCaffrey and Sharon Shinn for some reason. I finally finished Gabriel's Ghost (probably my least fave of her books), and then tore my way through the rest of Down-Home Zombie Blues (which, despite the title isn't really about zombies. It's more of a space opera/bug hunt with a romance in the middle. Really enjoyed it, as it was something of a change of pace for her. And now I'm back to her first novel (a fantasy--her only one) called Wintertide.

    The editing is driving me nuts. (The copyediting on Android's Dream also drove me nuts--I think I counted about half a dozen missing "to"s throughout the text). But given that it's small press, you kind of expect that (sigh). It's a lot rougher and less polished than her later SF books--it's taking forever to get off the ground, but it's really interesting, because it's the sort of thing that's usually a "trunk book" for an author--and you can see the buried seeds of Accidental Goddess everywhere.

    I've also been dipping, every now and again, into the Connie Willis short story anthology, The Winds of Marble Arch (most of which I've already read in earlier anthologies). It's been almost six years since Passage, and no hint of a release date for All-Clear (or whatever it's going to be called), yet. Sigh. Oh, well, still better than the fourth Door book.

    BTW, if you've never read Connie Willis, but would like a taster, Asimov's has a sample from her latest story online.

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  • Emi
    replied
    Kathy, I got Shoeless Joe and I have to say so far it's interesting. In the beginning it was hard for me to concentrate, but after a bunch of pages it starts to get interesting. Having J.D. Salinger as the kiddnapped author makes it a plus. Thanks for pointing that out!

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  • Kathy Li
    replied
    Yup. Peter Jackson. BTW, dunno if you knew, but His Majesty's Dragon began as locked LJ entries. Naomi Novik's LJ has been hopping ever since.

    Nice to know McCullough's 1776 is worth it. It's been a while since I read him (the last one hit was the Brooklyn Bridge one).

    Oh, and I need to get the new Oliver Sacks, Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain big time.

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  • Garrett Fitzgerald
    replied
    My favorite history reading is right around the Revolutionary War period, since I'm a 1776 junkie. :-) My favorite book so far in that period was Founding Brothers, by Joseph Ellis. It tells how the interpersonal relations between the various founders (and he includes Abigail Adams as an equal there, although she's omitted from the title and cover pictures...) affected the early history of the country. I also enjoyed Ellis' His Excellency: George Washington.

    I really liked McCullough's 1776 -- I didn't realize how chaotic that year had actually been until McCullough laid it out and showed how narrowly and how often we avoided disaster. His John Adams was also enjoyable, but didn't stick in my mind as vividly.

    And on a mostly-unrelated note, I'm halfway through the Temeraire series. Borders had books 1, 2, and 4, so I'm stuck for the moment. :-) *checks Wikipedia* Sweet Mother of Abraham Lincoln! Peter Jackson has on option on the series???? I probably heard about this at the time, but before reading them, it wouldn't really have registered beyond "Oh, that's nice..."

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  • Kathy Li
    replied
    I am now two-thirds of the way through Killer Angels, and I figure I'm also the very last Firefly fan ever to have gotten around to reading it. It's really good. I'm now curious about picking up Shaara's Broken Ground. Anybody have any info on what it's about? I know I could google, but I'm feeling lazy. Haven't had this much fun history reading since I ran through a half dozen MCullough books (and if anybody's interested in the upcoming HBO series, I'd recommend picking up John Adams).

    Oh, and I found Scalzi's The Last Colony at the public library and raced right through. Wah, there's no more to the series! Have, nonetheless, picked up a copy of Android's Dream, now, whose title alone tickles the heck outta me (Philip K. Dick, anyone?). I also gotta make a very small mention that Scalzi's tuckerizations are cracking me up. The one of George R.R. Martin in particular was absolutely hilarious, given that Martin's WildCards character was "The Great and Powerful Turtle."

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  • seabiscuit1009
    replied
    Originally posted by Garrett Fitzgerald:
    My favorite Merlin series, on the other hand, is Mary Stewart's Merlin Trilogy -- The Crystal Cave, The Hollow Hills, and The Last Enchantment, plus The Wicked Day, which tells the story of Mordred from Mordred's point of view. It manages to match nicely the reported events of Arthur's final battle, while still making Mordred a very sympathetic character -- perhaps Arthur's equal in kingship, if not in battle.
    I remember that series! I think I read it freshman year, and loved it. Definitely one of the better Merlin stories out there, and the only one that really sticks out in my mind (and I've read a lot of Merlin/Arthur stories.)

    Right now I'm re-reading one of my favorite books ever, called Sophie's World. It was originally written in Norweigian, and is a history of Western philosophy in the form of a novel. *shrugs* I'm a philosophy dork, and it's basically the sparknotes version of the history of philosophy (well, it's a bit longer than a sparknotes history would be...) Anyway, I find it fascinating; if you're seriously into philosophy, check it out-it's not a book for those who don't like to think a lot while reading though.

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  • Emi
    replied
    Hey Kathy! Now you got me wanting to read Shoeless Joe!! I didn't know that Salinger was the original character. That's pretty cool. I like his style of writing. It's too bad that he won't sell the rights to The Catcher in the Rye for a movie, that would be really neat to see played out. I read plays for school, does that count?!?? I enjoy some of them.... like, we're reading "A Death of A Salesman" by Arthur Miller, and it seems interesting so far. Not really sure if I'm going to enjoy it... On my spare time I usually read scripts online from movies that have elements I might want to add in my script.

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  • Garrett Fitzgerald
    replied
    Originally posted by vashmata:
    Well, I'm reading "Guardian of the Balance" by Irene Radford. It's about the "real story of Merlin and Arthur".
    I thought you were about to say "Guardians of Ga'Hoole", which is Ael's latest kick. It's a series of books about owls -- that's about all I've figured out so far, since I'm not sure I actually want to dive in. :-)

    My favorite Merlin series, on the other hand, is Mary Stewart's Merlin Trilogy -- The Crystal Cave, The Hollow Hills, and The Last Enchantment, plus The Wicked Day, which tells the story of Mordred from Mordred's point of view. It manages to match nicely the reported events of Arthur's final battle, while still making Mordred a very sympathetic character -- perhaps Arthur's equal in kingship, if not in battle.

    And I second the recommendation for The Killer Angels. It's an amazing book, and the movie was a very faithful adaptation -- they even got permission to film on the battlefield itself, which was fairly unusual. I'd suggest watching the movie first, so you can have the setting and voices in your head as you read.

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  • meteorite
    replied
    Originally posted by AlidaART:
    I'm also reading The Adventures of Kavalier and Clay for an English class on Pulitzer Prize winners. So far so good, but we'll see how I feel in a couple weeks.
    Alida, if you are reading Pulitzer Prize winners and you enjoy history, I highly recommend The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara. It is the story of the 4 days of the battle of Gettysburg, and was subsequently made into the movie (4 hours!!) Gettysburg. Shaara does a bang-up job making you feel for both the Blue and Gray characters. I felt whole new levels of sympathy for Longstreet, stuck between his men and his commanders but trying to do the best he could; truly a portrayal of middle management's problems!

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