Jump to content

Books!


meru

Recommended Posts

The Ocean at the End of the Lane is beautiful. Definitely read it.

 

There are a handful of amazing fantasy authors I can't recommend enough:

- Scott Lynch. There's a lot less magic in Scott Lynch's works than in a lot of fantasy, but there's also a lot more style. His heroes are not magicians: they're the best con men you'll ever hear about. His quantity of output is definitely a little iffy (I think he had several years of writer's block), and his only series is incomplete, so if you don't like reading incomplete stuff, maybe don't go for him... But if you can accept that you're not getting the whole entire story right now, nor for a large number more years  (maybe not ever), you should go start reading The Lies of Locke Lamora right now.

- Brandon Sanderson is the king of modern fantasy, IMO. His world-building is bettered perhaps only by Terry Pratchett, but unlike Pratchett, his works are serious (which I don't say as a negative - just a difference). Putting magic into the world, and making it systematic and believable, is his forte - it may not sound like much, but if you see it in action you'll probably appreciate it. He is also ridiculously prolific, so if you like what you read, there's a hell of a lot more out there. Mistborn is a good starting point to see if you like his style. My favorite is probably his novella The Emperor's Soul, which you can easily read in a few hours.

- Brent Weeks has one complete series (The Night Angel trilogy) and one nearly-complete series (Lightbringer) under his belt. I've talked about The Night Angel earlier in this thread, but basically, it's extremely compelling (he just pulls you through the pages), and it's the only series I can recall reading that gets better with every chapter. The ending is gorgeous. I just finished the first Lightbringer book yesterday, and it's looking like it will be even better than the Night Angel series - I think he's picking up some of Sanderson's influence in terms of systematizing his magic, because Lightbringer does a way better job with magic than Night Angel did.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just started up the Sharpe series by Bernard Cornwell. This is my first foray into historical fiction and man am I loving it. My favorite thing so far is one of the crooked officers keeps saying 'says so in the scriptures' to back up the most horrendous things.

 

Anyway the books are set around the Napoleon era and are about a hapless private in the British army. I assume he at some point becomes a hero and goes on to have all kinds of adventures and battles but for now he's at the absolute bottom of the heap, barely managing to hang on to his life (more because of dirty army politics than because of enemies trying to kill him). It's exciting, gritty, real stuff. I keep finding excuses to go out for long walks so I can listen to more of it (I'm listening to the audiobook version, highly recommended).

 

The strange thing is, the last book on tape I listened to where the reader had a heavy British accent was Alice in Wonderland, so it's kind of a shock going from an innocent children's story to an incredibly bawdy and dark war story.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Still reading Logic: A Very Short Introduction. I finished the first Maze Runner book, and I also borrowed two more A Very Short Introduction books from the school library: Particle Physics and Socialism. I'll also borrow Capitalism somewhere down the line.

 

I'll go "one Maze Runner- One Very Short Introduction- one Maze Runner" and so on. 

 

I want to read a grand space opera, so I am planning to restart Hyperion after I go through all six books (three in Maze Runner, three in VSI).

 

Also Isaac Asimov is a fucking GENIUS. (Just read The Last Question)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Is it ok to ask for recommendations based off light novels? Was just looking for a book with similar characters and dialogue from Gekkou, cynical/sarcastic characters with some mystery thrown in there. Thanks :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Finished The Scorch Trials, then went and binge-read The Death Cure in two days.

 

SC was nearly as good as I remembered, 8.5/10.

 

DC was disappointing, 6/10.

 

Also, the prose was VERY annoying:

 

*X happens*

 

Thomas: "OH SHIT NO X HAPPENED"

 

End of chapter:

 

"X had happened". 

 

Annoying, but I guess that is what I deserve after diving into YA books after trying to read Hyperion.

 

Started Socialism: A Very Short Introduction.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Finished The Scorch Trials, then went and binge-read The Death Cure in two days.

 

SC was nearly as good as I remembered, 8.5/10.

 

DC was disappointing, 6/10.

 

Also, the prose was VERY annoying:

 

*X happens*

 

Thomas: "OH SHIT NO X HAPPENED"

 

End of chapter:

 

"X had happened". 

 

Annoying, but I guess that is what I deserve after diving into YA books after trying to read Hyperion.

 

Started Socialism: A Very Short Introduction.

 

That's why I've pretty much stopped reading YA fiction at this point. All of them feel the same to me, and the writing is so dry compared to other books out there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's why I've pretty much stopped reading YA fiction at this point. All of them feel the same to me, and the writing is so dry compared to other books out there.

 

I have read Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy, Lord Of The Rings (Favorite part being the Appendices at the end of RotK), Foundation, Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep and Dune over the last year (not only those). All of them had damn good prose. (Though LotR and DADoES were a bit slow for me)

 

Now I can't go back to YA, I just can't. I like their over-the-top stories, full of action, etc. but the prose is SOOOOOOO BLAAAAAAAAAAAND. 

 

I can tolerate it if the story is real good (The Hunger Games blew my mind in sixth grade, maybe Battle Royale to an extent(not sure if this counts as YA), The Knife Of Never Letting Go was uniquely amazing, GONE (by Michael Grant, look it up, great series, changed my life when I found a fan group related to it on Facebook in sixth grade) is superb, etc.), but when the story is slow this simplicity of the writing sticks out, and painfully so.

 

I am almost completely ignorant as to what communism/capitalism/socialism are (though I just did a little research on Reddit), hence why I am reading a book on introduction to socialism (and will later read a book from the same series for capitalism). To be frank, I am not sure I am understanding half of what I read. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I forgot to mention, but I'm a big fan of mystery. Mostly Agatha Christie works, specially the ones including Poirot.

And Then There Were None (also goes by two other archaic names) is definitely one of my favorite mystery/thrillers of all time. Took quite a while to get started, but once it picked up... man...

 

 

That's why I've pretty much stopped reading YA fiction at this point. All of them feel the same to me, and the writing is so dry compared to other books out there.

They are all very similar. :/ I completely agree. Once the Hunger Games hit the shelves dozens of copycats popped up.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And Then There Were None (also goes by two other archaic names) is definitely one of my favorite mystery/thrillers of all time. Took quite a while to get started, but once it picked up... man...

Oh yeah, I read that not too long ago for the first time. I would second your recommendation; it was a lot of fun to read.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I read the comic book adaptation of that (foolishly), it was pretty damn good even in that format. The ending man, the ENDING

There's a comic book adaptation? *googles furiously*

 

I even enjoyed the old black and white movie. Parts of it were a drag, but they switched up the ending a bit.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...