I actually think this may have been a bit stronger than the previous entry in Saga of the Seven Suns, but at the same time it's setup for at least book 5. I'm just glad some things (the rebellion, Maratha subplot) were actually resolved
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"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
The story is non-linear and told from 3 different perspectives in different times that at first appear to be totally unconnected, but as the story progresses it seems they are indeed connected (no surprise here). Where Baccano! fails to deliver a good story, Revelation Space seems to be very entertaining and mysterious. Mind that I read only 100 pages, but it looks very promising.
The Golden Dream of Carlo Chuchio, by Lloyd Alexander I've been a huge fan of Alexander's work since I was a kid, most notably the Prydain Chronicles. Golden Dream was... interesting. Its format was very stylistic, and a lot of the choices in the plot wouldn't work in general, but did here because of the atmosphere that was created around them. It's got a lot of elements familiar to me as a fan of Pryddain, but I have to say that most of those were done better there, where the arcs had a longer running time. Developing Fflewddur, Taran, and Eilonwy took time, and their counterparts (That is, the main boy who doesn't exactly know how the world works, the spitfire of a girl who ultimatley is the romantic interest, and the older comic relief with hidden depths) here kind of suffer from having to be introduced, developed, and evolved over this short a time. The one thing Golden Dream notably does better is working with a human-scale villain. Most of the villains of Prydain are working on the scale of monsters and magical beings. Dorath and Magg are pretty human, but also pretty secondary, and Magg is too insane to be taken entirely seriously in the end and Dorath... he's plenty serious and plenty nasty, but in the end he's nothing more than a simple bandit. The villain here, while not a huge presence in the narrative (it's more about the journey than a conflict, which is also pretty cool) is working on a similar wavelength to Dorath, but in the screen time he gets, at least he thinks big, and has the charisma and grand aspirations to really serve the role.
A Feast of Souls, by CS Friedman This is an odd one. I actually like the wider story being hinted at here, but I have trouble getting into a lot of the characters, most problematically Kamala.
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"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
I finished Worm recently. It's a pretty well written work for a web series. It's also really freaking long. Some chapters dragged a little, but overall I would definitely recommend it.
Now I'm mostly browsing through related fanfiction in my free time.
I finished Worm recently. It's a pretty well written work for a web series. It's also really freaking long. Some chapters dragged a little, but overall I would definitely recommend it.
Now I'm mostly browsing through related fanfiction in my free time.
I've had that open in a tab for a month or two now, actually. Yxoque I believe is who mentioned it and I'd like to read it eventually, although I'll have to find time in-between M:EM fanfiction and pony fanfiction and webcomics and other things I sometimes read.
My reaction is . It is an interesting book. The end is certainly different than what I was expecting, but I really don't know if I will read the next one.
As the 5th entry in the Saga of the Seven Suns, I kinda knew what I was getting into with it. And you know, it was a good entry. Stuff happened. I kinda wonder how 7 is going to manage to top this (I rather assume 6 won't exactly try, but that's just my idea of structure)
Spoiler
I was not expecting the Hydrogues to be declared defeated before the end of the series, and with how it was portrayed I don't expect them to resurge. I mean, the last few chapters set up that Faeros/Klikiss/Robots/Basil are going to be our leading baddies for the next installment(s), but this started with the Hydrogues and I had anticipated it ending with them too.
Urdu'h will be missed. He was a terrible person, but he was also clever, and did all the worst things for all the best reasons. In books 1 and 2 he was just flat evil, but he really came into his own in book 4, I thought. He deserved what he got from Osira'h and probably from the mob as well, but I'd rather hoped he'd stick around.
I also really like Fitzpatrick's growth and arc. He could have just been a stock 2d bully, but he actually got character traits, and learned something, and is making efforts. What can I say? I like it when we get some nuance to characters that could be left as cardboard cutouts.
Next up: The Snow Queen by Joan D. Vinge
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"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
Considering reading Battlemage by Donald Wigboldy. I want a book in the old style, just action and not much fluffy, like The Dresden Files. Any suggestion?
EDIT: Right book, wrong author. Battlemage by Stephen Aryan, and not Battle Mage by Donald Wigboldy.
Joined: Sep 28, 2013 Posts: 390 Location: Daly City, CA
Identity: Lord of Darkness
Finally getting back to Takeshi Kovacs. Started Broken Angels by Richard Morgan.
Kinda annoyed that the new Mistborn book just came out. I used to be able to bounce between multiple books in high school. I just don't have the head for it anymore.
I... Wow. This was a great book, but it was also a hard book for me to read. I love the baseline story of the Snow Queen, which is kind of the skeleton upon which Vinge's novel is built. But wow, the places she goes with this... like Vernor Vinge in A Fire Upon the Deep or A Deepness in the Sky she creates a deep, exotic universe and then draws you into it not with a pure mystique of philosophy and 'facts', but with a cast of characters who, for all that they're part of this fantastical universe, feel incredibly real in a way the constructs that populate the Saga of the Seven Suns, entertaining and likable or hateable though they are, never do.
And that made this a hard book to read. In A Fire Upon the Deep, the struggle is very large. While you're drawn in by the characters, the sheer scale of events is one that helps dilute some of that, and when the characters suffer it's usually mixed with some sort of mystery or triumph. A Deepness in the Sky was a good deal more personal, and there were times when I found myself feeling profoundly uncomfortable because the trials the characters were going through. But almost always, there was another line of the story to draw me along, and I read Deepness in comparitivley short sittings, which also mitigated (for better or worse) the effect.
To compare to another book I've read this year... I remember some people commenting on All the Windwracked Stars being a hard book to read, because there's a lot of suffering going around for pretty much all the characters and only just enough redemption, at the end. But I didn't really have trouble with All the Windwracked Stars because Muire, Cathoair, and The Grey Wolf were products of a world that was going to kick their teeth in whenever it pleased. They fought, they resisted. Sometimes, the world won, but even when it did there was a chord running underneath it... In any case, I could take it.
There were a few points where I just had to put The Snow Queen down for a minute, and wait for the suffering to pass. Get out of that universe, and those characters I was empathizing with so much. Like All the Windwracked Stars, even moreso than that novel, there's redemption and a happy ending to be earned, but the narrative is not one of resistance and survival against an uncaring world, it's one of separation, loss, and corruption. And that's harder to shake, because the characters are forced to change more in response to what they must endure.
So it's a very good book -- maybe not the same degree of favorite for me as the Vernor Vinge novels I've read, but good -- but also, in my opinion, but also not for the faint of heart.
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"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
Almost finishing The Shining. It is a normal book from Stephen King. I don't particularly like his books, the exception being the books that he uses a pseudonym and write differently. But the movie The Shining was considered one of the best horror movies of all time and so I had to read the book as an horror fan myself.
Never read one that I truly liked (already read the Talisman, Salem's lot, The thing, two or three more, but I don't remember the names now), but I liked a lot The Long Walk and The Running Man.
And I also liked Horns that is written by his son.
Joined: Nov 10, 2013 Posts: 17753 Location: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Yeah, Running Man was great too. You should try Eyes of the Dragon (his attempt at fantasy). It might be my favourite book.
If you dug Running Man, I think you might REALLY like his 11/22/63 book on the JFK assassination and time travel. I LOVED that book and it was pretty damn stressful to read. Since we like similar works of King and I liked that one, i think you should try it.
I want to like Eyes of the Dragon. I really do. and I think it's a lot tighter than many of King's works, and it tells a good story. I suppose while I don't love it I could still recommend it. I mean, for all that I don't remember of a lot of books I read when I read that one, I still recall Dragon Sand, the miniature house, stealing threads, and Flagg.
Don't go into it looking for epic fantasy though. I think that's why some of my memory is sour, because that's not what it is. It is King telling a kind of fantasy mystery/thriller.
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"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
Just remembered the other two. Dreamcatcher and Green Mile, I liked these ones, but not that much.
Maybe I will read it later, much later. A co-worker already offered me to lend the continuation of The Shining. I am not sure if I want to read it. I don't want an overdose of King and I already selected my next read.
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