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La La La - I can't hear you!
Nope, no spoilers. It does look like they will move outside the solar system. It also looks like Bobbie will be back. I also hope that Melba/Clarissa continues a redemption arc, but I don't want to know ahead of time |
Finally got around to reading Gene Wolfe the past couple months (Book of The New Sun, Fifth Head of Cerberus, The Island of Doctor Death...). Absolutely amazing, some of my most enjoyable reading in years. Going to start on the Long Sun and Short Sun series soon.
Will also sneak in a horror/fantasy recommendation here: Ghost Story by Peter Straub (1979). Read it this Spring and it's the best horror novel I've ever read. |
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Olaf Stapeldon's ODD JOHN a must read.
Love the "Conan" books by Robert E. Howard, nobody did heroic fantasy better. |
Malazan fans, I have a question or two. I just started the series and recently finished Gardens of the Moon. Do people like the Esslemont books? Should I read them after the main series or read them concurrently? Is there a suggested order if I do read them together? I’m sure there are answers out there that are easily googleable, maybe even in this thread, but I don’t want to read spoilers.
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So for years I've heard about how good this book series by Pierce Brown is, that starts with the novel Red Rising. I've had it on Audible for I don't know how long, and for whatever reason I've never started to listen to it. Until last night, when I finally started listening to the book, and....holy shit. I don't even know how to describe it. It almost evokes Dune, which I think most of you probably know is my favorite book of all time. And i'm only maybe 5 hours into Red Rising, and I'm already thinking it's this good. I can't wait to get into the whole series, which is I think up to 7 volumes now.
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I would do publication order, personally. Less to keep track of that way. The Esslemont books add even more characters and detail and happenings. The esslemont books pick up and improve as they go along. Return of the Crimson Guard is really good. Erikson is the master of epic fantasy. You want sweeping, vast, varied, interconnected plotlines? Check. You want to laugh? Check. You want to cry when characters you love are ripped away from you? Check. So many times. You want gritty realism when it comes to politics and war? Check. You want moral dilemmas? Check. You want character growth? Check. |
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Pierce Brown is a boss, too. Darrow is a badass protagonist. It’s a good series. Major shift in tone from book 1 (all about the making and the institute) to the following books, too. In a good way. Brown, like Herbert, does a good job of making you think about the cost of having a Messiah with a cause. Unlike Herbert, he doesn’t flinch away from showing the fallout of it as it goes. Really good stuff. |
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:D I'm on page 300ish of Crippled God, waiting for it to pick up speed. |
My local bookstore owner was talking up a book called Seveneves by Neal Stephenson. I'll give it a read soon.
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