Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
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• Page 175 of 175
Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
I finished Bone #3: Eyes of the Storm a few days ago and I've been reading Over Sea, Under Stone by Susan Cooper.
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Dragon_Eyes - Grazer
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Mmmmm, I LOVE that series. I haven't read it in years and now you're making me want to go dig it up at the library. I always felt Over Sea, Under Stone is probably the worst (okay, I don't want to use the word worst to describe anything about that series)... the least best of the series.Over Sea, Under Stone by Susan Cooper.
The series also made me attempt to teach myself Welsh. MASSIVE FAIL.
Best Newbie (Sraffie Awards 2008)
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"There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved." (Charles Darwin, "On the Origin of Species")
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bee - HoneyPie
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Recently - Sir pTerry - Nation. Whatever else Alzheimer's is doing to him it's not spoiling his storytelling. I absolutely loved it.
Now - Paolo Bacigalupi's biopunk epic The Windup Girl. I'm about halfway through and reserving judgement. I will say this - it's clearly a first novel.
Now - Paolo Bacigalupi's biopunk epic The Windup Girl. I'm about halfway through and reserving judgement. I will say this - it's clearly a first novel.
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Peter - Not an endangered species
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Agreed. Having to see the slow end of one of my favourite authors is very difficult but his passion to finish everything he has going on top of having to deal with one of the most challenging diseases from a creative POV is inspiring. I don't consider myself a well read person but what Pratchett has left us is priceless.Recently - Sir pTerry - Nation. Whatever else Alzheimer's is doing to him it's not spoiling his storytelling. I absolutely loved it.
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Darragh - Entirely Adequate
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Just finished The Remembrance of Things Past, Volume I, by Marcel Proust. It's a common story that reading Proust nearly silenced Virginia Woolf...I'm glad it was only nearly because she always put my thoughts better than I ever could: "My greatest adventure was undoubtedly Proust. What is there left to write[read!] after that?"
O, and I recommend the new Lydia Davis translation heartily. My boyfriend and I read her translation and his Scott Moncrieff together for a bit and I believe (and am told) the Davis is clearer and closer to Proust's original writing.
O, and I recommend the new Lydia Davis translation heartily. My boyfriend and I read her translation and his Scott Moncrieff together for a bit and I believe (and am told) the Davis is clearer and closer to Proust's original writing.
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Mockingbird - A Walking Blade
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Just finished reading the good soldier, by ford madox ford. I don't usually read books like that but I got it free with a newspaper a while ago, and a blogger said it was her favorite book...so I read it. It was okay.
Today I bought Neil gaiman's neverwhere, which I have heard many good things about.
Today I bought Neil gaiman's neverwhere, which I have heard many good things about.
"To him whose elastic and vigorous thought keeps pace with the sun, the day is a perpetual morning."
-Henry David Thoreau
-Henry David Thoreau
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Jaya - Je ne suis pas une sraffie.
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
being all excited about the new tinker tailor soldier spy remake with gary oldman -- though our local cinema isn't showing it, grrr, so i haven't had a chance to see the film yet -- i've collected all the george smiley books by john le carré.
i've just finished reading call for the dead, the first smiley book, and the first novel le carré wrote. it's a great book, and more of a whodunnit rather than the espionage novel i was expecting. the character of smiley is a little different from the alec guinness version i love from the BBC adaptation, but i don't suppose i can really fault the book for that...
and despite that, i still love how this version of smiley is portrayed, short and fat, slimy and toadlike, blinking like a mole in the sunlight.
-- darren
i've just finished reading call for the dead, the first smiley book, and the first novel le carré wrote. it's a great book, and more of a whodunnit rather than the espionage novel i was expecting. the character of smiley is a little different from the alec guinness version i love from the BBC adaptation, but i don't suppose i can really fault the book for that...
and despite that, i still love how this version of smiley is portrayed, short and fat, slimy and toadlike, blinking like a mole in the sunlight.
yay for neil gaiman! i love neil gaiman! woo! (his non-sandman comics are poo, though.) have you started neverwhere yet?Today I bought Neil gaiman's neverwhere, which I have heard many good things about.
-- darren
a tear, sarah jane?
but it did happen.
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darren - alcoholic frog *hic*
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
currently reading neuromancer for troh book club *shameless promotion* pick it up, be prepared to take at least twice as long as a normal book this size, and please join in!
i don't even think i could read anything else right now if i *had* another book.
i don't even think i could read anything else right now if i *had* another book.
i wear purple for my daddy
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zemarl - I ATE'NT DEAD
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
I've been sticking with 'Mark Reads' since he did HDM, so I've just finished American Gods (by Neil Gaiman) and have just started The Hobbit; I read it when I was 10 (this is a depressingly long time ago), so I'm quite looking forward to reading it again. 3 chapters in and it's quite light and fun. I can see why I liked it at such a young age.
I won't lie, I was a little disappointed in American Gods. I know some people love the strange pacing of it, but to me it was just a little boring for the first two thirds. Also I really didn't care about the main characters, and those that I did find interesting were casually dropped in and out. I'm guessing that the fact that...
A. I know very little about mythology
B. I'm not American, and have very little knowledge of thier cultural geography (if that makes sense?)
... meant that I didn't take as much from it as others will.
I'm also reading The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, which I'm about 6/7 chapters into and really enjoying so far. I've had all three Millenium books since last Christmas, but I'm pretty lazy. Plus I still need to get the second book back from my sister. I started it while reading American Gods, and I think I'm just glad to be reading something that isn't fantasy-based. And yes, I know that I've just started reading The Hobbit...
I won't lie, I was a little disappointed in American Gods. I know some people love the strange pacing of it, but to me it was just a little boring for the first two thirds. Also I really didn't care about the main characters, and those that I did find interesting were casually dropped in and out. I'm guessing that the fact that...
A. I know very little about mythology
B. I'm not American, and have very little knowledge of thier cultural geography (if that makes sense?)
... meant that I didn't take as much from it as others will.
I'm also reading The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, which I'm about 6/7 chapters into and really enjoying so far. I've had all three Millenium books since last Christmas, but I'm pretty lazy. Plus I still need to get the second book back from my sister. I started it while reading American Gods, and I think I'm just glad to be reading something that isn't fantasy-based. And yes, I know that I've just started reading The Hobbit...
The sad truth: http://www.last.fm/user/chrispardo
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cjp - Grazer
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Where, oh where, are the decent literary editors? Editors with the clout to stand up to a well-known and profitable author and say, 'Take this home and work on it. It's not ready yet. It needs trimming and some of it really doesn't hang together very well.'I won't lie, I was a little disappointed in American Gods. I know some people love the strange pacing of it, but to me it was just a little boring for the first two thirds. Also I really didn't care about the main characters, and those that I did find interesting were casually dropped in and out.
I'm seeing so much stuff that seems to have gone straight from the writer's word processor to hardcover. Me, I blame that Douglas Adams. (Who famously did just that, although with better results.)
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Peter - Not an endangered species
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Bl-le-le-leak House. The thing about Dickens is, whether you like it or not, once you have him in your bones, you have him in your bones forever.
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Mockingbird - A Walking Blade
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Haruki Murakami - Sputnik Sweetheart.
I came to this completely cold, but it kept me with it. A mysterious story, in which no statement can be taken at face value and may well be untrue. I rather liked it.
The translation by Philip Gabriel, whether or not it's accurate (and I can't tell), is very readable.
I came to this completely cold, but it kept me with it. A mysterious story, in which no statement can be taken at face value and may well be untrue. I rather liked it.
The translation by Philip Gabriel, whether or not it's accurate (and I can't tell), is very readable.
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Peter - Not an endangered species
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Katherine Paterson - Bridge to Terebithia.
Interesting if flawed book which will especially appeal to bright 10 y-os. I'm surprised I'd not heard of it before.
The flaw lies in the episodic structure which, while building up a picture of Jess and Leslie's friendship is not best integrated into the overall fabric of the book. It reminded me of similar structures in E Nesbit and CS Lewis. It's well-suited to an adult reading to a child at bedtime as each chapter (until the last few) is self-sustaining - but I think this is a book to read to oneself.
As for the end - it justifies all that has gone before and, in its way, is not dissimilar to the conclusion of The Amber Spyglass. I've always appreciated children's books where the danger is real and the most awful things can (and do) happen; especially when the characters are shown to be capable of carrying on with life afterwards. It's a useful lesson - that however bad things may be now there will eventually come a time when sadness or setbacks can take their proper place in the past.
Interesting if flawed book which will especially appeal to bright 10 y-os. I'm surprised I'd not heard of it before.
The flaw lies in the episodic structure which, while building up a picture of Jess and Leslie's friendship is not best integrated into the overall fabric of the book. It reminded me of similar structures in E Nesbit and CS Lewis. It's well-suited to an adult reading to a child at bedtime as each chapter (until the last few) is self-sustaining - but I think this is a book to read to oneself.
As for the end - it justifies all that has gone before and, in its way, is not dissimilar to the conclusion of The Amber Spyglass. I've always appreciated children's books where the danger is real and the most awful things can (and do) happen; especially when the characters are shown to be capable of carrying on with life afterwards. It's a useful lesson - that however bad things may be now there will eventually come a time when sadness or setbacks can take their proper place in the past.
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Peter - Not an endangered species
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
We read this in 5th grade. I no longer remember the story at all, but I remember being traumatized.Katherine Paterson - Bridge to Terebithia.
There's a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious—makes you so sick at heart—that you can't take part. You can't even passively take part. And you've got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you've got to make it stop. And you've got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you're free, the machine will be prevented from working at all
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AlexSP - Invincible Starlight
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
just finished maskerade, about to start guards! guards! (again, i think, but it's always good to reread vimes stories). currently reading jon stewart's earth, the book ...or is it (the book)? meh. funny and sad at the same time.
i wear purple for my daddy
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zemarl - I ATE'NT DEAD
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Now: Iain Banks - Transitions. Not an M Banks, but its tale of world-hopping agents is certainly a kind of SF. So far, rather better than a lot of his recent work.
Next: Simon Armitage - The Death of King Arthur. Armitage's translation of Gawain and the Green Knight was very well received, this less so. We shall see.
I like the cover very much:
Next: Simon Armitage - The Death of King Arthur. Armitage's translation of Gawain and the Green Knight was very well received, this less so. We shall see.
I like the cover very much:
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Peter - Not an endangered species
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
- Read
01 Vampire Academy Book Book Six: Last Sacrifice by Richelle Mead (01-03-2012) ★★★★
02 Night Shade Book Two: Wolfsbane by Andrea Cremer (01-05-2012) ★★★★
03Abhorsen Chronicals Book Three: Abhorsen by Garth Nix (01-08-2012) ★★★★★
04 Maximum Ride Book Seven: Angel by James Patterson (01-12-2012) ★★★
05 Zoo City by Lauren Beukes (01-18-2012) ★★★★
06 Crank Book Two: Glass by Ellen Hopkins (01-22-2012) ★★★★
07 Warriors Omen of the Stars Book Four: Sign of the Moon by Erin Hunter (01-24-2012) ★★★★
08 Birthmarked Book Two: Prized by Caragh O'Brian (01-27-2012) ★★★★★
09 Strange Angels Book Two: Betrayals by Lili St. Crow (01-29-2012) ★★★★
10 Ender's Game Book One: Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card (02-03-2012) ★★★★★ ♥
11 The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (02-06-2012) ★★★★
12 Study Series Book One.Five: Assassin Study by Maria V. Snyder (02-06-2012) ★★★★
13 Glass Book Three: Spy Glass by Maria V. Snyder (02-07-2012) ★★★★★
14 Night Shade Book Three: Bloodrose by Andrea Cremer (02-10-2012) ★★★★
<B>reading</B>
15 Delirium Trilogy Book One: Delirium by Lauren Oliver
The Mortal Instruments Book Three: City of Glass by Cassandra Clare
Inheritance Book Four: Inheritance by Christopher Paolini
plan to read
Chemical Garden Book One: Wither by Lauren DeStefano
Paranormalcy Trilogy Book Two: Supernaturally by Kiersten White
Raised By Wolves Book One: Raised by Wolves by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
Crank Book Three: Fallout by Ellen Hopkins
Healers Book One: Touch of Power by Maria V. Snyder
The Dark Divine Book One: The Dark Divine by Bree Despain
Artemis Fowl Book Six: The Time Paradox by Eoin Colfer
Paranormalcy Trilogy Book Two: Supernaturally by Kiersten White
Chicagoland Vampires Book Three: Twice Bitten by Chloe Neill
Wicked Book Two: Curse by Nancy Holder
Fearless Book Thirty-two: Terror by Francine Pascal
WWW Book Two: Wake by Robert J. Sawyer
- Stelmaria7
- Gallivespian Spy
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Re: Just finished, currently reading, or about to start :)
Richard Morgan - Woken Furies. Having polished off the first two Takeshi Kovacs books, Altered Carbon and Broken Angels, Peter's really looking forward to another fix of hard-boiled ultraviolence
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Peter - Not an endangered species
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