books you've read !

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toniglandyl

internal data fragmentation : 62203480%
Jan 20, 2006
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diceedge.blogspot.com
ok, so some of us actually read books ! (me for example)

so here, you put the books you've read recently or not, that you would like to advice to BuFers.
You put a brief description of the book's content, what to expect.

"The killing Floor" by lee child.
This was a book that Airmoran adviced me to buy, as I was searching for something to read. It's all about finding ou who the murderer is and stopping him. So if you don't like thrillers, pass your way.
The story unfolds up well, with lots of action and characters have real personalities which makes them worth remembering.
I'd highly recommend it.
 

dragonfliet

I write stuffs
Apr 24, 2006
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Last Week:

Atonement by Ian McEwan: Not as good as the movie. This book focuses too much on what a 13 year old girl thinks about writing and not enough time on the central theme of atonement. The book within a book concept is rife with problems and the author's crowning work is completely unable to sustain itself. McEwan has emphasized the wrong things in this book and it suffers for it.

Daughters of Earth: Feminist Science Fiction in the 20th Century collected by Justina Larabalestier: 11 short stories followed by 11 essays, this collection is a really strong chronological record of sci-fi written by women from the '20's to the '90's. I'm most amused that 2 of the stories aren't even Sci-Fi at all (one uses entropy as a metaphor, but it happens in an unspecific but contemporary by description present and the other is a simple safari story that happens to reference a sci-fi story), but I found the stories interesting, if not altogether well written (though some are) and the essay's are thought provoking.

Woman on the Edge of Time by Marge Piercy: I'm pretty torn on this one. On one hand, the example of the exploitation of women, minorities and those perceived to be different from larger society in our time (70's, but it still works) is vividly and strikingly portrayed, the Utopian society portrayed in the future is laughable and childish. I'm still on the fence how to take a few sections of the book, and I can't say them here as they're major spoilers, but the book is certainly a thought provoking one even if it isn't always a perfectly written one.

~Jason
 

Balton

The Beast of Worship
Mar 6, 2001
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Berlin
I wish I could contribute with something worthwhile. In the last book thread I talked about how good Trainspotting is and back then I was in my "a week a book finished"-reading pattern... but then I found out about new 360 rentals which has forced me to finish a couple of games first(Mass Effect, Assasins Creed, Cod4[1day :rolleyes:]). yadayada, anyways, I got to finish a collection of shortstories by P.K. Dick, assembled to or after the movie release of Minority Report, aptly named "Minority Report". Half the stories I already read in "Second Variety" so this collection feels a bit too much like merchandising... meh.

I've started the first couple of pages of "The Transmigration of Timothy Archer" and I should have Vonnegut's Breakfast of Champions in the mail.
 

GotBeer?

The nozzle is now calibrating
Mar 10, 2004
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57th State
Well, I fought my way through Frank Herbert's "Chapterhouse Dune" a couple of weeks ago. Jesus, I have trouble following his 'writing style'. Seriously, I just don't get the dialog. It's like simultaneously listening to half of a conversation from two different cafe tables at the same time. I just started "Hunters of Dune", written by Herbert's son Brian and Kevin J Anderson. It's much easier to understand so far.

Speaking of Anderson, I've just read his "Saga of Seven Suns" up to the current "Metal Swarm". Not bad. Humans and a race known as Idirans battling against themselves, each other, and elemental beings.
 

das_ben

Concerned.
Feb 11, 2000
5,878
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Teutonia
Last week's novels:

Isaac Asimov - Caves of steel (Wikipedia). It's solid Asimov, a nicely constructed story and rather bland characters. I liked the way Earth and its 'caves of steel' were described, in a way it seemed like a dystopian sci-fi world without the population minding or being even aware of the state of things. In any case, I love how Asimov keeps constructing problems with the solution being close but never quite tangible - at least for me.

F. Scott Fitzgerald - Tender is the night (Wikipedia). This is widely described as his masterpiece, and rightly so. While I was hesitant about it at first, despite loving Gatsby and some of his short stories, I was definitely drawn in after a while. The way the characters and how they change in the course of a marriage and a little more than a decade in Europe's interwar-period are portrayed is simply brilliant. Following the relationship between the psychologist Dick and his mentally unstable wife Nicole on its downward spiral is haunting and towards the ending, quite depressing. If you like Fitzgerald, this book is a must-read, if you don't know Fitzgerald, read this novel and you'll like him.
 
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toniglandyl

internal data fragmentation : 62203480%
Jan 20, 2006
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diceedge.blogspot.com
the belgariad from David Eddings (a series of 5 books)
Medieval Fantasy, very easy to read, it brought me some epic moments, as characters really feel alive, with their worries and the fact that we discover everything progressively.
it's really entertaining, and the fact that the whole universe makes sense (not scientific sense since there's magic, but sense in a way you don't have to force yourself to believe it). actually, there are 5 more books after the belgariad, and 4 others that should be read after reading those 10 books, that talk about the whole past of the world (it's an autobiography of millena old sorcerers).
in short : Garion is a farm boy, living with his aunt. all seems normal until one day, a powerfull magic stone was stolen. Garion accompanies his aunt, an old man, a thieft and a warrior who are trying to catch up with the stone stealer and bring the stone back to it's original place. that's all I can tell without telling too much spoilers ! anyway, I've read this series maybe 3 times, and it's always very fun ! the ending brings a lot of satisfaction too :)
 

SnaKe-Fu

Thread Killer.
Dec 26, 2000
839
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www.7igaming.com
Just read a couple books over a couple weeks.

Inside Delta Force - Good read with some pretty good insight on what it would take. Reminded me that it's not what I want to do. =P

Lone Survivor - Another very good military book. Just a great story about the strength of a human being and how some people can be so selfless.

Treasure of Kahn - A very good dirk pitt novel by clive cusslar. Wouldnt pass this one up if you are given a chance to read it.
 

GotBeer?

The nozzle is now calibrating
Mar 10, 2004
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57th State
I would say read The Belgariad, but skip everything else. The "good guys always have a witty one-liner while the bad guys always say 'huh?'" formula works in the first series, but gets old, imo.
 

_Zd_Phoenix_

Queen of BuFdom
May 1, 2001
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I got a book for Christmas that had been recommended to me and that I'd asked for: the Hyperion Omnibus (comprising of the books Hyperion and Fall of Hyperion) by Dan Simmons.

The front cover carries a quote from Iain M. Banks, "truly astonishing" - and I think I'd have to agree with that.

It's a science fiction story, but of a kind completely new to me; the way in which the story is told is magnificent and, of the books I've ever read, Hyperion has the most brilliant structure.


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The book takes place within confines of The Hegemony, a vast human society that has grown after the end of Old Earth, built with the help of the TechnoCore, a society of AIs that had long seceded from human control but now prop up human society with technology that allows people to instantly travel to other planets in the Hegemony 'web'.

The story begins with the commencement of a final pilgrimage of seven pilgrims to a planet that is outside of the Web: Hyperion, which is about to be the forefront of a war with a group of humans outside of the Hegemony. Their destination are the Time Tombs, mysterious structures that are home to the Shrike, part god and part killing machine, that lives beyond the laws of time and space.


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The setting does take getting used to, but the gradual way in which you really begin to understand what's really going on and how the book is set up is what makes it great. The journey in 'realtime' of the character is not a long one; most of the first book is actually devoted to the pilgrims taking it in turn to tell each other why they were picked to come on the final pilgrimage.

Each story has its own different concept, and quite frankly there are at least four that could have been quite astounding if they had been books on their own - but instead here they are as short stories working themselves into a greater tapestry.


As someone who has been trying for a few years to develop several ideas that I hope will become books one day, it was almost shaming to see such amazing work piled into one place like that. It's an embarrassment of riches.

By the time you're well into the second book and really begin to see the extent of the author's imagination, you have to stop and wonder how the hell one man can come up with this much and work it all into a single frame. It's ridiculous.

It's a great book (or rather they're both great books). You have no idea what the hell is going on at first, but it's a mark of how great the writing is that you're completely an utterly hooked as much as you are bewildered such a short way into the books, by the end of the first pilgrim's tale. There are occasions where both books drift slightly and you have to wait for the pace to pick up again, but when it does it was more than worth it.

As is a norm in science fiction, most of the characterisation is somewhat limited (with a notable and important exception), but quite frankly there's hardly the room for it with such a focus on the overriding themes.


Can't recommend it enough.
 
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[VaLkyR]Anubis

Foregone Destruction
Jan 20, 2008
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I read the book Sea Monsters by Nigel Marven - That is a great a book,especially something for people who like those monsters and dinosaurs.This book contains all sea monsters,which ever excisted on earth,like Liopleurodon or the biggest shark (Carcharodon megalodon) and many other,very interesting,I recommend that book.:)
 

_Zd_Phoenix_

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May 1, 2001
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Ooo I definitely won't forget! I've been dying to get it since I finished Fall a couple of days ago, but am waiting to get back to uni where I can buy it off the shelf (which I always like more than getting things from amazon or the like). :)

What did you think of the first two books?
 

Gundato

Wangosaurus Rex
Feb 26, 2002
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Ooo I definitely won't forget! I've been dying to get it since I finished Fall a couple of days ago, but am waiting to get back to uni where I can buy it off the shelf (which I always like more than getting things from amazon or the like). :)

What did you think of the first two books?

The Hyperion Cantos remains one of the greatest stories I ever read. Although, the end of Rise of Endymion is kind of weak.

Personally, I found Hyperion/Fall of Hyperion to be the most exhilarating of the two, but Endymion/Rise of Endymion to be the more compelling read. More plot-related activity happens in the latter two, but most of it feels like it is just progressing the plot (which, with a plot like that, is acceptable :p). With Hyperion, not a lot happens, but you soak up every single millisecond of it.

Also, if you like that, try Simmons's other epic Illium/Olympos. He does to Shakespeare and Homer what he did to John Keats. Although, the end of Olympos is REALLY weak, but there is apparently a third book on the way (Odyssiad).
 

SleepyHe4d

fap fap fap
Jan 20, 2008
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Here's a great read, it's only a short story but is very funny. The title is:

Post #12 and #17 of the "books you've read !" Thread at BeyondUnreal Forums

Summary:
LOL and suddenly my review looks completely over-dressed! :p

The book of life.

Haven't finished yet. This could take a while.

ROFLMFAO

...was my response while reading this masterpiece, I give it a 10/10.


Really though, I haven't read many books besides the Harry Potter series which I give a 7/10, but I don't have much to compare it to. :p

Edit (Sep2012): Dat cringe when reading old posts...
 
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