What book are you reading, ιf' - Iff you read books

I've been reading Dan Simmons's The Terror. It's actually kind of incredible, I've been having demonic polar bear related dreams.

I loved Hyperion. Without divulging any spoilers whatsoever.. is this similar? (not in terms of the plot but rather in the vibe and atmosphere the book creates and what it makes you feel as you read it)

I have been slowly making my way through Stephen Baxter's Voyage. I finished the Proxima + Ultima series by him and wanted to stick to the author.. and Voyage seems to be sort of but not really similar to For All Mankind, which I loved. And so far so good! It was written in 1996 so you can sort of see that Baxter's prose is still a bit rough around the edges. In later books he cuts out more of the filler, I find. I'm enjoying it though, although I'm only about 150 pages in.
 
I loved Hyperion. Without divulging any spoilers whatsoever.. is this similar? (not in terms of the plot but rather in the vibe and atmosphere the book creates and what it makes you feel as you read it)

I have been slowly making my way through Stephen Baxter's Voyage. I finished the Proxima + Ultima series by him and wanted to stick to the author.. and Voyage seems to be sort of but not really similar to For All Mankind, which I loved. And so far so good! It was written in 1996 so you can sort of see that Baxter's prose is still a bit rough around the edges. In later books he cuts out more of the filler, I find. I'm enjoying it though, although I'm only about 150 pages in.
Its a straight up period piece horror/thriller. As far as tone goes, its very similar to the priest's tale, except its even more of a proper slow burn. There's just a hint of Melville in there too. If you liked Hyperion, you probably will like it.
 
Should finish Sons of the Waves tonight,a history of British sailors in the 18th century and early 19th.
 
Oh no
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I managed to get through about 3 1/2 books. (IIRC, Kyriakos didn't do much better either.)
Iirc I read roughly 150 pages (or maybe 100) back when I was 17 or 18...
I don't remember anything, apart from the first paragraph.

Anyway, I now read the first two collections of the FB stories. The second was worse than the first, but the first wasn't that good either. I hope I hadn't already read his best stories before undertaking to read full collections...
 
I am considering joining the Proust fray. That is, if I can re-start my reading habit. Uni and tonnes of writing and editing killed it :(

And I still have all those other books to go! I think my dad will be disappointed if I don't read LOTR before I'm twenty. Opportunity costs...
 
Looking at The Usurper King on the fall of Richard II to Henry of Bolingbroke and the Wars of the Roses that would result.
 
Is that one of those newfangled euphemisms for 'reading'? :)

:lol: Currently reading the first chapter to see if I like the author's style enough to continue. So far, so good.
 
Last week I finished reading

The Disappearances

by

Emily Bain Murphy

Copyright 2017

"Every seven years something disappears in the remote town of Sterling:
people's reflections, the stars in the sky, the ability to dream."

A very enjoyable literary fantasy.
 
As compared to the swarthy, slant-eyed hordes coming from the East in Sauron's support during the War of the Ring?
Now that I've finished The Lord of the Rings, and have finally encountered those famous orc of whom I have heard so much about, I will observe that I did not find their depiction as offensive or upsetting as that of the Calormenians in The Chronicles of Narnia. Because in his design and description of the orcic hordes he seems to merely be tapping into the collective European consciousness' memories and history-myths of an unstoppable destructive horde from the East – whether Hun or Turk or Saracen

– but C.S. Lewis on the other hand comes across as very deliberately caricaturing cultures and societies for which he harboured contempt and distrust drawn purely from bigotry – and in doing so evidently fails to even understand those cultures and societies he disparages with so uncharitable a pen. That part about Calormenian poetry being inferior to Narnian poetry, for example: when Lewis writes that the Calormen-raised protagonist Cor feels like a rocket had blasted up within him upon listening to Narnian poetry, a sensation he had never felt with Calormenian poetry, that part rankled with me even when I first read it as a child. Because I have read the sort of poetry Lewis is stereotyping here, and I have read English poetry as well, and though I love the latter my appreciation tends to stop at its aesthetic virtues – I have not felt poetry in the English language so truly and intensely as that former sort of poetry; in fact, if I were asked to describe how it made me feel I would say it was like if someone had lit a dynamite within me – very much like the way Lewis describes Narnian poetry.

And that is not the only jarring thing in The Horse And His Boy. There is an episode – for example – where Lewis makes a contrast between the dark, scowling Calormenian guards and the smiling and laughing fair-haired noble Narnians and Archenlanders. Then there is the depiction of every Calormenian character in the story as being greedy, cruel and double-crossing (with the exception of the female protagonist).

But I still love the series, and I still love the book (The Horse And His Boy is among my favourite childhood novels) but my memories of them are nonetheless implacably soured.
 
I gave up on Kim Stanley Robinson's Green Mars (1993) about 2/3rds of the way through. Enough with the descriptions of rock outcroppings and lichen. Maybe move the story along? Just a thought. :sleep:

Then I started Dust (2013) by Hugh Howey, book 3 of the Silo trilogy. It's been a while since I read Wool and Shift, but I didn't feel like going back and rereading those, so I pressed on, but I think I'm remembering enough as I go along to grasp this one.
 
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Vacation reading

The unusual suspect 7/10 it's about an idealistic autistic bank robber, I sent a copy to my daughter

Stoner 8/10 : a classic I'd never heard of. Very poignant and relatable in certain parts
 
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