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Tallima: I picked up a Shannara trilogy. So far, I'm enjoying it. I only finished Sword and Elfstones. I couldn't get through Wishsong. It bored me. I tried twice over a few decades. But I hear the ending is great. :)

I picked this one up on clearance. It looked fun.

I lost my intended next book but just found it: the last book of the Kingdom of Thorn and Bone by Greg Keyes. I've really enjoyed that series. I hear it's the weakest of the series, but the story must end!

Speaking of fantasy: Robert Jordan. I picked up a few of his Wheel of Times. Everyone loves those books to pieces. I couldn't get past page 50. It was horribly slow and overly descriptive for my tastes. Does it get any better?
It certainly does, just a bit further on. I want to say page 80 or 100 tops.
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Tallima: Speaking of fantasy: Robert Jordan. I picked up a few of his Wheel of Times. Everyone loves those books to pieces. I couldn't get past page 50. It was horribly slow and overly descriptive for my tastes. Does it get any better?
I couldnt get past book 5. It got boring.........(and i love trilogies.... ok so his series went a few past 3....)
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Tallima: I picked up a few of his Wheel of Times. Everyone loves those books to pieces. I couldn't get past page 50. It was horribly slow and overly descriptive for my tastes. Does it get any better?
Jordan did world-building. In the same way that Tolkien is a stuffy bore to read [url= seriously, he writes like..well.. a nineteenth century English literature professor. It's great stuff, and the story is nearly perfect, but you can't fault someone for not enjoying the actual reading part of it ^_^ If you don't like Tolkien, you're just wrong, but it's fine not to like reading him. ][/url], Jordan is a pompous bore to read. But if you want a fleshed out world - not just a few cities here and there and some ambassadors to remind you there are other places, too - and an epic story, you won't do much better. If you can't enjoy it, no harm. You are missing out on a good story, though. [url= Also, if you don't lug those books along with you when you move, what are you going to use to hold down the tarp on your car when it gets windy? Or use half the series to build a wall around your new home to keep out the riffraff. ][/url]

Did you ever read Tad Williams' Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn, or the more recent Malazan Book of the Fallen by Steven Erikson? Those are also great examples of worldbuilding, and though the page count can be daunting, they're good solid reads.

But if you don't want that, I always take a line to remind people that maybe the most technically perfect novels written this century are Patrick Rothfuss' The Kingkiller Chronicle, which is only a trilogy (well, will be once he publishes the last book) plus an optional short novel. The series is an ode to language itself, and you almost have to read it through twice just to see all the secrets hidden in plain sight.
God Emperor of Dune. Now continuing my Arrakis Odyssey with Heretics.
Tales of Earthsea, by Ursula K. le Guin. If you like her Earthsea novels (and then Tehanu, the fouth), then this book is a must.
Memnoch The Devil Probably one of my favorite books all things considered. Somehow manages to explain heaven and hell masterfully weaved into religious myth.
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bad_fur_day1: Memnoch The Devil Probably one of my favorite books all things considered. Somehow manages to explain heaven and hell masterfully weaved into religious myth.
There is that. Not that I'd believe it, but just taken as it is, it was a not unreasonable theory, she managed to make the existence of a "devil" being make logical sense.

Height of the series (and maybe of her writing in general). After it, Blood and Gold can be nice too, and the new Prince Lestat was actually better than I expected. Others, not so much.
Post edited February 01, 2016 by Cavalary
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bad_fur_day1: Memnoch The Devil
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Cavalary: There is that. Not that I'd believe it, but just taken as it is, it was a not unreasonable theory, she managed to make the existence of a "devil" being make logical sense.

Height of the series (and maybe of her writing in general). After it, Blood and Gold can be nice too, and the new Prince Lestat was actually better than I expected. Others, not so much.
If nothing much is catching my eye I think I would be happy to read, or re-read in the case of Memnoch, any of the Vampire Chronicles. I didn't realize their was another Le'stat novel, I'd love to read it.

Interview with the Vampire film did a pretty decent job of the first book, I usually imagine Armand, Louise and Lestat as they were in that film, though they do look a bit different in the books. Even Anne Rice was impressed with the film.
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bad_fur_day1: If nothing much is catching my eye I think I would be happy to read, or re-read in the case of Memnoch, any of the Vampire Chronicles. I didn't realize their was another Le'stat novel, I'd love to read it.

Interview with the Vampire film did a pretty decent job of the first book, I usually imagine Armand, Louise and Lestat as they were in that film, though they do look a bit different in the books. Even Anne Rice was impressed with the film.
Yeah, wasn't aware of it either about a year ago, till some newsletter suggested it. Seems like she's going back to her older stuff, I'm sure in part because the newer stuff wasn't selling so well, so didn't expect much, but this actually seemed a fair bit more than just cashing in to me. Wouldn't have ended up with a 1600-word review if it was just that, after all :)) And you may fit that target audience too, then, with the fondness and nostalgia for the series in general.
Will be at least one other in the Chronicles, scheduled for this year.

About the Interview, eh. Movie was decent, but wasn't that keen on the book in truth.
Just stay away from that butchery they did in Queen of the Damned. The movie, I mean.
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Cavalary: Yeah, wasn't aware of it either about a year ago, till some newsletter suggested it. Seems like she's going back to her older stuff, I'm sure in part because the newer stuff wasn't selling so well, so didn't expect much, but this actually seemed a fair bit more than just cashing in to me. Wouldn't have ended up with a 1600-word review if it was just that, after all :)) And you may fit that target audience too, then, with the fondness and nostalgia for the series in general.
Will be at least one other in the Chronicles, scheduled for this year.

About the Interview, eh. Movie was decent, but wasn't that keen on the book in truth.
Just stay away from that butchery they did in Queen of the Damned. The movie, I mean.
Honestly not much fun without Lestat classing everything up with his killer good looks, fancy outfits and naughty behaviour.

Queen of the Damned pretty much killed the Vampire Chronicles as movies for all time, unfortunately. I try to watch it occasionally, it never works out well. Luckily Lestat fixing his cuffs and driving off into the night with a evil smile at the end of Interview with the Vampire happily makes up for that movie.
Post edited February 01, 2016 by bad_fur_day1
This year, today in fact, I just finished the complete books of british dentistry, german cooking, somalian law, scottish & irish sobriety, french barbery, russian etiquette, african food production, north korean politics, turkish economics, mexican immigration, feminist logic, liberal economics, and american diplomacy. I don't know if I'm any more literate than before though. ☜(゚ヮ゚☜)
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GR00T: God Emperor of Dune. Now continuing my Arrakis Odyssey with Heretics.
Those two are my absolute favourite of the Dune novels.
I finished my first book of the year last night: Winter's Heart, The Wheel of Time book 9, by Robert Jordan. While I have to admit the pace is really slow, it's also equally awesome at moments. Especially the last 50 pages of this one. Anyway: only five books to go. I'm almost there!

Books finished in 2016:
#1: Winter's Heart, Robert Jordan
Letters from a Stoic

A great book written by Roman Philosopher Seneca (the younger). There's a lot of good stuff in there; everything from general advice to face mundane everyday issues to existential crisis.

It's not flawless, there are some parts that bother me like his endless preaching about it's greatness of living in poverty even though he was one of the richest men in Rome (probably in the world too) when he lived not to mention that he flat out says that one shouldn't listen to a hypocritical philosopher (e.g lives one way, advices another).
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MaximumBunny: This year, today in fact, I just finished the complete books of british dentistry, german cooking, somalian law, scottish & irish sobriety, french barbery, russian etiquette, african food production, north korean politics, turkish economics, mexican immigration, feminist logic, liberal economics, and american diplomacy. I don't know if I'm any more literate than before though. ☜(゚ヮ゚☜)
LOL, looks you and I have the same kind of "anything goes" library :o)

We have a saying in French for this: "je m'endormirai moins con ce soir" ^o^
(rough translation: "I'll go sleep less dumb tonight")