XzAr_79: Just finished
Prelude to foundation. Now on
Foundation by Isaac Asimov
Good for you. Although those books are better in the order they were written. But if it works for you, then great. At least you have seen a more fleshy Hari Seldon.
When he first wrote it, the Foundation trilogy was independent from his Robots series. It was later that he linked it together. So now in Prelude, the stories are intertwined. All the best if that hooks you into the Robots series and the series of novels that started with The Caves of Steel, in case you still had not.
But still, it makes sense to read Asimov in the order he wrote his books. That way you meet Dawn at its peak, instead of getting to know it first by its remnants.
ConsulCaesar: Back to sci-fi with
Aurora by Kim Stanley Robinson.
Is it good? The novella
The Blind Geometer, that won the Nebula, is very good.
Sjuan: Historia de la vida del Buscón, llamado don Pablos by Francisco de Quevedo.
If you feel like watching it afterwards (so that nothing is spoiled), there is a movie that somehow dares to complete the story. A mature don Pablos makes the account of his life in flashbacks. But the book is better, and funnier.
cose_vecchie: Motti e facezie del Piovano Arlotto, an anonymous XV-century collection of anecdotes, witticisms, moral sayings, cautionary tales, practical jokes, and the like (including some scatological and some "spicy" ones) attributed to Arlotto Mainardi, a country priest who was apparently well-known for such things.
Interesting! Just wondering, are you fond on the Decameron?
GeraltOfRivia_PL: The Lord of the Rings, the Fellowship of the Ring.
All that is gold does not glitter, not all those who wander are lost.
It is all one book, do not linger before proceeding.
Also, best if you read The Hobbit.
Enjoy!