JoeinAR 1,957 Posted January 23, 2015 Posted January 23, 2015 Let's see I've been reading a lot of Preston Childs, finished Revival by Stephen King. It did not have the most frightening ending he ever wrote but the book lingers and the ending was disturbing as it asked the question what lies beyond death? I sincerely hope that what lies beyond death in King's world I hope my mon is not experiencing that.
Mr. Breathmask 624 Posted January 27, 2015 Posted January 27, 2015 Finished the first book in the Hunger Games trilogy. Well, there's nothing girly about this and it's a great read. Tense and exciting, it's quite the pageturner. I'm curious to see what the rest of the series holds in store.
BloodBoal 8,711 Posted January 27, 2015 Posted January 27, 2015 The girlish stuff starts in the second book.
Incanus 5,891 Posted January 27, 2015 Posted January 27, 2015 I just had a nostalgic read as I revisited the whole of David Eddings's long, long, long fantasy series of Belgariad (5 books), Malloreon (another 5 books) and Belgarath the Sorcerer and Polgara the Sorceress series in the last couple of months. I remember being quite taken by those books when I was 14. Eddings writes entertainingly but by the end this particular story starts to wear really thin and there are a lot of descriptions of riding from one place to another in Malloreon without much actually happening but the characters being very witty.
Code 000. Destruct. 0. 4,262 Posted January 27, 2015 Posted January 27, 2015 The girlish stuff starts in the second book. Sexist pig.
KK 3,313 Posted February 3, 2015 Posted February 3, 2015 Harper Lee to publish Mockingbird Sequel.Heck, if To Kill A Mockingbird can get a sequel, I guess anything can...
Wojo 2,458 Posted February 3, 2015 Posted February 3, 2015 Wow. Even Boston put out follow up works faster than that.
mrbellamy 8,245 Posted February 3, 2015 Posted February 3, 2015 Interesting that it was actually written before To Kill a Mockingbird. Should be an enlightening read, for many reasons.EDIT: Some are wondering if this is an attempt to exploit Lee's estate, now that her sister/spokeswoman has passed and she's too senile to protect herself from unwanted publicity: http://jezebel.com/be-suspicious-of-the-new-harper-lee-novel-1683488258
Hlao-roo 390 Posted February 4, 2015 Posted February 4, 2015 Gregory Peck is probably no longer the right man for the part, should Hollywood have any interest.
JoeinAR 1,957 Posted February 4, 2015 Posted February 4, 2015 To Cap a Mockingjay?To Kill a Thug?To Loot a NeighborHOOD!
Wojo 2,458 Posted February 4, 2015 Posted February 4, 2015 Well Boo Radley wouldn't be allowed to drown his food in all that syrup now. It'll given kids the diabeetus.
JoeinAR 1,957 Posted February 18, 2015 Posted February 18, 2015 Finally got around to Robert Galbraith's the Cuckoo's Calling. Rowling works her magic in a different genre
Code 000. Destruct. 0. 4,262 Posted February 18, 2015 Posted February 18, 2015 Magic? More like derivative schlock.
Hlao-roo 390 Posted February 18, 2015 Posted February 18, 2015 Interesting that it was actually written before To Kill a Mockingbird. Should be an enlightening read, for many reasons.EDIT: Some are wondering if this is an attempt to exploit Lee's estate, now that her sister/spokeswoman has passed and she's too senile to protect herself from unwanted publicity: http://jezebel.com/be-suspicious-of-the-new-harper-lee-novel-1683488258Some diligent reporting on this here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/to-shill-a-mockingbird-how-the-discovery-of-a-manuscript-became-harper-lees-new-novel/2015/02/16/48656f76-b3b9-11e4-886b-c22184f27c35_story.html
Jill Sandwich 11,171 Posted February 18, 2015 Posted February 18, 2015 Magic? More like derivative schlock.An area she is quite adept at.
JoeinAR 1,957 Posted February 18, 2015 Posted February 18, 2015 Magic? More like derivative schlock.said the person who loves Hanz zimmer.I take your opinion with little fanfare.I will read Silkworm next then casual vacancy.
Incanus 5,891 Posted February 19, 2015 Posted February 19, 2015 Augustus: From Revolutionary to Emperor by Adrian Goldsworthy: A very readable biography and study on Rome's first emperor firmly sets Caius Julius Caesar (Octavianus) Augustus into the framework of the time period, politics and culture and attempts to give us a picture of the man behind the public image. Alas the Ancient sources on his character behind the facade are scant so there is a lot of guess work and the author has to make a lot of inferences from this little evidence but in the end he succeeds in not only chronicling the well known period at the end of the Republic quite adeptly but also giving old theories and interpretations worthy new challengers. While a lot of the writing is embroiled in the public side of things, politics and historical events Goldsworthy succeeds in offering some glimpses of the man behind the ageless marble statues and images in coins that preserve a detached ever young image of Augustus.
Romão 2,473 Posted February 24, 2015 Posted February 24, 2015 I've been meaning to read his biography of Julius Caesar for a while now. Have you read that one, Mikko?
Incanus 5,891 Posted February 24, 2015 Posted February 24, 2015 It's next on my list. If Augustus is anything to go by it will be very interesting and quite comprehensive (judging by the 500+ pages). I knew a good deal more about Caesar so I thought I'd read Augustus's biography first. It proved to be especially illuminating on the last decades of his life, which I didn't know so well.
Romão 2,473 Posted February 24, 2015 Posted February 24, 2015 I always picture Brian Blessed in my head when reading about Augustus
Incanus 5,891 Posted February 24, 2015 Posted February 24, 2015 I always picture Brian Blessed in my head when reading about AugustusHehehe I Claudius can do that to you. Although I think he was less a befuddled fool than Graves suggests.
Romão 2,473 Posted February 24, 2015 Posted February 24, 2015 Well, I'll have to check out the book Thank you for the recommendation
#SnowyVernalSpringsEternal 12,393 Posted February 24, 2015 Posted February 24, 2015 I always picture Brian Blessed in my head when reading about AugustusHehehe I Claudius can do that to you. Although I think he was less a befuddled fool than Graves suggests. "IS THERE ANY MAN IN ROME WHO HAS NOT SLEPT WITH MY DAUGHTER?!?!?!"
Romão 2,473 Posted February 24, 2015 Posted February 24, 2015 Great moment, that one, Steef Such an incredible TV series
Incanus 5,891 Posted February 25, 2015 Posted February 25, 2015 Great moment, that one, Steef Such an incredible TV seriesAlas the DVD transfer left a lot to be desired. And this is coming from a person who is not a niggler for absolute high definition image in his movies. But it is in great part because of the age of the show itself and quality of the original tapes.But it doesn't make the series any less brilliant. The theatre-like setting further enhances the whole thing. I just rewatched it and was again amazed how gripping it all is. And what a line-up of premiere British thespians.
#SnowyVernalSpringsEternal 12,393 Posted February 25, 2015 Posted February 25, 2015 Inky. It was a 70's BBC production. Shot completely on video. The DVD is as good as its ever going to look.
Incanus 5,891 Posted February 25, 2015 Posted February 25, 2015 Inky. It was a 70's BBC production. Shot completely on video. The DVD is as good as its ever going to look.I know! But on the other hand it adds a good deal of old time charm to it.
Naïve Old Fart 13,027 Posted February 25, 2015 Posted February 25, 2015 ...and it is shot entirely in the studio. Best line "Tiberius is definitely dead".
JoeinAR 1,957 Posted February 25, 2015 Posted February 25, 2015 I always picture Brian Blessed in my head when reading about AugustusHehehe I Claudius can do that to you. Although I think he was less a befuddled fool than Graves suggests. "IS THERE ANY MAN IN ROME WHO HAS NOT SLEPT WITH MY DAUGHTER?!?!?!"Me Me!
Jill Sandwich 11,171 Posted March 21, 2015 Posted March 21, 2015 Alien vs Predator novelisation.About on par with the movie. At least I could imagine the predators being played by Kevin Peter Hall.
Not Mr. Big 5,011 Posted March 25, 2015 Posted March 25, 2015 I've been rereading The Courtship of Princess Leia after 8 years or so. Lots of fun, very Star Warsy. I particularly like how it doesn't get caught up in any military/vehicle jargon like many Timothy Zahn SW books do. The big 3 seem pretty well done too, without any of them breaking character too much (so far). This would have been a fairly good Star Wars movie, had it been made around its publishing year, 1994.
Wojo 2,458 Posted March 25, 2015 Posted March 25, 2015 That was the first EU book I read and I still have nostalgic fondness for it. Some of the Warlord Zinj space stuff didn't make sense the first time I read it, and I never got the feeling he was a very scary or powerful villain.
Jay 46,245 Posted March 25, 2015 Posted March 25, 2015 That was probably the first one I read after the Zahn trilogy. That or The Truce At Bakura
Wojo 2,458 Posted March 25, 2015 Posted March 25, 2015 I think I only ever read Heir to the Empire, not the rest of that trilogy. Never Truce at Bakura.
Jill Sandwich 11,171 Posted March 25, 2015 Posted March 25, 2015 Truce at Bakura is okay. I like that the author dedicated it to John Williams.
Luke Skywalker 2,386 Posted March 25, 2015 Posted March 25, 2015 I finished the 'Fate of the Jedi' series a few days ago.I think that after so many books, the ending was a bit rushed. If i remember correctly, 'Legacy of the Force' series suffers the same error, but at least it has a lot of books after it to expand the ending. Fate of the Jedi has only one book and i fear it is going to end so open ended that it is going to be a very unsatisfactory end to the EU. Specially since they did a comic series set 130 Years after Yavin, and all the interesting ideas presented there will never be explained...Now I'm reading X-Wing Mercy Kill, and even if the plot is meh, it is a very engaging book. It is sad DEL REY did not ask Stackpole and Allston write more of these books all these years.After mercy kill i will read Maul lock down, then Honor among thieves and Razor's edge, and finally, Crucible to end my Star Wars literature once and for all.I have a list of about 15 books from other things to read!
#SnowyVernalSpringsEternal 12,393 Posted March 25, 2015 Posted March 25, 2015 Who bother with the now defunct EU? A new one is coming.
Wojo 2,458 Posted March 25, 2015 Posted March 25, 2015 The stories don't need to be accountable to the movies for us to like them.
JoeinAR 1,957 Posted March 29, 2015 Posted March 29, 2015 Lots of Clive Cussler, the Dirk Pitt tales. Sir Hilary Bray 1
Sir Hilary Bray 235 Posted March 31, 2015 Posted March 31, 2015 Lots of Clive Cussler, the Dirk Pitt tales.can't beat a bit of Cussler, especially his early stuff. A letter I got from him 15 years ago is a cherished posession, kind enough to answer some very basic questions...==The Guns of Navarone.A week ago I re-read HMS Ulysses for about the third time and found it so powerful, right up there with The Cruel Sea and then sought from the library's reserve Jack Webster's Bio on MacLean. Maybe not the best writer, his life story was complex in its way with a second wife who seemed a bit of a chancer and fantasist and himself being someone convinced of writing soon 'my best novel'. So I'm about to trawl through what MacLean's I have and currently on Force 10. Only realised of late it's more a sequel to the film Guns of Navarone than the book. A way to pass the time all the same.
Glóin the Dark 1,874 Posted April 1, 2015 Posted April 1, 2015 I'm writing the next instalment, The Girl Who Got Herself into a Right Pickle.
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