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| General Book Discussion General Science Fiction Fantasy books and literature discussion. |
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| | #227 (permalink) |
| Creeping in shadows Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Estonia
Posts: 444
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings Finished Butcher White Night - there is something to be said about Butcher sense of humor - I really like it - at some points I just can't do anything else than to put the book down and laugh. It's a effect that most of the comical fantasy books can't achieve. Oh well, I'm just a sucker for sarcasm. Now I'll have to make a decision - whether I can hold on until next year to get Small Favor or do I want to order it as a hardback (and whether it's possible here at all) Now reading - I don't know - maybe Lynch maybe Moon maybe Baron - that will become apparent if a next few days. |
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| | #228 (permalink) | |
| Daft Wullie Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Greater London
Posts: 505
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings Quote:
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| | #229 (permalink) |
| Cynique du Nord Join Date: May 2007 Location: Tyne and Wear
Posts: 558
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings Me too, WWD. A new Rankin book is always a cause for celebration. Along with the inevitable drunkenness, gratuitous sex and violence and the odd running gag or three... ![]() |
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| | #230 (permalink) |
| >==¦===@ . Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Darlington
Posts: 980
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings I had the 3 Cornelius books of Rankin's but had to leave them behind to be sold when I moved. Do the new ones use the same characters? I have one upstairs i've yet to read,Apocalypso |
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| | #231 (permalink) |
| Cynique du Nord Join Date: May 2007 Location: Tyne and Wear
Posts: 558
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings No, Cornelius and Tuppe only appear in those three, I think (I stand open to correction on this). However, the two main characters in Hollow Chocolate Bunnies and Toyminator, Eddie Bear and Jack, have a very similar relationship and repartee. |
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| | #233 (permalink) | |||
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: California
Posts: 1,026
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
So, if you were just starting to read him, where would you start? (The Chronicles strikes again) | |||
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| | #234 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,377
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings In addition to Collins' Little Novels, I've been reading E. G. Swain's Stoneground Ghost Tales. Swain was an acquaintance of M. R. James, and wrote a series of tales "in the Jamesian manner". Well, sort of. There is much of the sort of thing James did here, but the stories are overall much tamer (James's ghosts could be quite nasty) and the stories' charm lies in their telling and in an occasional phrase or image that does send a genuine chill. I'd say they're well worth reading just for a well-told tale; the sort of thing one might tell in a circle of friends around a campfire or at a party when the subject of ghosts came up. But once in a while, there is a stroke of genius there, as well.... |
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| | #235 (permalink) |
| I Do Not Sow Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Canada
Posts: 1,513
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings Just finished Deadhouse Gates. What a great book but at 925 pages, it took me a while. Now, reading No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy. I had read two of his previous books (All the Pretty horse and The Crossing). This one really sets a great pace and doesn't let up. What a great read. |
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| | #236 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 2,550
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings Well, after a long stint where reading had to be put on hold, I'm almost able to get back into Deadhouse Gates. And I think, finally, I'll dip into my Evelyn Waugh collection. I might go for Decline and Fall. I love that one. |
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| | #237 (permalink) | |
| Cynique du Nord Join Date: May 2007 Location: Tyne and Wear
Posts: 558
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings Quote:
); alternatively, you could start with one of the Rex Mundi novels (Armageddon: The Musical being the first of those). Otherwise, I'd recommend either The Book of Ultimate Truths or The Hollow Chocolate Bunnies of The Apocalypse. | |
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| | #238 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Washington
Posts: 500
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings This morning I finished Short Drive, Sweet Chariot, and started The Man With the Heart in the Highlands, both by William Saroyan - my favorite non-genre author. The man was a genius, and could write like it was nobody's business. |
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| | #239 (permalink) | |
| Daft Wullie Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Greater London
Posts: 505
| Re: May's (Mostly) Marvelous Literary Musings Quote:
![]() There are also stand alone novels, some people prefer the Armegeddon trilogy,his books have varied themes and topics the novels now are a lot different in ways and content from the early ones,but still really good it is all up to indivdual taste. ![]() | |
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