| | #106 (permalink) |
| Mumbling though life Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: South Yorkshire
Posts: 290
| Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts Finished Off Armageddon Reef by David Weber. A little slow to get going, and I barely put it down a third of the way through but persevered and it turned out quite enjoyable in the end, will continue with the series. Now (re-)reading Memories of Ice by Steven Erikson, if you haven't done it yet I suggest everyone to re-read the whole series. Much easier to follow and you pick up on so much more the second time round. |
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| | #107 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Sweden
Posts: 7,990
| Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts I read Scum Manifesto by Valerie Solanas. A bit wild on her views against males but she was really radical,smart about her ideas,comments on the gender roles. The book has dated really well despite writing about hippies. Fantasticly agressive and powerful read. She might not like my gender but i dig her book |
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| | #109 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: USA:
Posts: 2,236
| Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts Finished (re)reading Pohl's collection, In the Problem Pit (1976). Good+. (As usual with collections, verbose post in the short story thread.) |
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| | #111 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: USA:
Posts: 2,236
| Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts Harry Harrison's Star Smashers of the Galaxy Rangers (1973). This book is chock full of funite! If you love 30s-style space opera (and have a sense of humor), you'll probably love this and if you hate 30s-style space opera, you'll probably love this. While it at first seemed to be nothing but pure comedy, the moment I thought to myself that the humor was wearing because, ironically, I couldn't take anything "seriously" enough to keep the humor biting, the book began to manage a remarkable job of being passable old-style space opera while continuing to mercilessly skewer it with pinpoint accuracy and kept things fresh by diverging from expectations in places while it usually accorded with them. IOW, for every nine ingredients that had to be there to be classic space opera, there was one ingredient that pointedly couldn't be in classic space opera - or never would have been brought to the foreground. So it was funny both ways. Anyway - this is easily better than Bill, the Galactic Hero and probably only fails to displace The Adventures of the Stainless Steel Rat out of sentimentality or due to the fact that SSR is a very different kind of humor with, actually, more serious substance. I felt like Bill had a sort of sap of a protagonist that Harrison was mostly just sadistic towards and some of the non-Starship Troopers satirical targets didn't really make much sense and much of the story was (naturally) unpleasant. Not to say it's bad, but just that it wasn't as much to my taste and wasn't as enjoyable. Whereas Galaxy Rangers was basically intrinsically entertaining, funny, pointed, and kept a light feel despite the barbed nature of the satire. As a fan of all four, I can almost say that, except that it's almost impossible to be as concentratedly funny as Spinal Tap and ST didn't really run the counter-expectation riffs, Galaxy Rangers : Space Opera :: Spinal Tap : Heavy Metal. |
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| | #112 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Mar 2012 Location: Germany
Posts: 35
| Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts Followed Weber's A Rising Thunder by A Beautiful Friendship. Not sure that I am fond of the idea of him adding a young adult series to the Honorverse. Which is too close to being a euphemism for adolescent, I feel. There's a fix: On the one hand I don't want to miss out on background/historical information, on the other hand I didn't enjoy reading it as much as I liked reading A Rising Thunder. Followed that up with a fun read, if you like military scifi: David Drake, The Road of Danger. Lots of attitude. Great stuff. Am now reading The King's Blood by Daniel Abraham, the follow-up on The Dragon's Path. The first one was a very promising beginning, I thought, but it is early days yet. |
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| | #113 (permalink) |
| Couch Commander Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 424
| Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts I started Devil to the Belt by CJ Cherryh yesterday. It's the first of her novels that I've read. So far so good, and not what I expected. |
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| | #114 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2010 Location: North Dakota
Posts: 1,639
| Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts Decided to reread The Lord of the Rings (this will be my twelfth reading), this time following along with the Hammond-Scull Lord of the Rings Companion and reading selections from The Silmarillion (today, "Of the Rings of Power...") and Unfinished Tales, etc. Btw, this year is loaded with Tolkienian anniversaries. This week I turned in an article to Beyond Bree, the Tolkienian newsletter, on The Adventures of Tom Bombadil (50 years); Poems and Songs of Middle Earth, the Caedmon LP with Tolkien reading several of his poems -- this was a treasure for some of us back in the day, a rare opportunity to hear The Professor -- who is a great reader of his own work (45 years); and Smith of Wootton Major (45 years). It is the 35th anniversary of the publication of The Silmarillion. This year marks the 20th anniversary of the publication (in Sauron Defeated) of The Notion Club Papers, Tolkien's unfinished novel that he worked on during a time when he was stalled on the composition of The Lord of the Rings (that is probably an oversimplification). According to the story itself, this year 2012 is the year in which the Notion Club Papers were discovered in waste paper in an Oxford basement. This year is also the 75th anniversary of publication of The Hobbit, but you may have heard about that already! I'm reading Peter Ackroyd's London: The Biography (he knows Arthur Machen, as well as Dickens and Thomas de Quincey, as one who evokes the mystery of London), Roger Scruton's Green Philosophy, Bradbury's Dandelion Wine (just a little at a time) and selections from Moore and Kuttner's Detour to Otherness collection. I've also decided to read the entire King James translation of the Bible, taking several years to complete it if need be. I recently read the Bible (the 66 books, not including the Apocrypha, which I mean to begin reading later this year) in the English Standard Version, taking two years. I read the Bible as a Christian, but I would recommend it to non-Christians too. I'm also reading stories by Chekhov and have read several by Arthur Machen, including "A Fragment of Life," which I think very well of. I read it in S. T. Joshi's Penguin selection of Machen, which makes choices I would dispute. For example, I think that, if space was limited, he should have omitted "The Bowmen" and "The Soldiers' Rest" in favor of perhaps my favorite of Machen's stories, the little-known London story "N." I'll probably read again "The Terror" before returning the book to the library. |
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| | #115 (permalink) |
| dark and stormy knight | Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts ![]() Finished HORROR: THE 100 BEST BOOKS edited by Stephen Jones and Kim Newman. Great, I loved it. Wasn't sure at first but like a good burial my impression was premature. My three favorite essays based on writing alone --- I kept the writers' names covered --- were Colin Wilson on DRACULA by Bram Stoker; Harlan Ellison on OUT OF TIME AND SPACE by Clark Ashton Smith; Donald A. Wollheim on THE OUTSIDER AND OTHERS by H.P. Lovecraft tied with Lisa Tuttle on THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE by Shirley Jackson. Sorry, I hate ties as it shows unwanted weakness but I couldn't decide. So there! The three books I wanted to read most based on the essays regardless of how well I enjoyed the writing: THE KING IN YELLOW by Robert W. Chambers, essay by H.P. Lovecraft; A SECOND CENTURY OF CREEPY STORIES edited by Sir Hugh Walpole, essay by Hugh Lamb tied with THE ISLAND OF DOCTOR MOREAU by H. G. Wells, essay by Gene Wolfe (didn't feel right substituting an anthology for a novel so another annoying tie); and HAWKSMOOR by Peter Ackroyd, essay by R.S. Hadji. My least enjoyable essay? Almost from the first sentence I knew something was off. I spent too much time rereading sentences trying to figure out what the guy was trying to say. Who could this be? Then, two sentences from the end, and I swear this is true, it hit me. I slid the piece of paper away confirmed I was right. John Clute. Now I like John Clute and his entries in the SF Encyclopedia pose no problem, in fact there a little off too but in a good way. This here was like his book reviews in F&SF. Sometimes I just didn't know what he was saying. But it's over with, the book is read, enjoyed, and highly recommended. |
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| | #116 (permalink) |
| Dramatically tremendous | Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts I'm really pleased to have picked up a second hand copy of Eyes of the Dragon by King at the school fair yesterday - I haven't read it in years. Just finished Anne Lyle's Alchemist of souls which I very much enjoyed. |
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| | #117 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 13,183
| Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts Quote:
*And if anyone wishes to contest that, I suggest they try reading Murgunstrumm, especially given the perfectly apropos addition of those grotesque Lee Brown Coye illustrations, before doing so.... | |
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| | #118 (permalink) |
| dark and stormy knight | Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts I don' need no stinkin' contest . I've been looking for MURGUNSTRUMM ever since I saw the old pulp cover to one of Cave's stories where a damsel was strapped to a gigantic pair of scissors, an evil looking doctor and his drooling assistant eagerly standing by expecting---?! Man, that stuff wouldn't be allowed on a magazine cover today no matter how free the Supreme Court says we are. No way! |
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| | #119 (permalink) |
| Couch Commander Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 424
| Re: May's Magical Meditations on Masterfully Manafactured Manuscripts I read the first book in the CJ Cherryh omnibus, and enjoyed the hard science and quality of the writing, but also need a break before the second half. Now I'm about 100 pages into Alastair Reynolds' House of Suns, and so far it's a winner. |
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