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Posted: Thu Oct 14, 2004 7:01 pm
by Corpse
Mr. Teatime wrote:Moved to the appropriate forum... and on the topic of books, the latest Terry Pratchett one (Going Postal) is pretty good so far.
Cool, I read most of the Discworld series up to "The Last Continent" but I think "Hogfather" has to be my favourite. I can see its one of your favourites too judging from your handle. Anyone read "Good Omens" by Pratchett and Neil Gaiman?

Posted: Thu Oct 14, 2004 10:09 pm
by Spazmo
Good Omens was terrific, as is anything else by Gaiman. And I thought that Last Continent was pretty weak for Pratchett. It seemed to just be a long joke about Australia rather than a good novel.

Posted: Sat Oct 16, 2004 7:34 pm
by Ernesto
I just finished Palahniuk's Survivor. It's a great satire/commentary on religion and it's relationship to modern media. Palahniuk's Lullaby and Choke (Great fucking books by the way) were much better compared to Survivor -- It didn't move like Chuck's other books and the end of Survivor lacked the omph he's famous for.

Now I'm going to read the Hitch-Hiker's Guide To The Galaxy series. I've heard fan-fucking-tastic things about the epic but I've never took the time to read it.

Hopefully all the references in Dongo Weener and in the Fallouts will finally make sense.

Posted: Sat Oct 16, 2004 7:44 pm
by Mr. Teatime
The weakest Discworld novel I think was <b>Monstrous Regiment</b>, which I never even finished. It seemed to be a bad attempt by Pratchett at feminism.

<b>Going Postal</b>, however, is turning out to be excellent, though like Pratchett's other recent novels, is based around Ank-Morpork (or however it's spelt).

<b>Good Omens</b> is one of my favourite books. Completely brilliant.

As for serious books, I really like EM Forster's <b>Passage to India</b>, though I've only really read it once. Lots of philosophies about the nature of the universe and stuff. Also <b>Jude the Obscure</b> by Thomas Hardy is a powerful read. Very anti-religion and anti-establishment, which is a brave thing to do considering the time and place it was written (around 1900 I think, in England). And the circumstances around the book concering Hardy are interesting, if depressing. I think it was the book that persuaded him to stop writing novels, and it was around the time his wife died, or maybe I'm getting things mixed up. I know he refused to speak to his wife on her death bed in the upstairs room, she died, and he was filled with remorse and gave up writing novels for the rest of his life and only wrote poetry.

Posted: Sat Oct 16, 2004 7:47 pm
by Ernesto
Is it just me or is Neuromancer a fucking hard book to follow?

Posted: Sat Oct 16, 2004 8:09 pm
by Megatron
have any of you bum-faces read snow crash FFS

Posted: Sat Oct 16, 2004 8:19 pm
by Ernesto
r they stuk in a anvalance?

Posted: Sat Oct 16, 2004 8:51 pm
by Mandalorian FaLLouT GoD
Ernesto wrote:Is it just me or is Neuromancer a fucking hard book to follow?
Its an odd book to follow. But I think its only hard to follow when you start. Its been a while since I have read it.

Posted: Sun Oct 17, 2004 12:04 am
by Megatron
Ernesto wrote:r they stuk in a anvalance?
yea lol btw has your skin cancer eaten at your organs yet bye

It's about Hiro Protagonist whose a hacker, samurai swordsman and pizza-delivery driver. And this girl on roller-blades or a skate-board. I forgot. Anyway, it's good you gypsy fuck, so like...read it. OR else.

Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2004 9:39 am
by xbow
I recomend Armor by John Steakley its a very good read. If you don't get involved with the characters in this book your dead. Whats extra cool is that power armor is a critical component of the story. Much better than Starship Troopers and on an equal level with Hyperion.
Reviews

Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2004 11:18 am
by Insane-Lark
Snow Crash is worh a read indeed. Quite fun.

If you'd like to try something a bit different (I'd only reccommend the ones translated by Brinbaum) I'd suggest you might want to give Haruki Murakami's books a shot. Hard Boiled Wonderland & the End of the World & Wild Sheep Chase were excellent & either would be a fine place to start.

Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2004 4:47 pm
by LlamaGod
Ernesto wrote:Is it just me or is Neuromancer a fucking hard book to follow?
Someone here is a moron!

Anyways, i'm reading Dune right now.

Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2004 4:59 pm
by Spazmo
I'm pretty sure he means that after a book as good as Neuromancer, it's hard to follow up with a suitable sequel.

Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2004 5:48 pm
by Megatron
I'm pretty sure he can't comprehend books properly.

Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2004 6:18 pm
by Ernesto
I'm becoming the subject of a stickied thread? Wow, I must be important.

Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2004 7:14 pm
by Nicolai
xbow wrote:I recomend Armor by John Steakley its a very good read. If you don't get involved with the characters in this book your dead. Whats extra cool is that power armor is a critical component of the story. Much better than Starship Troopers and on an equal level with Hyperion.
Reviews
Yeah, Armor is pretty fucking good.
I think that the guy is writing a sequel to it atm, Armor 2, there's a chapter of it on some fan-site out there, on the interberrywebnet. :drunk:

Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2004 11:11 pm
by Mandalorian FaLLouT GoD
xbow wrote:I recomend Armor by John Steakley its a very good read. If you don't get involved with the characters in this book your dead. Whats extra cool is that power armor is a critical component of the story. Much better than Starship Troopers and on an equal level with Hyperion.
Reviews
The well conversation fucks with your head. I still remember it.

Posted: Mon Oct 25, 2004 8:48 pm
by SuperH
I just interrupted my Dune re-reading marathon for Brave New World, because my girlfriend had a copy and it's something I've always wanted to read. I always thought it was supposed to be pretty 1984, but it was on the whole much cheerier. I liked it, and it was really surprisingly ahead of it's time.

As I have mentioned before, probably in this same thread, I read all those idiotic Dune prequels and now I'm going back to re-read all the original Frank Herbert books. On Children of Dune right now, I'm actually amazed at just how little I remember from the last time I read them. Damned good stuff, anyway.

Anyone ever read any other Frank Herbert books? Obviously they aren't going to be Dune quality, but snap, he seems to be a decent author?

Posted: Tue Oct 26, 2004 1:44 am
by Mandalorian FaLLouT GoD
SuperH wrote:I just interrupted my Dune re-reading marathon for Brave New World, because my girlfriend had a copy and it's something I've always wanted to read. I always thought it was supposed to be pretty 1984, but it was on the whole much cheerier. I liked it, and it was really surprisingly ahead of it's time.

As I have mentioned before, probably in this same thread, I read all those idiotic Dune prequels and now I'm going back to re-read all the original Frank Herbert books. On Children of Dune right now, I'm actually amazed at just how little I remember from the last time I read them. Damned good stuff, anyway.

Anyone ever read any other Frank Herbert books? Obviously they aren't going to be Dune quality, but snap, he seems to be a decent author?
I'd hope they were better than dune quality. Dune isn't good enough for my dog to shit on.

Posted: Tue Oct 26, 2004 8:35 am
by fallout ranger
Dune: the book for all your fantasy needs FOR ME TO POOP ON!