|
|
|
|
|
Ikeoko
Sniper Joe
Posts: 386
|
|
« Reply #155 on: 26 March 2010, 04:45:18 » |
|
TWILIGHT.
|
|
|
Logged
|
~ ♥ ~ ANNIE ~ ♥ ~ /l、 ゙(゚、 。 7 l、゙ ~ヽ じしf_, )ノ kitteh!
|
|
|
|
Ikeoko
Sniper Joe
Posts: 386
|
|
« Reply #157 on: 26 March 2010, 05:06:40 » |
|
I was kidding...that was SO eighth grade!
Plus it was unpopular then and I was the only person who knew it existed. Haven't read it since though.
|
|
|
Logged
|
~ ♥ ~ ANNIE ~ ♥ ~ /l、 ゙(゚、 。 7 l、゙ ~ヽ じしf_, )ノ kitteh!
|
|
|
|
|
|
ASR
Super Robot
Posts: 10911
|
|
« Reply #161 on: 23 June 2010, 05:51:09 » |
|
DON'T bother reading And Another Thing..., seriously. Not worth it.
And holy hell, the second-closest book to me is a Neil Gaiman book, but it's another biography of Douglas Adams (called Don't Panic.) The only reason I have those biographies is because I did a report on Douglas Adams in... middle school, I believe? After reading them, however, the guy was permanently cemented as my all-time hero despite the fact that reading Hitchhiker's Guide had already done just that.
But yeah, also right nearby is a huge box full of books I brought back from my apartment, and sitting on top is an awesome comic called Chew. HILARIOUS comic, really great. I highly recommend checking it out. I met the creator when I got dragged to the Detroit Comic-Con, so that was pretty cool.
|
|
|
Logged
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Majikn
Super Robot
Posts: 2357
|
|
« Reply #168 on: 23 June 2011, 02:22:57 » |
|
I #####ing hate it when I have to rewrite something large.
This year I read: Gardens of the Moon by Steven Erikson (epic/dark/heroic fantasy) MultiReal by David Edelman (business cyberpunk) Elves: Once Walked With Gods by James Barclay (spin-off of his Raven series) The Affinity Bridge by George Mann (steampunk mystery) I Am Number Four
Those are pretty much ranked from best to worst, but I Am Number Four was the only book on that list that I'd say was actually bad. The rest are all worth reading, though Gardens of the Moon has 9 more books in the series, plus a few short novels, and more in the same setting by another author, so it could be daunting to get into.
The Jump 225 trilogy (Infoquake/MultiReal/Geosynchon) so far is just amazing. It'll remind you of The Matrix in a way. It's still, of course, better. All of the characters are believeable, they're all well developed and continue to develop, and the story takes place in an alien year-3600-or-so setting where everyone's brain is connected to the internet and a lot of stuff about reality is now just smoke and mirrors. The main character gets a hold of a technology that could change everything. I haven't read the third book yet but so far it's outstanding.
Anyway I recently bought and plan to read: Monster Hunter International by Larry Correia (Sort of a fast-paced action packed cliche about fighting monsters. It's the kind of book I would look at and probably walk away, but the right recommendation got me to buy it.)
I Am Not a Serial Killer by Dan Wells (In the same vein as Dexter, apparently better-written.)
Retribution Falls by Chris Wooding (Reminds me a bit of Firefly, so far... it's about sky pirates in a retro-futuristic setting, with magic.)
Geosynchron by David Edelman (book 3 of a cyberpunk novel about a badass entrepreneur with a crazy singularity technology that simulates multiple realities in which bad decisions are rejected)
Deadhouse Gates by Steven Erikson (book 2)
The King of Plagues by Jonathan Maberry (James Bond/Rainbow Six style, it's a techno thriller where a secret US gov't division takes on zombies, monsters, and weaponized diseases, all engineered by terrorists. This is the third book in the series, so you can tell I think it's awesome.)
I Am Legend by Richard Matheson (I'm reading this one now, it's so much better than the movie so far, and so completely different.)
The Dark Tower - The Gunslinger - The Journey Begins (6th graphic novel)
The Dexter novels don't entirely suck. They just didn't evolve well. The third novel was weird, and the fourth novel seemed to ignore that the third novel happened. This kind of leaves a bitter taste about the whole thing. I'd say the first two books are solid, but skip the rest.
|
|
|
Logged
|
The Exorcist has taught me that when I'm losing an argument I may save face by vomiting on the opposition.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|