Jessica, why no to Ready Player One? It's on my maybe list, but I don't remember hearing anything bad about it.
Kaylee ,'Shindig'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Oh, I ranted about it right when it came out (DH got an ARC) - the main character is such a self-involved asshole, and it's written in the first person (and written terribly - if I were being charitable I'd say it's written accurately in the voice of someone who is very immature and very shallow and not very good at thinking) and The Girl Character is a two-dimensional fanboy wet dream and then there's a thing at the end where something is revealed about another character which made me literally (yes, literally) throw the book across the room. Such a MASSIVE clusterfuck of fail.
I also couldn't figure out who the book was being written to. As in, it's first person POV with a lot of asides by the main character, and I couldn't figure out for the life of me who he would be telling this story to in this way. There's a TON of exposition about the world that anyone living in that time/place would find condescending and ridiculous - he explains in excruciating detail every single fucking made-up sci-fi slang term in the book, and there's also a ton of exposition about pop culture in the 80s that I found condescending and ridiculous. So it makes no sense.
I thought it was fun enough but better in the first part.
Ah, yes, now I remember you posting about that. The book title wasn't on my radar at the time so I didn't make the connection, but I vividly remember the throwing the book across the room. *g*
Off the list it goes, and thanks for the rehash!
Hee--today's Two Lumps is hilarious!
So I finally got around to reading Martha Wells' Cloud Roads, which is a very fun and creative fantasy adventure novel. I definitely recommend it: the world-building is great, with floating islands and monumental ruins and all sorts of really cool and varied intelligent species running about.
The one thing that makes me laugh is that the POV character is, well, John Sheppard from Stargate Atlantis. I mean, not really: his name is Moon. But he's a laconic loner--an orphan who doesn't know where he comes from, and is skeptical of the motives of anyone who is interested in him. But it turns out that he's more important than he thinks, and during the course of the novel he finds a new home and people to fight for. If you know Wells' background in SGA fandom, it's really quite endearing.
I've read some of her other books and enjoyed them. Can't pull up any titles - the insomnia fairy decided to set up camp in my bed last night (the fact it was about 85 in my apartment was probably a major factor) and my brain isn't braining.
I've read some of her other books and enjoyed them.
Oh, yes, she's really very good. And her fannish stuff is good too--she's written professional tie-in work as well as fannish stuff, and her fanfic is among the best around.
I read the first three Skullduggery Pleasant. Fun! Not so addictive to me that I'll pay for them on amazon.co.uk but very enjoyable. Any idea when they'll get US releases?
Now I need something else addictive to read. I just finished the last two October Daye novels, too, and am jonesing for more addictive fantasy/science fiction, urban or otherwise. Suggestions I might not have read?
ETA: Is there any reason I shouldn't read The Night Watch as my first Discworld book? It happens to be available now from the NY Public Library is my only real reason.
Is there any reason I shouldn't read The Night Watch as my first Discworld book? It happens to be available now from the NY Public Library is my only real reason.
THERE ARE A MILLION REASONS.
By which I mean I agree with the recommendation I was given that you read the Watch books in order. Night Watch in particular is much more effective if you know the history.