I just finished Goblin Emperor last night! I liked it a lot, though it was a bit hard with all the crazy names--I'm not entirely sure I grasped who was who through most of it. But still enjoyed, and was sad to see she said there's no plan for a sequel, though she may write in the universe again sometime. I wanted to see the wedding and marriage! and stuff.
'Beneath You'
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."
I'm still on the Veronica Mars book. My reading has really slowed down lately, and I don't know why. Poot.
I didn't actually love the Veronica Mars book. It felt a little too...noir. But not in a "OMG, VM is not noir" way, but in a "this is so very thematic that I feel like someone wrote it and then threw in VM and a few quips" way. Which is silly because of who wrote it, but....meh. And it's not as though that'll stop me from reading more of them when they come out.
Meara & Consuela - Yes I fell in love with the future empress and Maia's half-sister a LOT. I want books about them too
Julianna, I had a very similar reaction. Love that circus.
Crap, I still need to get the Veronica Mars book.
I just started Doctor Sleep (the sequel/companion to The Shining) and it's really good. After that I'll give Night Circus another try, though.
Totally agreed, Sox! So many possibilities!
I bought Valour and Vanity, and then I realized I hadn't gotten book three yet. So now I have two of them to read. This is the exact opposite of a problem.
Similarly, I'm about 100 pages from the end of The Golem and the Jinni and everything is going haywire but I do understaaaaaaaaand.
I've seen that in the bookstore and it looked interesting.
It's so good! It's not what I expected. It's a fascinating portrayal of both main characters, but it's also got a host of supporting characters whose lives intersect, which I love.
My wife is teaching an honors sophomore - level world lit course next year. The course is heavy on existentialism - Kafka, Sartre, waiting for Godot, other darkish things. She is trying to find a book to pair with Einstein's Dreams (technically a US writer but set in a foreign country) for summer reading; something not - too - long and not too depressing (just out of kindness) but with some nature-of-god-time-.and - the - universe kind of themes. Ideally a foreign author but a foreign setting or fish out of water themes might make it qualify. Problems: no or extremely minimal undescribed sex and little to no cursing because we are in a private school inTN and it sucks sometimes. So all Marquez is out. Sadly. Also junot diaz. Ideas?
Gris, maybe The Sunflower by Simon Wiesenthal. It's a series of essays about forgiveness by Wiesenthal, as well as Dalai Lama etc. It is episodic in the same way the Einstein's Dreams is because it's essays, but it's very accessible, which is perfect for summer reading where there is no teacher to teach it. Sort of "heavy" writing but very thought-provoking.