Just out of curiosity, Consuela, why didn't you like O Jerusalem?
'Serenity'
We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good
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 read Pattern Recognition last year, but don't remember much. The only impression that remains is "Better than Idoru, but otherwise more of the same."
I think Gibson peaked with the Burning Chrome short stories and Mona Lisa Overdrive.
Virtual Light is my Gibson of choice. It is one of those books I have a real absolute love for. He created a world that I understood how it came to be. Might be time for a reread.
and seconding Davids' recomendation of Synners.
I have not yet read Cryptonomicon or Quicksilver . DH keeps wearing out our copies of the first. Unfortunately I seem to have a fear of big books right now. Too Mnay books are takeing me oo long to read. Which means they really aren't that good ( Fairy Godmother ) but just interesting and easy enough to read that I keep going. big books that I am expecting to enjoy I Keep putting off. I recently realized that I though it was me - not reading like I used to . Actually , it is just too many bad books. and an inability to tell if it is me or the book.
I loved Cryptonomicon, despite the fact that Stephenson couldn't write a solid ending if his life depended on it.
I'm telling you, Zodiac has a solid ending. Honest. I was shocked.
Zodiac was really good.
It was. Tight, crisp, and totally unlike his other stuff.
I haven't checked Zodiac out. Will, soon, probably. Especially on the rec.
Also, my father loaned me Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight, which I'm really looking forward to. Didn't someone else here read it recently?
I've read it in the past year or so, and rather enjoyed it. I think there was someone else here too, though.
Actually, Plei, you're right. Zodiac has a good ending. I think. Been a while. What I remember most about that book is the brilliant description of a bicyclist trying to cross three lanes of traffic to take a left turn off of Commonwealth Ave in Kenmore Square in Boston.
why didn't you like O Jerusalem
Mary Sue, Mary Sue, Mary Sue. Mary Russell learns Arabic in six weeks, shoots like a sniper, understands the complex local politics, convinces their misogynistic guides that a woman can be as cool and tough as they are, flirts and captivates diplomats at the embassy soiree.... Mary Russell is perfect and everyone lurves her! Gah. Even her "flaws" are the approved ones: stubborn, decisive, too intelligent and independent for her time. Bleah.
Just once I want to see a historical novel where the flaw of the character is that she's too passive, and everyone around her recognizes it.
I liked A Darker Place but I'm worried that if I reread it I'll find it too self-indulgent and fanficcy.
I like Diamond Age, (NeoVictorians! Hee!) and just accept the fact that he can't manage to write endings.
Are you guys familiar with a vampire book that features a new vampire who is obsessed with finding her collection of shoes that had been disbursed by her family when she died?
My first thought was "Huh. I bet if I became a vampire, I would do that." Sad, really. But now I must track down more info on that book.