right in the middle, where I've had rather an interesting surprise.
If that's the surprise I'm thinking of, he got me too. There are clues but I thought it was fairly subtle. Micole guessed it, of course. *g*
I liked the book, and I'm interested to hear your take on it.
I've just started LMB's Paladin of Souls after really enjoying her Curse of Chalion (and the Vor books too, over the years). I'm only a chapter or two in and she has me chuckling with her small character sketches and slice of life portraits. She's good at flawed people and the start to this book feels very Chaucerian. I couldn't wait for Paladin to come out in paperback, but I didn't want to pay the $40 (cdn) for the new hardcover. Fortunately/unfortunately, I found it remaindered.
I just gave my housemate
Curse of Chalion
for her birthday--but if she doesn't start in on it soon, I may have to borrow it from her. I've never read any LMB but after seeing all the raves about her here, I'm eager to start.
The Paladin of Souls is a wonderful book.
Ginger, did you get a chance to read Say Goodbye yet?
No, JS, but I do have it neatly piled in my to-be-read pile, which also includes the 9/11 Report, The Things They Carried, a Jennifer Crusie book, a couple of mysteries and a book about tuberculosis.
I loved
Paladin of Souls.
As soon as I read it, it leaped over
Memory
in my mental ranking of Lois McMaster Bujuld's books, and is currently in first place.
I actually found that out at a picnic last summer...
t ::huffs:: on nails
t buffs on lapel
t admires
No, JS, but I do have it neatly piled in my to-be-read pile, which also includes the 9/11 Report, The Things They Carried, a Jennifer Crusie book, a couple of mysteries and a book about tuberculosis.
Ah, gotcha. I have a similar pile with different books.
t pause
Well, unless one of your mysteries is the new Ian Rankin.