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 bought
Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell
for my birthday! I'm not too far in it but it's very good.
Also, having slain my stack of TBR books, I whipped through
The Famous Flower of Serving Men
in one day. Wow. That was so good. I liked it even more than
The Weaver and the Factory Maid.
Now, the FFoSM song, I've heard -- or at least a version of it. I was thinking it would be cool, once there were enough of them to have a cd of the songs from the series titles.
Also, is
The Weaver and the Factory Maid
likely to come out in paperback? I have a cousin who travels much for work and loves mysteries, but prefers mass market paperbacks because they fit in her purse. I want to get her a copy of the book -- but will wait for the paperback if that is going to happen.
Book recs for my 12 or so hour flight coming up tomorrow?
(Things available in paperback preferred, for weight/space reasons. I read just about anything. My recent taste in relaxation reading has been tending towards fantasy or sci fi, especially of the future-fic sort. But any suggestions are welcome.)
Brenda, have you read anything by Alastair Reynolds? He writes wonderful big sprawling sci-fi novels, and the first two (Revelation Space and Chasm City) are in paperback.
The Time Traveler's Wife
by Audrey Niffenegger, or
Stranger Things Happen
by Kelly Link. Except that they're both a little denser and weightier than some people like their airplane books to be. Are you looking more for light entertainment or for something to sink your teeth into?
Oh, I almost picked up Time-Traveler's Wife the other day. I'll grab that one, and look for one of Jess's recs, too.
As to style, I like to carry options so that I can read what suits my mood at any given moment. So some assortment of meaty and candycane reads is what I'm hoping to cobble together. It's a
long
flight, so I think I'll have need of both.
For lighter and shorter books, I like James Alan Gardner's League of People's series a lot, too. (The best three, IMO, are Expendable, then Ascending, then Vigilant.) They're not exactly fluff, but they're very quick reads.
I so so so recommend TTW (again). Such a great story and so unique.
A bit bittersweet, but wonderful.
I always recommend Jack McDevitt's
A Talent for War,
which was reissued this year. His other books are good, solid science fiction, but with
A Talent for War,
he hit it out of the park. It's part science fiction, part history and part mystery, and I don't think it's a spoiler to say that it has a moment that redefines HSQ.
A quick rec:
Banewreaker (The Sundering, Book 1) -- by Jacqueline Carey
Back when Kushiel trilolgy came out I offended some people by having very mixed reactions to the series, while thinking that Carey had tremendous talent.
Well this new book has my unmixed endorsement. Good storytelling, no Mary Sues (well maybe the elves a little - but with good story telling and plot reasons for them to be.)
Also if you don't mind my using a dirty word, a really marvelous deconstruction of the Lord of the Rings. Umm, while I like the parallels I'm betting some will find them a mite anvilicious.
[On edit - not related to any particular request - just a general rec.]
Hi, TB. I'm second on the hold list for
Banewreaker
in the Seattle library system, but they're still listing it as "on order." Hopefully it'll be here when I'm back from Thanskgiving.
And I think in the intervening time since we had the argument over the Kushiel series, I've gotten confident enough in the excellence of my taste that I don't take it quite as personally when someone criticizes something I'm wholeheartedly enthusiastic about.
(OK, maybe not. But at least I usually manage to keep my mutterings of, "What's he talking about? I love it! And there's nothing wrong with either my taste or my intellect!" private, and keep my actual public comments to, "Well, I thought it was brilliant.)
ETA--I read the first few pages of
Banewreaker
last time I was at a bookstore and found myself wondering if I was going to enjoy Carey's writing so much without the intimacy and intensity of a strong first person narrator, so we could well end up with opposing opinions on which is her better work.