September 10, 2007
Bookses
A while back, I finished Lost by Gregory Maguire, which means that I've finished all of his novels that I really care to, for now. All of his books were good reads, but some were denser and a bit slower than others. Wicked, especially, can be a bit of a tough read.
I also just finished the His Dark Materials trilogy, and I absolutely loved it. I think Pullman actually accomplishes more with his series than C.S. Lewis managed in the Narnia Chronicles. The characters are more three dimensional, the writing is more clever, and the ending is actually sadder. The books are wicked-fast reads, and I don't think I'd hesitate to recommend them to anyone who's a fan of fantasy adventure.
Posted by jeff at 06:39 PM | Comments (0)
July 22, 2005
Book reviews
I read a few books recently, and had some thoughts.
First, William C. Dietz's DeathDay and its sequel EarthRise
You'll notice they are both on the Scifi Hall of Shame list on Amazon, and for a reason. These books are post-alien invasion apocalypse (think Footfall but, I swear, worse.) The writing is bad, the characterizations are painfully polarized. The plot is thin and the theme (racism is bad) is hammered into you with all of the subtlety of a Harry Potter fanfic. The books are just bad bad bad, and I still feel silly for buying them. I got more enjoyment from the Halo novelization.
I then got saved, because someone had the brains to collect the Morgaine Saga in one volume. This is some fun high-fantasy high-tech adventuring, with a preoccupation on horsemanship. Probably some of Cherryh's best work that I've read.
As I mentioned in a previous post, I read Diamond Age . Now, here's the thing... I understood the cool fun that was Snow Crash but the writing and plot were pretty substandard, at least compared with the inventiveness that went into the world. Now imagine Snow Crash with characters you don't really give a shit about. That pretty much sums up Diamond Age, and I don't think I'll be reading any more Stephenson for a long while. I would just rather read... almost anyone else.
Last new book, Forever Peace by Joseph Haldeman (more famous for The Forever War considered by many to be the definitive reply to Starship Troopers ) Well, it's not The Forever War . For one thing, Haldeman uses the rather clumsy technique of switching between the protagonist Julian Class and the omniscient narrator. The problem is that the narrator rarely has anything interesting to say and is used for forshadowing. The group-mind concept winds up terribly similar to Man in The Forever War. The antagonists could have been done better, and I really with the protagonist's characters had just been... different. They felt too much like rehashes or something. Still worth reading, whereas I'm lead to believe Forever Free definitely isn't ;)
Posted by jeff at 12:34 AM | Comments (1)
April 29, 2005
Book note
I remembered reading that, and can't describe how hard it was tracking down the name :)
Posted by jeff at 10:50 PM | Comments (0)
April 27, 2005
Book Linkage
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Gnome personal library software
Posted by jeff at 04:52 PM