Hehe, I think I should be getting royalties or something!
Hehe, I think I should be getting royalties or something!
Speaking of Gotham, I had emailed Mr. Wallace in order to thank him for this amazing book, to ask why he decided to end the second volume at 1945, and also inquire as to a possible third volume. He just emailed back:
thanks for your note. i thought about trying to get the whole 20th century between one set of hardcovers but given the perhaps lunatic comprehensiveness of my approach, and the spectacular centrality of nyc to innumerable issues in that century, it proved impossible. 45 is also crucial as it marks, i will argue, the final arrival of the city at the terminus of its trajectory from the edge to center of the world. there will -- assuming sufficient longevity -- be a volume three, carrying the story on down to the day after tomorrow. best, mw.
I finished Dance with Dragons but haven't ventured into the thread to catch up on everyone's opinions and don't really have the energy to say how I feel about it, other than I thought it was pretty good but was generally underwhelmed. I dunno.
I also just read this book called One Day, apparently a movie version is coming out soon with Anne Hathaway. Anyway someone suggested it to me and the ending was horrible and I'm annoyed I even read it. SO. I need something great to read now.
I had my infatuations, but we both know in our hearts who is the sole love of my short, bright life.
Read almost half of this in my local Barnes & Noble. Was just browsing, and started reading, thinking just to get the gist of it, and couldn't stop. Couple of hours later, thoroughly shaken, I had to leave. Maybe will pick it up as it drops in price. Good companion to The Looming Tower and The Longest War.
Tempis, have you read any Patrick Rothfuss? If you're a fan of fantasy, I highly, highly recommend it. He's only written two books so far, The Name Of The Wind, and The Wise Man's Fear...both of which are a part of his The Kingkiller Chronicles series.
The Name Of The Wind was his first novel, and after reading it, Rothfuss immediately shot up to my top three all-time favorite authors. I'm a huge fantasy fan, so that's very high praise, coming from me.
The story, characters, and writing style are absolutely brilliant. If you haven't read it, enjoy fantasy, and are looking for something new, definitely give it a go.
Elodin: "Tombs is for feckless twits who can't chew their own food. My boy's a Re'lar! He has the feck of twenty men!"
Kvothe: “Books are a poor substitute for female companionship, but they are easier to find.”
Simmon: ”It’s just ointment in case you get burned...but if you mix it with piss, it turns into candy.” Sim’s expression was deadpan. “Delicious candy.”
I am reading "Lisey's Story" by Stephen King.
My Library Obsession
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/pixiedark
One of my less favorite King books.
John
There's one hole in every revolution, large or small. And it's one word long.. people. No matter how big the idea they all stand under, people are small and weak and cheap and frightened. It's people that kill every revolution.
Just finished up GoT, and starting CoK. I will admit, the first half of Game had me nearly bored to tears, but it did get better as it went along. I was hooked by the end, hence me immediately picking up Clash.
And I totally agree, 0chris0...but I'm sure that's part of what makes his writing soo great. That extended (to us, agonizing) wait between books definitely gives him ample time to polish his stories to what we know and love.
Elodin: "Tombs is for feckless twits who can't chew their own food. My boy's a Re'lar! He has the feck of twenty men!"
Kvothe: “Books are a poor substitute for female companionship, but they are easier to find.”
Simmon: ”It’s just ointment in case you get burned...but if you mix it with piss, it turns into candy.” Sim’s expression was deadpan. “Delicious candy.”
There's one hole in every revolution, large or small. And it's one word long.. people. No matter how big the idea they all stand under, people are small and weak and cheap and frightened. It's people that kill every revolution.
Reading Ready Player One and currently think anyone that grew up in the 80's or that is the slightest bit geeky has to read this book right now!
Ruthful, that looks interesting. I myself have read about half of Richard J. Evans's Third Reich Trilogy, but haven't gotten to the war years yet. Fascinating. Speaking of Russia (and maybe Jean can chime in here), with this year being the 20th anniversary of the collapse of the Soviet Union, I was looking for some definitive account, but after spending quite some time on Amazon, there doesn't seem to be anything substantial on the subject, at least nothing serious and comprehensive. Is there really nothing like that?
My Library Obsession
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/pixiedark
Too everyone who does not like "Lisey's Story"
Spoiler:
My Library Obsession
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/pixiedark
It's one of my top ten too Pixie
I have Lisey's Story sitting on a shelf at home, but I have absolutely no desire to read it. This makes me feel bad because it was a gift
William Shakespear's "Coriolanus" - reading that before the movie comes out, and absolutely loving it.
I've also spent the last several re-reading the DT books for the second time (first time was when the last three books were originally released - never bought them at the time, just spent hours on my days off reading them in the bookstore). I'm reading them on Kindle this time, so it's hard to tell where I'm at. I'm about to read "Gran-Pere's Tale" when Eddie talks with Tian Jaffords grandfather.
Currently halfway through Vol.3 of "A History of Britain" by Simon Schama.
Then onto either The Talisman or Debunking 9/11 debunking (strange title!) by David Ray Griffin.
Can't decide!
I am now reading "Duma Key" by Stephen King.
My Library Obsession
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/pixiedark
I'm slowly reading my proof of 11/22/63 and also reading McCammon's The Five.
John