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Books

Re: Books
« Reply #20 on: December 10, 2009, 05:13:50 PM »
Wow.  Awesome.  I've got some good ideas from this thread.  Keep it going, though.  I could use a reference point next month. 

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AUsweetheart

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Re: Books
« Reply #21 on: December 10, 2009, 05:34:02 PM »

Hated this.  HATED.  IT.  She is a hack.  The books masquerade as historical, but all Gregory does is take a couple of historical figures and events and throw in a bunch of sex.  That is fine, sex and "romance" has it's place, but I hate seeing English history totally fucked up like that, because some people never bother to find out the real story behind it all, and go the rest of their lives believing that is the way it really happened.  And it's not.
it's fun if you know what it is. I read it on a dark and rainy day in Scotland...I thought it was great. Trash for sure, but great. I didnt like any of her other books.
The movie SUCKED.
I like my historical fiction well researched and based on facts.
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ibelonginprison

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Re: Books
« Reply #22 on: December 10, 2009, 05:58:40 PM »
stop lying.... we all know women can't read.
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Re: Books
« Reply #23 on: December 10, 2009, 06:18:08 PM »
Damn!  I'm 3/4 of the way through this.  Are you reading the one that came out later than the first version...without all the editor's cuts in it?  AKA "The unabridged version"?  Because that's what I'm reading, and might be the reason why you think it needs an editor...he purposefully left the additional character and plot development to be included in the unabridged version so the reader could see what all was cut before the original version came out.  I think it's a great read, however....

No, no... The Stand is an awesome book.  The first one WITH the cuts is better than the second version. 

I was talking about him needing an editor on the encyclopedia I just finished:  Under The Dome. 

Really a waste of a book.  King has become hackneyed.
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Re: Books
« Reply #24 on: December 10, 2009, 06:21:41 PM »
Did you read the Dark Tower series?

Amazing storytelling.  He weaves all of his most prominent characters and stories into this one epic.  The final book and end of the story are incredible and you finally see (whether it was planned or he just got inspired during the DT writings) that there is a forest in which all his novels stand as trees.




I grew tired of the Dark Tower series.  It's the only thing of King's I haven't completed. 

I even read that tiresome Buick book.  What a load...  I like the guy and he inspired me to work harder at painting a picture when I write -- something I try very hard to do.  But he's become fatuous lately.  As have I, I suppose. 

But I still have a book in me.  I now think it will involve some random killing sparked by a message board comment.
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Re: Books
« Reply #25 on: December 10, 2009, 07:58:07 PM »
I grew tired of the Dark Tower series.  It's the only thing of King's I haven't completed. 

I even read that tiresome Buick book.  What a load...  I like the guy and he inspired me to work harder at painting a picture when I write -- something I try very hard to do.  But he's become fatuous lately.  As have I, I suppose. 

But I still have a book in me.  I now think it will involve some random killing sparked by a message board comment.

I've never been able to read a Stephen King book.  They've always felt so generic like going to see the movie 2012 or G.I. Joe.  Hollywood tells you that they're a blockbuster hit, but you know deep down inside that it's nothing but frivolous CGI and a weak storyline.  Although, I've never attempted The Shining, The Stand, or any of his other earlier works. 

As for the book about a message board killer?  Sounds like a million bucks waiting to be made.
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AUsweetheart

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Re: Books
« Reply #26 on: December 10, 2009, 09:27:19 PM »
  Although, I've never attempted The Shining, The Stand, or any of his other earlier works.

The early stuff is the best. By far.
The Stand, The Tommyknockers, The Shining, It.....all really really good, even though every single movie was a joke. The Shining was a hit because of Jack's performance...but it really didn't even come close to the book.
Just my .02
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Tiger Wench

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Re: Books
« Reply #27 on: December 10, 2009, 11:24:45 PM »
In order by my preference:  The Stand (unabridged), The Shining, and Salem's Lot.  The Stand is materful.  The other two - scary as shit. 

It:  meh.  It had its moments but went on a bit too long.  Kind of an interesting idea but a spider?  Really?  All that buildup and that's the best you can do?

Needful Things:  Great premise, but lots of unnecessary and non-germane nastiness makes it a tedious read.

Everything after that... blech.

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Tiger Wench

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Re: Books
« Reply #28 on: December 10, 2009, 11:28:46 PM »
it's fun if you know what it is. I read it on a dark and rainy day in Scotland...I thought it was great. Trash for sure, but great. I didnt like any of her other books.
The movie SUCKED.
I like my historical fiction well researched and based on facts.
Again, as long as you know better, and don't take her version of "history" as fact, then fine, good airplane book.  But there are other authors who do a better job on their historical fiction.  Diana Gabaldon comes IMMEDIATELY to mind - the Outlander series is AWESOME.  Have you read those, Sweets?  If not, RUN to the bookstore and get them ASAP.

If you like the whole narrative feel but with accurate facts, then you should try anything written by Allison Weir.  her stuff is non-fiction, but reads like fiction.  The Six Wives of Henry the VIII is amazing, as is her bio of Elizabeth I. 
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Tiger Wench

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Re: Books
« Reply #29 on: December 10, 2009, 11:29:52 PM »
Wench,

Thanks for the Jack Reacher suggestion. Just starting the latest book of the series. Took me about 4 months to finally catch up after starting with the 1st. Pretty entertaining for flights and traveling.
The latest book is my second favorite, after the first one.  I re-read the big ending twice - it was just so fucking awesome. 

I love Jack.
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Re: Books
« Reply #30 on: December 10, 2009, 11:39:42 PM »
I've never been able to read a Stephen King book.  They've always felt so generic like going to see the movie 2012 or G.I. Joe.  Hollywood tells you that they're a blockbuster hit, but you know deep down inside that it's nothing but frivolous CGI and a weak storyline.  Although, I've never attempted The Shining, The Stand, or any of his other earlier works. 

As for the book about a message board killer?  Sounds like a million bucks waiting to be made.

I get the same thing with John Grisham books.  People tell me how great they are and I read the things and think "what the fuck, this was like a third-grader scribbled something down."  They're literary bubble-gum -- and not even the good gum, that nasty shit you get for a penny.   

I swear I think I can write better than John Grisham. 

Quick story about Salem's Lot.  I was about 17 and was reading that book while also drinking copiously (is that a word?).   At some point during the book, I fell asleep on the couch.   The way I was laying, my arm went to sleep from the shoulder down. 

I stirred on the couch, my dead arm flopped over and my hand landed on my throat.  My dead, unfeeling hand.  I reached up to brush it off and it fell heavily back. 

I screamed like a girl and broke the coffee table leaping up off the couch and charging around the room  trying to fight off whatever it was that was clearly attempting to kill me.   When my arm started to tingle -- and everybody in my apartment was awake -- I felt really foolish.
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Re: Books
« Reply #31 on: December 10, 2009, 11:42:20 PM »
Again, as long as you know better, and don't take her version of "history" as fact, then fine, good airplane book.  But there are other authors who do a better job on their historical fiction.  Diana Gabaldon comes IMMEDIATELY to mind - the Outlander series is AWESOME.  Have you read those, Sweets?  If not, RUN to the bookstore and get them ASAP.

If you like the whole narrative feel but with accurate facts, then you should try anything written by Allison Weir.  her stuff is non-fiction, but reads like fiction.  The Six Wives of Henry the VIII is amazing, as is her bio of Elizabeth I. 

LOVE Weir. I love Penman cause she's obsessed with the Plantagenets....and I find them fascinating.

I will be picking Gabaldon over the break. ;)Thanks!
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Tiger Wench

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Re: Books
« Reply #32 on: December 11, 2009, 10:33:37 AM »
LOVE Weir. I love Penman cause she's obsessed with the Plantagenets....and I find them fascinating.

I will be picking Gabaldon over the break. ;)Thanks!

Guys, if you have wives that like to read, this is a GREAT Christmas present idea. 

The first few books in the Outlander series take place during the last Jacobite rebellion and the aftermath of Culloden.  Bonnie Prince Charlie and all that.  Her research and writing are METICULOUSLY perfect with near total accuracy for names and dates and places, etc.  One of the few fiction books I have read that make me feel better educated once I am finished.

Warning about Gabaldon - her shorter books are 500-600 pages... and they will suck you in and never let you go until you turn the last page.  They MUST be read in order... and go ahead and spring for the oversized paperback (the regular sized paperbacks are jsut too think and the binding breaks and you lose pages before you get finished).  The initial premise seems nuts, but she makes it so completely plausible, even to the point where I plan to look for some standing stones on my next trip to Aberdeen so I can find a wild Highlander man of my own like Jamie...

Jamie... **sigh**... Jack Reacher's only challenge for my heart...

There is a spin-off series of books that feature Lord John, a character that appears early in the series, and it is helpful to have read all of the Lord John books before reading the seventh Outlander book.  I did not know this, and while I wasn't confused or anything, once I read the last Lord John book, a few things made MUCH more sense.

From Wiki:

There are presently seven novels in the main OUTLANDER series. The stories center around a time-travelling 20th-century English nurse (Claire Beauchamp Randall Fraser) and her 18th-century Scottish husband (James Alexander Malcolm MacKenzie Fraser), and are located in Scotland, France, the West Indies, England, and America. The Lord John Series is a spin-off from the Outlander books, as it centers on a secondary character from the original series, but is also part of the main series.

Outlander Series
Outlander (1991)
Dragonfly in Amber (1992)
Voyager (1994)
Drums of Autumn (1997)
The Fiery Cross (2001)
A Breath of Snow and Ashes (2005)
An Echo in the Bone (2009)

The Lord John Series
Lord John and the Private Matter
Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Blade
Lord John and the Hand of Devils (three short novellas)

« Last Edit: December 11, 2009, 10:38:10 AM by Tiger Wench »
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Re: Books
« Reply #33 on: December 14, 2009, 09:52:47 PM »
     I don't read nearly as educated books as you guys, but if you like to read more fictional fluff, some of my favorites are Randy Wayne White, John Sandford, Robert K. Tanenbaum, Micheal Connelly, and Jason Swain. 
     If you like SciFi/Fantasy type stuff, I'm a big Robert Jordan fan.  The new Eye of the World book (#12) is out, and it's probably the best of the last 5 or so. It's a LONG series (all twelve books are extremely long) but very good.  I also really like Tad Williams.
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Tiger Wench

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Re: Books
« Reply #34 on: December 15, 2009, 10:59:04 AM »
    I don't read nearly as educated books as you guys, but if you like to read more fictional fluff, some of my favorites are Randy Wayne White, John Sandford, Robert K. Tanenbaum, Micheal Connelly, and Jason Swain.  
     If you like SciFi/Fantasy type stuff, I'm a big Robert Jordan fan.  The new Eye of the World book (#12) is out, and it's probably the best of the last 5 or so. It's a LONG series (all twelve books are extremely long) but very good.  I also really like Tad Williams.
I LOVE me some John Sandford.  Lucas and Virgil are awesome heros.  They are manly men who take no shit off nobody.  While they are no Jack Reacher, no one ever could be, so it's ok.

If you like Michael Connelly, then you would also like John Connolly - his books are about a private eye and have a slight supernatural twist to them, very slight.  He confronts evil in human form, serial killers and other horrible people who are just freaking evil, you know, so evil that you just have to believe they are otherworldly because to believe that a human would just be that awful is too difficult.  

I am almost embarassed to admit this, but I am reading Raymond Chandler and the Phillip Marlowe series for the first time... and LOVING IT.  I am reading The Big Sleep right now, and it is so amazing.  It was written in 1939, and it is so easy to see how many contemporary writers were influenced by Chandler - Robert Parker and Robert Crais come immediately to mind, especially Parker and his Spenser novels.  Spenser is a thuggish Phillip Marlowe. Chandler's use of descriptive terms and metaphors is incredible - he is the master.  I cannot believe I have waiting this long to read these.
« Last Edit: December 15, 2009, 11:00:46 AM by Tiger Wench »
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