What are you reading right now?

Finished The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea and I'm looking for something similar. This is one of maybe two or three books that had a sex scene that I didn't hate. Now I'm reading Christopher Marlowe's Doctor Faustus and it's pretty cool. I like learning the 14th century sayings like "in good sadness" meaning in seriousness. It's very rich although I'm too low IQ to catch everything.

Just finished Hyperion by Dan Simmons. Not terrible but not great either, at least it didn't grab me the way some books do, probably a 6 or 7/10. I like the structure for the most part and some of the worldbuilding is interesting but for a 500+ page novel nothing really happened and it all felt like setup.

There are apparently 4 books in the series? I don't know if I like the first one enough to commit to 3 more at this point unless the quality improves drastically in the other books.
Really? Hyperion got me good, especially the priest's story. I didn't bother reading any of the other books in the series but I thought it was great.
 
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Finished The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea and I'm looking for something similar. This is one of maybe two or three books that had a sex scene that I didn't hate. Now I'm reading Christopher Marlowe's Doctor Faustus and it's pretty cool. I like learning the 14th century sayings like "in good sadness" meaning in seriousness. It's very rich although I'm too low IQ to catch everything.


Really? Hyperion got me good, especially the priest's story. I didn't bother reading any of the other books in the series but I thought it was great.
I love Marlowe. One of my few Bucket List goals is to sit down and read all the extant English Renaissance plays in the space of a year. There are only about 475 of them, so one a day and two on the weekends isn't an unobtainable goal. I just need to sit down and do it is all.
 
Finished a couple things over the past month:

Dracula (1897) - This is fantastic from start to finish and I was fully hooked even after the first 4 chapters, I loved the sense of them all closing in on the count while they hunted him in England and how intense the the final struggle is to finish him off.
I read this when I was younger. Need to do it again.
Border Trilogy - After I finished ATPH I went and did The Crossing and Cities of the Plain. And I legit think the Crossing is one of my favourite works of art of all time, it was INCREDIBLE from start to finish and the ending is such a gut wrencher. COTP is also really good, but I just wish the first half wasn’t so slow - but hooooo boy did this ending hit even harder. I literally just sat on it for a couples days it was that good. 10/10 Trilogy
I did find a copy of the Road for 50 cents. I hear he's an interesting writer.
Alice in Wonderland - This was a good breather after reading the BT lol. I just wish I had grown up with this one, cause I just know I woulda been enraptured by the illustrations and just plain old weirdness as to what unfolds. First half was dull, but I found the second really charming.
Grew up with it. It's good.
Currently reading The Dispossessed by Ursuala K Le Guin at the recommendation from a friend and I think the prose is really solid and I love the concepts put forth, the book is just so. fucking. boring. that I just ain’t sure I’ll continue - even though part of me really wants to go on. (Currently on Chapter 4)

Next up after this is War and Peace just cause I’m real curious as to what it’s like, themes or contents.
I hear le Guin's good. Like, legitimately good. I'm gonna see how good because I got the Hainish books in a big set for 20 bucks.
Finished The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea and I'm looking for something similar. This is one of maybe two or three books that had a sex scene that I didn't hate. Now I'm reading Christopher Marlowe's Doctor Faustus and it's pretty cool. I like learning the 14th century sayings like "in good sadness" meaning in seriousness. It's very rich although I'm too low IQ to catch everything.
Eh, I'd say you don't need to catch everything in one go. Did you enjoy it? Then you may love to re-read it in the future.
Really? Hyperion got me good, especially the priest's story. I didn't bother reading any of the other books in the series but I thought it was great.

I'm looking forward to reading Hyperion in the coming year.
 
48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene. I'm amazed it only came to my attention recently.

I'm a bit of a readlet (working on it) and really enjoy this type of work. Besides his other books, any suggestions?
 
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Dracula (1897) - This is fantastic from start to finish and I was fully hooked even after the first 4 chapters, I loved the sense of them all closing in on the count while they hunted him in England and how intense the the final struggle is to finish him off.

<snip>

Currently reading The Dispossessed by Ursuala K Le Guin at the recommendation from a friend and I think the prose is really solid and I love the concepts put forth, the book is just so. fucking. boring. that I just ain’t sure I’ll continue - even though part of me really wants to go on. (Currently on Chapter 4)
Dracula is one of my favorites. Stoker was very inspired by Carmilla, which is a quick read, and I recommend it. Although it is much smaller in scale than Dracula. Carmilla began the now-uncommon trope of woman vampire trying to seduce another woman.

Ursula was a very important figure in sci-fi and fantasy at a time when such genres were scoffed at, but I find her very dull. Years back I read an essay of hers (I think it's "In Defense of Fantasy" or something, but Google isn't turning up much) and it was a very compelling defense of genre fiction as an important and respectable art form. I know I had a physical copy of this essay in a collection of her other essays, but I just looked at my shelves and can't find it.
 
its infected with reddit.
My disappointment is immeasurable and my year has been ruined.
I just finished it (audio) and I was incredibly disappointed by it.

I don't know how it's the longest book BS has released, while simultaneously feeling like nothing happens for like 70% of the book. I really don't know wtf happened but it feels like a different author from the first two Stormlight books. Therapist Kaladin is the dumbest shit ever and I will always be mad about it. I'm getting worried that BS is starting to suffer George Lucas syndrome, where he has surrounded himself with too many yesmen, and not enough mean editors telling him that your books need to have fucking proper endings, instead of a giant Marvel post credit scene for a thousand other books that will be released in the future.

In short, I don't know how much the beta readers influenced this, but more of them needed to tell Brandon that this book is boring.

Also, Kate Reading, the narrator that does all the female character povs, sounds awful in this book. She didn't sound too bad before, but she has a really bad case of old lady voice now, it's just really raspy and scratchy. She's not getting any younger, so I wonder if they'll have to politely get her to retire one of these days because I can't see her continuing down the road.
 
Someone recommended the black company to me on and it is generally one of the best fantasy novels I think I've read so far basically how they explain magic is great by not really explaining it it's just something that's extremely frightening that most people don't screw with because it's really easy to kill you werewolves exist don't screw with them they're gonna eat your face
 
Finished The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea and I'm looking for something similar.
The Temple of the Golden Pavilion and Runaway Horses, with their young protagonists, have a similar vibe to The Sailor. Gore Vidal was right that Mishima is good but he never grows out of his youthful enthusiasms. He read Nietzsche at 13/14 and he never left that worldview. He was disappointed Japan did not have a traditional system that was comparable to it. That makes him good at writing young characters, however. Few writers are able to do the same, who either just write adults or make children sickly sweet and full of wisdom.

Graham Greene's work is worth reading if you enjoyed Mishima. Short stories like 'The Fallen Idol' or 'The Destructors', or a novel like Brighton Rock, all come to mind when thinking about The Sailor. Both writers capture the mythical (of good and evil) qualities a child's new experience to the world brings, right before evil falls into banality and is assumed as par the course of living. In childhood, darkness lurks in the corner because it is still unknown, not yet felt within.

Now I'm reading Christopher Marlowe's Doctor Faustus and it's pretty cool. I like learning the 14th century sayings like "in good sadness" meaning in seriousness. It's very rich although I'm too low IQ to catch everything.
Marlowe, of all the great Renaissance poets and playwrights (England's greatest artistic period), is the most direct to follow. He should be taught in schools, building up to Shakespeare. Ben Jonson is the opposite for me. I still struggle with his plays, which is partly due to it to being mostly written in prose.

Shakespeare is allusive but Marlowe is the reverse. The man you read in his plays and poems is quite obvious. One can work out his interests and desires. Faustus, like Barabbas or the Duke of Guise, is the one type of character he writes well. There is a clear development in his thought from Tamburlaine to The Jew of Malta, but he never leaves his one idea of power seeking. I do not mean that as a criticism.

Marlowe's other plays (except Dido) are worth reading, but his finest achievement is Hero & Leander, his unfinished poem. If you know Tristan and Isolde, it is similar.

Let me recommend one tragedy: A Yorkshire Tragedy by (assumedly) Thomas Middleton. It is short but powerful. Writers love to talk about the destructive elements of sexual desire, but the desire for money is just as bad.
 
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I just finished it (audio) and I was incredibly disappointed by it.

I don't know how it's the longest book BS has released, while simultaneously feeling like nothing happens for like 70% of the book. I really don't know wtf happened but it feels like a different author from the first two Stormlight books. Therapist Kaladin is the dumbest shit ever and I will always be mad about it. I'm getting worried that BS is starting to suffer George Lucas syndrome, where he has surrounded himself with too many yesmen, and not enough mean editors telling him that your books need to have fucking proper endings, instead of a giant Marvel post credit scene for a thousand other books that will be released in the future.

In short, I don't know how much the beta readers influenced this, but more of them needed to tell Brandon that this book is boring.

Also, Kate Reading, the narrator that does all the female character povs, sounds awful in this book. She didn't sound too bad before, but she has a really bad case of old lady voice now, it's just really raspy and scratchy. She's not getting any younger, so I wonder if they'll have to politely get her to retire one of these days because I can't see her continuing down the road.
The only thing in the way of praise i can think of for this book is "well... at least it isn't Rythm of War". I really hate Kaladin's character arc, and the constant therapyspeak felt like I was being lectured to.

I'm reading Scott Smith's "the ruins" right now. I saw it recc'd on a few disturbing book lists, including on here, and so far (chapter 11) I am enjoying it. I do hope something really freaky happens soon, though, If anything to offset the slow pacing.
Edited to say that things got very freaky very quickly after this chapter, kek
 
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I just finished it (audio) and I was incredibly disappointed by it.

I don't know how it's the longest book BS has released, while simultaneously feeling like nothing happens for like 70% of the book. I really don't know wtf happened but it feels like a different author from the first two Stormlight books. Therapist Kaladin is the dumbest shit ever and I will always be mad about it. I'm getting worried that BS is starting to suffer George Lucas syndrome, where he has surrounded himself with too many yesmen, and not enough mean editors telling him that your books need to have fucking proper endings, instead of a giant Marvel post credit scene for a thousand other books that will be released in the future.
Would you like to get mad?
Here's what he said on reddit:
smelling his own farts.webp

He lost his good editors after The Lost Metal. That's why Rhythm of War started the downhill trend.
This is a completely different author than books 1-3 and he's lost the fucking plot
Dude is too far up his own ass writing about bullshit like tower spren not having a gender, legendary warriors becoming therapists, and LITERAL INTERRACIAL FAGGOTRY
I came here for worldbuilding, cool anime fights, and complex magic systems. Not this fucking gay SHIT.
In short, I don't know how much the beta readers influenced this, but more of them needed to tell Brandon that this book is boring.
The faggots probably sucked him off over all the gay propaganda in the book.
Also, Kate Reading, the narrator that does all the female character povs, sounds awful in this book. She didn't sound too bad before, but she has a really bad case of old lady voice now, it's just really raspy and scratchy. She's not getting any younger, so I wonder if they'll have to politely get her to retire one of these days because I can't see her continuing down the road.
She sounds like dog shit. They also have both genders for voice acting but refuse to use them properly. I *never* want to hear a Shallan perspective from Michael. I *never* want to hear a Kaladin/Dalinar chapter.

I'm very upset about this new direction his books are taking. I hate that I'm so invested because at this point I need to know how it ends
 
Now you understand why the book is banned in most prisons.
Cannot help but dislike that book because of its audience. It consistently appeals to the lowest common denominator who has no power nor should have any. Anyone who follows it should be actively bullied.

Speaking of sociopaths and prisons, I recently started reading Darlymple's The Knife Went In which offers interesting insight into the mental deficiencies exhibited by the average murderer, drug addict and other flavors of deplorables. It's a collection of essays by a British prison psychiatrist and while it is far from a scientific work, Darlymple does not shy away from showcasing just how pathetic the modern criminal is. An excerpt from the book which explains the title:
I did however observe one peculiar phenomenon in the prison where I started to work twenty years ago — a prisoner’s use of the passive voice as a means of distancing himself from his own decisions, and of persuading others of his lack of responsibility for his actions. I first noticed the phenomenon when speaking to murderers who had stabbed someone to death and who invariably said, ‘The knife went in,’ as if it were the knife that guided the hand rather than the hand that guided the knife. Such a murderer may have crossed the city, taking a knife with him, to confront the very person against whom he bore a serious grudge. Yet still it was the knife that went in. When I relayed this observation to my wife, also a doctor, she thought I was exaggerating. But one day she was in her clinic when she asked an elderly widow how her husband had met his death. ‘The knife went in,’ the widow said.

I subsequently noticed that prisoners often used similar locutions, though only to describe their bad behaviour, never their good behaviour. ‘The beer went mad’ or ‘The beer took over’ were phrases that alcoholics favoured, as if the beer drank them rather than the other way round. Heroin addicts, describing how and why they started to take heroin, almost invariably said that they ‘fell in with the wrong crowd.’ When I replied that I found it strange that I met many people who fell in with the wrong crowd, but never any member of the wrong crowd itself, they invariably laughed. Foolishness is not the same as stupidity.
For lighter reading, I can recommend Samuel Kelly: An Eighteenth Century Seaman Whose Days Have Been Few and Evil. It is an utterly charming and funny memoir of lifelong Cornish sailor who participated in a surprising number of important historical events such as the New York Evacuation Day of 1783. It's a hidden gem that I recommend to anyone into stories about piracy and sailing the seas. It's extremely pleasant and somehow reminds me of The Malay Archipelago by Wallace although focused on seafaring rather than a study of geography and biology. Despite being completely different people, there is something similarly pleasant in the tone of both books that I cannot identify. They are both a very comfy read.

Edit: Expanded the quote from Darlymple.
 
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The terminator novelizations. Read the first book, the original t2, all the salvation trilogy.

Currently on t2 infiltrator, rising storm, and soon will be on future war.
 
What a load of bullshit. Editors 100% tell you to make cuts, sometimes very large ones.
Clearly you don't read the books.
He just goes
It's Robert Jordan levels of bullshit and superfluous writing.


You're right tho, any editor worth a damn would have him cut 30-40% of Wind and Truth
 
Clearly you don't read the books.
He just goes
It's Robert Jordan levels of bullshit and superfluous writing.


You're right tho, any editor worth a damn would have him cut 30-40% of Wind and Truth
I read The Way of Kings (at the behest of my Christian friend group, who swore up and down it was the best thing ever). It dragged at points and the prose was rough but I was generally entertained. 3/5. Tried to read Words of Radiance and couldn't get more than 50 pages in. Extremely slow and a lot of focus put on Shallan, and I find that Sanderson does not write women well at all.
 
I read Children of Time a while back and really enjoyed it. It plays with space travel and time dilation and really ties everything together in a fun story. Plays with a lot of cool ideas and perspectives. Really enjoyed it.

So now I'm reading Children of Ruin which I'm also greatly enjoying. There's some new themes and it dips into some pretty cool horror scenes and explores some of the ideas in the first book but from a wildly different perspective. I'll probably just read the third book right after this one.
 
Tried to read Words of Radiance and couldn't get more than 50 pages in.
It was shallan, he couldn't stand shallan
Extremely slow and a lot of focus put on Shallan, and I find that Sanderson does not write women well at all.
called it.
Shallan is the weakest part of the series. Perhaps the worst character Sanderson has ever created.
The crazy thing is the first and 3rd book are some of the best he's ever written. Its really too bad that he's gotten too big for his own fat ass,
 
It was shallan, he couldn't stand shallan

called it.
Shallan is the weakest part of the series. Perhaps the worst character Sanderson has ever created.
The crazy thing is the first and 3rd book are some of the best he's ever written. Its really too bad that he's gotten too big for his own fat ass,
It's unfortunate because I was excited for a fantasy series that didn't go into elaborate detail on sex or defecation, and that had generally good-hearted protagonists.
 
Shallan is the weakest part of the series. Perhaps the worst character Sanderson has ever created.
The crazy thing is the first and 3rd book are some of the best he's ever written. Its really too bad that he's gotten too big for his own fat ass,
Shallan pretending to be a rockeater (horneater or whatever they're called) in Words of Radiance was the most painful and infuriating thing I've ever read.
 
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