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Senior on Duty
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Picture of kli6
Location: San Diego, CA
Registered:: 14 February 2003
Posts: 1905
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Gosh. Haven't read any Lynn Abbey since Thieves' World (remember when shared worlds were all the rage?). And then, I was mostly reading Thieves' World for the DD short stories. [they were "The Hand That Feeds You" in #6, and "Down By the Riverside" in #7, if you were wondering] Smile

Boy, if your dad has Robert Asprin and Piers Anthony on the shelf, you ARE gonna be a while...

...has anybody ever read all the Xanth books?
Member
Picture of alla
Location: Terra Australis Incognito
Registered:: 21 August 2004
Posts: 647
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quote:
remember when shared worlds were all the rage?


Umm... when was that, because I dont't think I'm that old.

Ahh... you made me look... theres's like two and a half shelves of Piers Anthony Eek... Anyway, I need want to read them all anyway.


RIP Peter Murray - We'll miss you ||tumbleweed: *bouncing* || 'Alla is the forum scapegoat' ~ TheSharklord || Thongs are comfortable to wear in summer
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Picture of Peter Murray
Location: Dover, England
Registered:: 09 September 2003
Posts: 1289
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quote:
Originally posted by kli6:
Gosh. Haven't read any Lynn Abbey since Thieves' World (remember when shared worlds were all the rage?). And then, I was mostly reading Thieves' World for the DD short stories. [they were "The Hand That Feeds You" in #6, and "Down By the Riverside" in #7, if you were wondering] Smile

Boy, if your dad has Robert Asprin and Piers Anthony on the shelf, you ARE gonna be a while...

...has anybody ever read all the Xanth books?


Uh... Piers Anthony? His editor? I give up - have they? (Well, the first few were Ok.)

Somewhere amongst all these boxes, I have two novels by Lynn Abbey. Also several Mythadventures books by Robert Asprin, who I vaguely remember starting to read because of his Thieves' World stories, and his being married to Lynn Abbey. (I don't remember why that made sense at the time.) I can't remember which Thieves' World books I've got, but I did get Chaosium's RPG supplement Smile .

*looks at that webpage* I'm fairly sure I've got the first 6. Not sure about ones after that. Oh look, "The Tie That Binds" in #9 is also by DD.

This message has been edited. Last edited by: Peter Murray,



Just the FAQs, ma'am: Chat, Board and Books.
Senior on Duty
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Picture of kli6
Location: San Diego, CA
Registered:: 14 February 2003
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alla, yes, sorry. That was an old-coot reminiscence for PM--er, the other old-coots on the board. Smile Another similar series (but with a different group of writers) were the Liavek books (which, I believe included stories by Megan Lindholm before she started using the "Robin Hobb" pen name). The superhero variant would be the Wildcards series, edited by George R.R. Martin.

Needless to say, a lot of these evolved because SF/F writers sometimes form gaming groups. Smile

And yeah, PM, alla, that Piers Anthony. One prolific dude.

PM: d'oh! I knew I'd forgotten something!
Member
Picture of alla
Location: Terra Australis Incognito
Registered:: 21 August 2004
Posts: 647
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No worries, Kathy. Big Grin

I'm getting seriously awed by the amount of books that I'm going to be reading. I've only got through two so far Red Face... It'd be great if I could finish them before the end of the year - and catch up with dad who has had thirty odd years to read them all - except the collection keeps expanding... I think I'm going to be wading through them for a looong time! Well, at least there is some humour coming up. Big Grin


RIP Peter Murray - We'll miss you ||tumbleweed: *bouncing* || 'Alla is the forum scapegoat' ~ TheSharklord || Thongs are comfortable to wear in summer
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Picture of kli6
Location: San Diego, CA
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Yes, 30-odd years is a long time to have read and accumulated books. I'd say take it easy, and just read what appeals to you. Go ahead and give yourself the freedom to rethink your decision about reading all of it in a row. There's no point to it if you're not enjoying yourself. :-)

I just finished re-reading Pratchett's Bromeliad trilogy. Man, I wanna see the Cosgrove Hall animation, now. Am also chowing down on the Pratchett NESFA collection and a biography of Christopher Wren.
Member
Picture of alla
Location: Terra Australis Incognito
Registered:: 21 August 2004
Posts: 647
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Topic Bump!

Ok, so I've got a bit sidetracked at the moment. From reading all dad's collection anyway. I have found a copy of The Phantom of Manhattan which is sorta a sequel to the musical... but yeah. I would just like to say that Erik (aka The Phantom) is a very devious and perhaps overly intelligent person. I'm about three quarters of the way through the book at the moment, and the only thing that annoys me about it, is that each chapter is written by a different person. It would be much better to have an omnipotent narrator, but yes... I guess its good Smile

Alla


RIP Peter Murray - We'll miss you ||tumbleweed: *bouncing* || 'Alla is the forum scapegoat' ~ TheSharklord || Thongs are comfortable to wear in summer
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Picture of kli6
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Sounds like a good pastiche. The only Phantom of the Opera pastiche I ever read was a Sherlock Holmes one, too: Nicholas Meyer's The Canary Trainer. Better than the second book in the series (The West End Horror), but still not as good as the original, a Sherlock-Holmes-meets-Freud book, The Seven Percent Solution.

I've been sidetracked away from reading more Gaston Leroux, in the wake of seeing the Phantom movie. I've got both The Mystery of the Yellow Room and The Perfume of the Woman in Black waiting for me in a pile somewhere...
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Picture of kli6
Location: San Diego, CA
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BTW, just heard that Conrad's Fate is now shipping in the UK. Here in the US, we have to wait a whole 'nother month for the next Chrestomanci novel by Diana Wynne Jones.

OTOH, I know that I can go see Howl's Moving Castle on June 10th at the El Capitan.
Member
Picture of alla
Location: Terra Australis Incognito
Registered:: 21 August 2004
Posts: 647
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Heh. I don't think that that would ever actually show here in the cinemas Frown. You're lucky.

There's more Chrestomanci novels?! Where does that one fit into the scheme of things? *tries to think* Nah, its been too long since I read them. I could go and look off my shelves, but that would require getting up... Wink

hehe.. if you have to wait a month, think yourself lucky - in general Australia has to wait about a year for things like that Frown... or even longer Hopping Mad


RIP Peter Murray - We'll miss you ||tumbleweed: *bouncing* || 'Alla is the forum scapegoat' ~ TheSharklord || Thongs are comfortable to wear in summer
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Location: New Zealand
Registered:: 11 September 2002
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Alla- you better be wrong about Howl. If it doesn't get here (which it won't, if it doesn't make Aus) I may CRY. Ditto Conrad's Fate- we don't always have to wait if something's REALLY popular, and DWJ is a goddess, so...

Oh, okay, according to HarperCollins Australia it's due out 30th March there. Of course, HarperCollins doesn't HAVE an NZ website, so I still don't know when it's due out here... Frown


Go ahead! Panic! Do it now and avoid the June rush! Fear death by water!
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Picture of kli6
Location: San Diego, CA
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Given how well Spirited Away did for Disney on home video, and that they've finally gotten around to releasing the other Miyazaki titles they had tucked away, I get a feeling that Disney will at least release it on DVD, even if the film doesn't make it into wide release. I'm not sure why it wouldn't make it into wide release, though, given the subject matter. It's not like it's got head-slicing blood-stream violence, ala Princess Mononoke, and if they follow their usual pattern, they've obviously dubbed it into English.

As for more Chrestomanci books, they weren't exactly written as a series with continuing plots across volumes in straight lines (DWJ doesn't work that way, from what I've read on her website), so fitting it in shouldn't be a problem.

Man a lot of good books coming out this year: Conrad's Fate, Neil Gaiman's Anansi Boys, George R.R. Martin's A Feast for Crows (we hope), Wizards at War (we hope), The Empty Chair...
Senior on Duty
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Picture of kli6
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So, I've started Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash. Will somebody tell me if it's like this all the way through?! Migod. I don't know if my heart can stand it... Big Grin

Also, picked up the fifth Samaria novels by Sharon Shin, Angel-Seeker. Comfort reading on the level of Pern books.

And I'm also ploughing through Armadale for something like the third or fourth time. Gods, I love Wilkie Collins. He's the only writer I know who can create a snarky murderous female villain who breaks your heart for her.

So, what have you been reading?
Very Senior Member
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Location: New Zealand
Registered:: 11 September 2002
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Snow Crash? Hmmm... depends what you mean by "this". I think it slows down a bit and gets more factual (I dunno where you are, I suppose) but I have to say the beginning is totally inspired. Big Grin (The Deliverator. *dying*)

As for what I've been reading that's new... Empress of the World by Sara Ryan, which was okay, and re-reading stuff by Nancy Garden, mostly. I probably need to re-read Annie on my Mind sometime.

Also, Son of the Mob by Gordon Korman is funny and clever if anyone's in the modd for that kind of thing.


Go ahead! Panic! Do it now and avoid the June rush! Fear death by water!
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Picture of meteorite
Location: Kihei, HI US
Registered:: 16 January 2003
Posts: 364
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I enjoyed Snow Crash best of all Stephenson's books (note the sig?), read Zodiac, The Diamond Age, and The Big U, but stalled out on Cryptonomicon. Too darn big, and I kept on getting sidetracked and putting it down for a week, which meant having to go back and reread parts to refresh my memory. It was like trying to eat a whole pan of baklava at one sitting Eek

Now that I've begun my MLIS, I can read kids' and YA books without fear of looking like a geek. Oh yeah, I used to do that anyways. My present favorites are Kathryn Lasky (who reminds me stylistically of William Sleator) and Karen Hesse. Karen Hesse will make you like poetry even if it's not your favorite topic. Read Witness and see what I mean.


"Thus is Balance maintained." A Wizard of Earthsea
"Condensing fact from the vapor of nuance." Neal Stephenson, Snow Crash
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Picture of kli6
Location: San Diego, CA
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I'm only as far as the car in the swimming pool, and it's dizzying fun. And I now understand why the Baroque Cycle books are shelved in SF/F. :-) I am glad to hear that I'll get a little breathing space, though, further in.

I got about 250 pages into Quicksilver before I realized my head was conflating it with His Invention So Fertile (Christopher Wren biography I'm also reading) and this paper on Turner's connections with the Royal Society I picked up as a London souvenir that I was also reading, and I had to stop and stick with the non-fiction to get stuff straight in my head. Smile

I stalled out in Cryptonomicon as well, but that was more just a mood thing.
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Picture of meteorite
Location: Kihei, HI US
Registered:: 16 January 2003
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Wait until you meet Y.T. Hee!

I also acquired a lovely coffeetable book, Mythology: the art of Alex Ross. Alex Ross, for those of you who don't read many comic books, has a very realistic yet painterly style that is gorgeous, and somehow eminently suited to doing comic-book heroes. He's done work for both Marvel and DC, and I love his art.

Oh, and last but not least, I just read the latest Sammy Keyes book. A guilty pleasure, but not on the same level as J.D. Robb (Witness in Death), who I like more because of the Century City-esque detective work than the trashy romance subplot.


"Thus is Balance maintained." A Wizard of Earthsea
"Condensing fact from the vapor of nuance." Neal Stephenson, Snow Crash
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Location: NW Sator Square, Ankh-Morpork
Registered:: 05 August 2003
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I've had about six enthusiastic recs for Snow Crash lately. Unfortunately, I have also heard it is not exactly family-friendly. Therefore, my best bet is to try and read it covertly at a bookstore. Question: is it worth it?

And now for something completely different.
(Blargh I am a bad segue disguised as a Monty Python quote and I will eat your brains!)

Shadow of the Giants is on sale, hardcover, at Borders. As I did not have sufficient linger-and-read time I read some of Card's short stories with my coffee instead.

Quite honestly, though, I think the Ender story is told. Yes, it did require a certain number of volumes. But...it's the end. We have closure from all sides. Maybe I just need to re-read Shadow Puppets, but Giants seems like Card riding on the popularity of the previous six.
We know, mostly, what will happen to the characters. There's no 'What will happen to Lusitania? Will Bean ever find out the Secret of his Mysterious Past?' Peter and <the former assistant of Qing-Jao whose name is censored> live on, which is completely fitting and a stroke of genius; Bean and Petra will carry on with generations of Anton's experiment. Life will be, if not utopian, as good as they can hope for.
What more is there to say? Six is a good number. Leave it at that.


My art place thing - http://paperdragoness.deviantart.com
OK, so ten out of ten for style, but minus several million for good thinking, yeah?
--Douglas Adams, HHGG
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Picture of kli6
Location: San Diego, CA
Registered:: 14 February 2003
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meteorite: how incredibly funny. Robbs are a guilty pleasure for me as well, but I don't mind the trashy romance, and even buy her Nora Roberts books in the bookstore Pink Aisle. Smile

My current recurring recommendation is Donald Westlake's The Hook. I've read two of the Dortmunders, so I just need to find some time for this one.
Possibly Posts Too Much :)
Picture of Agent M
Location: The Abarat
Registered:: 30 August 2002
Posts: 2467
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Ken Follett!! Read Ken Follett!!! Jackdaws!!! *shifty eyes* ..... *goes back into wherever i've been for the past few months*

and by the way.... have I mentioned Timeline? Wink


*Agent~M*
"Imagination is more important than knowledge" Albert Einstein
"Those who dream by day are cognizant of those who dream by night" -Edgar Allen Poe
"See everything, overlook a lot, correct a little." - Pope John Paul XXIII
"I could live for a week on a compliment" - Mark Twain
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