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Picture of meteorite
Location: Kihei, HI US
Registered:: 16 January 2003
Posts: 364
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Mel, I'm hooked on Georgia Nicholson. Angus, Thongs, and Full-Frontal Snogging had me giggling madly and intermittently, and so did almost every book thereafter by Louise Rennison. Georgia is a little bit of a twit, but no more self-centered and vacuous than a lot of teens I know, and you are rooting for her to finally (spoiler alert) get together with Dave the Laugh if only to settle that plot line!

I MUST recommend Little Brother by Cory Doctorow. Imagine 1984 meets Snow Crash and has a successful, alien hybrid Big Grin


"Thus is Balance maintained." A Wizard of Earthsea
"Condensing fact from the vapor of nuance." Neal Stephenson, Snow Crash
Emi
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Picture of Emi
Location: lost in my imagination, buried in manuscripts
Registered:: 20 July 2007
Posts: 418
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I'm so happy, I can cross another book off of the list I wanted to read... There's a long list...

I just finished reading Speak By Laurie Halse Anderson, the other day. It's a really good book, and now I'm excited to go out and get the movie. I wanted to read the book before I saw the movie, so I know what really happened in the book. I'm starting to do that a lot, lately.


"It's the simple things in life that are the most extraordinary."
-- The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
||What if I'm not the hero? What if I'm the bad guy?|| 11.21.08||
kk
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Picture of kk
Location: On one of my semi-prehistoric computers. By some stroke of luck, I might be on my new one...
Registered:: 20 August 2006
Posts: 546
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A friend of mine loaned me Phantom of the Opera, so I need to read that. Also, I'm almost done readin The People of Sparks, which is a good book. Smile I like reading...


"Believe something and the Universe is on its way to being changed. Because you've changed, by believing. Once you've changed, other things start to follow."

--Khairelikoblepharehglukumeilichephreidosd'enagouni, the white hole
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Picture of kli6
Location: San Diego, CA
Registered:: 14 February 2003
Posts: 1905
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BTW, if you cannot afford a copy of Cory Doctorow's Little Brother he's put it up for free download on his website, under Creative Commons. So, no excuses.

Oh, and the Tor website is up.
Member
Location: In a book, at school, or on the forums.
Registered:: 10 March 2008
Posts: 39
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I just finished reading The Fire Within, Icefire, and Firestar by Chris D'Lacey. I'm not sure if this is for talking about books or recommending them, but I'd like to recommend those three and The Warrior Heir, and The Wizard Heir. The last two are by Cinda Williams Chima.

kk:
quote:
Also, I'm almost done readin The People of Sparks, which is a good book. I like reading...
Does that book have a sequel? I might've heard about it. I agree, reading is awesome. Smile


__________________________
Dai! *Logs off to read again*
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Picture of EricG1793
Location: New England
Registered:: 24 May 2007
Posts: 437
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The order in which the books were published is The City of Ember, The People of Sparks, and The Prophet of Yonwood.

Whited out due to an indirect spoiler (announcing the chronological order in which the books occurred):

The Prophet of Yonwood, The City of Ember, and The People of Sparks.

But it's still neat to read them in the publication order. (Actually, I read it book 2, book 1, book 3._
Member
Picture of Cress
Location: William Beckett's blog! It's unhealthy there.
Registered:: 01 August 2004
Posts: 570
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Holy shamoli, I'm reading the last book in the series by Chris D'Lacey right now! I haven't actually read the first three, because I just grabbed this book (it looked interesting), and it didn't say anywhere on it that it was part of a series. I think it had a note on the inside back cover. About 50 pages in, I got kind of confused and looked to see if it was part of a series, but didn't see anything and kept reading. It's really quite good, if somewhat strange.

Also...EVERYONE read Little Brother by Cory Doctorow. It's completely amazing. You won't regret it. Other recent recommendations...Conception, The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing and 6 Degrees. All very good. I love my library meetings...I get free, new books!


The Taiko Dodo and Mitten of Insanity
I promise not to funfun anymore
Be happy cause life is good
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Picture of Zirsta
Location: this dimension, I hope
Registered:: 27 July 2008
Posts: 53
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You're reading the Fires Eternal? I read that. Yeah, you need to read the first three before that one to really enjoy them. They go:
The Fire Within
Icefire
Firestar
The Fires Eternal
They are VERY good. I recommend them to everyone! Bouncing Grin

Gwendi: You've read The Warrior's Heir? I just finished re-reading it. It was OK, but I'm a girl, and it was sort of confusing at times. I haven't read The Wizard's Heir yet. Was it any good?
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Location: San Diego, CA
Registered:: 14 February 2003
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I am sick in bed. I finally got around to finishing Reader and Raelynx, the fourth (and supposedly final) book in Sharon Shinn's Twelve Houses series. Enjoyed it, but I liked the other three a bit more.

However, if you enjoy Robin McKinley's Beauty, I'd highly recommend picking up Sharon Shinn's The Safe-Keeper's Secret/The Truth-Teller's Tale, and The Dream-Maker's Magic. I love these books to death, and they really remind me of McKinley's earlier novels--there's a strong fairy-tale structure, and an interesting logic to the magic that just makes for great storytelling. Basically, in this world (a sort of indeterminate medieval-mixed-Victorian setting, like Beauty) there are three types of magic people: safe-keepers, who can never tell a secret confided in the; truth-tellers who can never tell a lie; and the dream-maker whose mere presence can cause dreams to come true, but who has no volition in granting the wishes and whose own life is filled with tragedy and pain.

Or, if you're an Anne McCaffrey fan, I'd recommend finding Shinn's Archangel, 'cause it's mostly just Dragonflight, but with angels instead of dragons and dragonriders. Smile
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Picture of Garrett Fitzgerald
Location: Brewer, ME, USA, Terra, Sol system, Orion arm, Milky Way
Registered:: 18 July 2002
Posts: 410
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And if you're a dragon fan in general, I'd suggest Naomi Novik's Temeraire series, starting with His Majesty's Dragon. It's basically Horatio Hornblower/Jack Aubrey, but with an Air Force in addition to the Navy.

Over the course of the 5 books (I still haven't gotten to Victory of Eagles yet -- I was going to pick it up today, but it's not in paperback yet), it deals with the question of what happens when your military "hardware" has a brain and can make its own decisions about how it's being treated....
----
Also, you don't have to wait to be loaned books like Phantom of the Opera -- just head over to www.gutenberg.org, or www.librivox.org, if you prefer audiobooks. :-)


"Now, one of [my] laws of politics is this. If one candidate is trying to scare you and the other one is trying get you to think, if one candidate is appealing to your fears and the other one is appealing to your hopes, you better vote for the person who wants you to think and hope."
kk
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Picture of kk
Location: On one of my semi-prehistoric computers. By some stroke of luck, I might be on my new one...
Registered:: 20 August 2006
Posts: 546
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Huh, I didn't know Gutenberg.org had Phantom of the Opera...thanks, Garrett!

They have a lot of good books...Wuthering Heights (which I need to finish), Pride and Prejudice (which I need to read), and others.


"Believe something and the Universe is on its way to being changed. Because you've changed, by believing. Once you've changed, other things start to follow."

--Khairelikoblepharehglukumeilichephreidosd'enagouni, the white hole
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Location: San Diego, CA
Registered:: 14 February 2003
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Ok, this isn't really a book thing, but I didn't want to start a radio drama thread. Smile I was just over on the BBC website, and it looks like they're going to do a second Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency adapation (this time of Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul). It's gonna start up Oct. 2.

Typically, the stuff starts streaming off the website as soon as it's aired, and remains on the website for a week. Just so's you know, you can listen to this even if you live outside the UK.
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Finally, I have been reading YA fantasy again, and I have three books I'd like to mention which may actually be of interest to other members of this board. Smile

The first two are new--just came out this month in hardcover, while the third one is a little older and can probably found in paperback or at the library.

Nation by Terry Pratchett is not a Discworld book, but is YA. It's set in an alternate reality, not that different from our own in a vaguely Pacific South Seas setting. It's about big things like death and culture, religion, and national identity. So, naturally, it's a kids' book. I highly recommend it. It makes you think. A lot. It's one of Pratchett's best.

Second, Neil Gaiman's latest, The Graveyard Book. An absolutely perfect Halloween read. It's charming and creepy and goth all at once (while bloody things happen, it's not a gory book). And it also makes you think about the nature of life and death, but not in the furious way that Pratchett's book will, but more in a curiously musing sort of way.

The third book is China Miéville's Un Lun Dun which I liked a lot for turning a lot of fantasy cliches on their ear (the chosen one, the "coupon plot" idea, etc.) and because the heroine wins out the day by not listening to what someone tells her, but by thinking for herself and coming up with a better way of doing things. My only real disappointment is that the world is drawn much more vividly than the characters for my taste. But that's more than made up for by the word coinage that happens (e.g., martial arts trashcans => binja). But I definitely have to get my hands on Perdido Street Station, now.
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Registered:: 15 September 2008
Posts: 24
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Anyone read the Hunger Games? I guess Stephenie Meyer is recommending it. I've had ton of people come into the bookstore where I work looking for it. It sounds really interesting.

And I'm assuming this thread is to discuse any other books that we like. If I'm wrong... sorry.


"Doctors help you to live, the Arts give you a reason to live."
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Picture of kli6
Location: San Diego, CA
Registered:: 14 February 2003
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This thread is for discussing books. So, no worries.

I have found the iPhone application Stanza, which lets you download books to your iPhone/iPodTouch. So, I went and got Cory Doctorow's Little Brother. Oy. Great book, and it's something I think a lot of people need to read, but as I was looking for a little escapism after watching Frontline's episode on the war in Afghanistan, it didn't exactly fit the bill. Still, great stuff.
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Picture of Zirsta
Location: this dimension, I hope
Registered:: 27 July 2008
Posts: 53
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Anyone read the books Inkheart and Inkdeath, by Cornelia Funke? They are really good. Well, there's a third in the trilogy, Inkdeath. It is fantastic, but I don't think it ended the trilogy quite on the note I'd have liked it too. Stupid Doria. [SPOILER] He's the guy that Meggie falls in love with, because Farid is too busy trying to get Dustfinger back from the White Women.
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Picture of smile
Location: in one of my books - I love them all - and Annie is on my lap, purring : )
Registered:: 03 November 2007
Posts: 83
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That's what I should read! I have Inkheart, but I never finished reading it... I rember that I loved it (wonder why I stopped, I almost never stop...)

Has anyone read Airborn, by Kenneth Oppel? It's an old favorite of mine, and it takes place on an airship...
quote:
Lighter than air, that's our Mr. Cruse.
(that appears several times in the story)

Has anyone read The Oracle Betrayed series? You have to work a little to get into the first on in the trilogy, but they are wonderful! They're young adult, as are many of my series.



"And on he went, out of sight in unhurried grace; the true dark angel, the unfallen Destroyer, the Pale slayer who never really dies-seeking for pain to end." Deep Wizardry, page 355
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Picture of Zirsta
Location: this dimension, I hope
Registered:: 27 July 2008
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I haven't read Airborn, but I've read other books by Kenneth Oppel. The Sunwing/Firewing/Silverwing Trilogy. They are good, but the end of Firewing is really bad. I mean, what author in their right mind kills the main character? It ruins the end.

He also wrote a new one, Darkwing. I haven't read it, but it's sort of like the trilogy, but about a thousand years in the future.

Anyone read the Guardians of Ga'Hoole? I didn't think so, but just in case... The War of the Ember was released yesterday. It is the 15th and final book in the series. It's better than some of the other recent ones, but a horrible ending. Soren kills Nyra, but Coryn gets killed, and Soren becomes king. Also, another author, Kathryn Huang Knight is going to write a book about some stories of Ga'Hoole, even though there are 16 books already.
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Location: umm, I don't know...but it echoes
Registered:: 04 September 2007
Posts: 47
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oh my gosh smile, I love Airobrn. I read it in school for Battle of the Books several years ago, and I immediately fell in love with it Smile
Hey guys, guess what? I got a friend of mine to read the YW series, and he gave me a bunch of books. Such a Pretty Girl, by Laura Weiss, is about a young rape victim. Very powerful. nd the Edge Chronicles. Don't know who it's by, sorry, but it's very cute. And I have to recommend Dracula, by Brahm Stoker, of course. A classic. And The Host, by the beloved Stephenie Meyer, I made him read those as well. Hope you get a new read out of this! Dai'


~We’re the kinda friends that kill each other for a handful of Doritos and in the end we don’t say sorry we say Haha! Too bad!!~. Errors have been made. Others will be blamed.
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Location: San Diego, CA
Registered:: 14 February 2003
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I read Inkheart and Inkspell, but haven't gotten my hands on Inkdeath yet. I'm also happy that it's called "Inkdeath", since way back when worlebird and I were discussing the lame way the titles were being translated. Tintenherz and Inkheart is fine. But Tintenblut should be "Inkblood", not Inkspell. And Titentod (Inkdeath) was called a no-go title and was going to be Tintensaat (Inkseed), but the English title was going to be Inkdawn (eyeroll), so it's nice to know that Funke's original title prevailed in both languages.
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