TSF Book Club
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@voodoo said in TSF Book Club:
Such junk. I hope the earlier stuff was better so Child's at least partially deserves his success.
I read the first five or six. Entertaining, but not Pulitzer prize winning. The problem was the same for any character series; typically formula based and increasingly more absurd. At some point you could pick up the wrong cliff notes and it wouldn't make a difference.
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@antipodean Agree first couple were OK Haven't read one since about Book 3 when it became very onvious he was recycling the same story.
Much prefer Greg Hurwitz's Orphan Black series.
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@Stockcar86 I love Neil Gaiman
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just finished Attila, The Scourge of God by William Napier (book 1 of 3)
HIstorical fiction, was pretty good.
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@taniwharugby said in TSF Book Club:
just finished Attila, The Scourge of God by William Napier (book 1 of 3)
HIstorical fiction, was pretty good.
Ta added to my list
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The Last Day by Andrew Hunter Murray. A thriller about a UK in a world 30 years from now when the world has stopped spinning leaving one side blistering hot and the other freezing cold.
A decent read. Murray is one of the QI researchers and co-host of the No Such Thing As A Fish podcast.
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@JC yeah I read that after he was talking about it on one of the NSTAAF episodes, decent read, ending was a bit abrupt, guess leaving possibility of another?
I'm on book 3 of the Attila series by William Napier, really enjoying it.
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I just finished reading the 10 Malazan books back to back.
Fuck what a mission. Those are some big ass novels
Overall story is still epic, and made more sense when you knew the whole arc. But it's too long. I reckon you could have cut a heap of shit and made it 8 books. A couple of them really drag.
Also it's infuriating how many story threads that used to important pretty much just disappear. And the ending is pretty frikken abrupt.
Still an amazing piece of work