This month I've been rereading Halo: Primordium. Good book but just as depressing as I remember. I've also started working my way through the OpenLDAP Admin manual trying to wrap my head around LDAP.
So what have you all been reading? What did you think of it?
Oh man, I am so excited for you! That ending is amazing for the series. WoT is how I found my way to Brandon Sanderson. Now that I've read a lot of his stuff I understand that he excels at endings; its probably his biggest strength.
Thanks, I'm really looking forward to it! It's been a long journey through these 15 books. And Brandon Sanderson is great, I love the Mistborn and Stormlight books, but Elantris is one that really gripped me. Such a interesting and well-written story.
How is And Another Thing? Loved H2G2, but I read several of the Artemis Fowl books as a kid and can't really imagine Colfer nailing Adams's style (though I admit the latter H2G2 books began to loose their punch anyway). If anyone, I would've accepted Pratchett picking up the series, but alas.
The jokes aren't as great, nor is the writing, specifically compared to Douglas Adams' work. However, it isn't bad, and pretty OK when consumed in the form of an audiobook. I am mostly reading it because the ending of Mostly Harmless left me sad and I wanted to read more stories involving the characters.
I'm reading "So You Want to Be a Game Master" by Justin Alexander and "The Way of Kings" by Brandon Sanderson.
I also have "Needful Things" by Stephen King and "The Great Hunt" (The Wheel of Time book 2) by Robert Jordan sitting at roughly 50%, but they currently are in pause; unfortunately reading more than 2 books simultaneously is difficult if you also have to work.
I've just finished "The Sparrow" by Mary Doria Russell. A sci-fi story where it's the Jesuits who are sending the first mission to contact an alien species. It was a really great book, some of the best sci-fi I've read in recent years. The author really knows how to write great characters you care about, despite the fact that you know it'll all end in disaster from the very beginning.
I've now started "Gardens of the Moon", the first book of the "Malazan Book of the Fallen" series. The series is somewhat infamous for being very complicated and difficult to read, so we'll see how it goes. The author definitely likes to use some very obscure vocabulary, good thing I have an ebook reader with a built-in dictionary.
I'm reading book 6 of the Wheel of Time. It's pretty great, I started the series after finishing the Cosmere books. A friend suggested them since Sanderson finished the series for Jordan.
I finished the Farseer Trilogy recently, which I fell in love with. Rarely have I read such compelling characters with such emotional depth. So I've done a 180 and started Malazan: Book of the Fallen!
Resuming Moby-Dick which I've been on-and-off reading for a year at this point. Quite enjoying the contemplative tangents by Melville and the vivid characterizations. I'm using the Norton Critical edition which is immensely helpful with the annotations explaining all the archaic terms and phrases.
Light novel named To Be the Eminence in Shadow. Compared to other JP novels out there, this translated version truly has distinction of people in dialogues (that means you can clearly notice who is speaking), which is very pleasing to say the least
Over December I read Scott Hawkins’ Library at Mount Char, T. Kingfisher’s Paladin’s Faith, Ben Aaronovich’s Moon over Soho, and I just finished Neil Gaiman’s Norse Mythology last night.
Mount Char was a wild ride. I’m still processing it a bit. I enjoyed it a bunch though.
Kingfisher is amongst my favorite authors right now, and while I’m not typically a Romantacy person, the World of the White Rat books all have a lot of great Fantasy and the romance portions are integrated well.
I started Rivers of London a while ago, but dropped off so I’m trying to pick it back up. It’s good, especially if you’re a Dresden Fan. There’s quite a few similarities in style.
Norse Mythology has always been interesting to me, and Gaiman’s integrates a bunch of disparate sources to make a pretty good set of stories.
Just started Rise of Empire, Volume 2 of The Riyeria Revelations. I'm normally a pretty picky reader (Sanderson has spoiled me...) but this series is just plain solid so far. It's not great in any area, but it does well in most. Vol 1 felt a bit like a mix of LOTR and Wizard of Oz. Just a quest to find a thing and picking up folks with necessary skills along the way. The character development could use some fleshing-out, but that seems to be happening a bit more in vol 2. Overall, I recommend this series (so far), good fun.