Books to read, 2006
Jan. 6th, 2006 10:27 amMy goal this year is to increase the ratio of non-fiction to fiction books that actually get read, and also to continue to move towards having read all of the books in the house.
To-Read: Fiction
- Re-read Wheel of Time Series, Robert Jordan (we own it!)
- Anansi Boys, Neil Gaiman (when
- Life of Pi, Yann Martel (we own it)
- Siddhartha, Herman Hesse (have to get a copy)
- Finnegan's Wake, James Joyce (have to get one)
- Perdido Street Station, China Mieville (need to get)
- Promethea series (borrow from
To-Read: Nonfiction
- Metamagical Themas, Douglas Hofstedter (we own it, and have for years. Has anyone read it? No.)
- Zero: Biography of a Dangerous Idea (we own it)
- Training Trances (we own it)
- Generation Hex (have to get a copy)
- The Laughing Jesus (in the book club queue)
- The Hidden Messages in Water (in the book club queue)
- Chance, Amir Aczel (in the book club queue)
- The Shadow Club, Roberto Casati (in the book club queue)
- Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, Mary Roach (need to get)
- Strategies for Success
Also, taking suggestions: What have you read lately that was of interest? I'm interested in pretty much any fiction that isn't a romance or a western (with preference for sci-fi, fantasy, horror, and alternate history), and any non-fiction about math, science, philosophy, psychology/sociology, ethnography, religion, magic, language or non-military history. Thanks!
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Date: 2006-01-06 05:05 pm (UTC)Will look into your other reccommendations, though, as I'm not familiar with any of them. Fun!
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Date: 2006-01-06 05:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-06 05:42 pm (UTC)Although Arya continues to get cooler, so that was worthwhile. I have decided to let him live :)
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Date: 2006-01-06 05:47 pm (UTC)I give better fiction than non-fiction recs, so have you read the Kushiel's Trilogy by Jacqueline Carey?
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Date: 2006-01-06 05:53 pm (UTC)She's also got a newer, closer-to-genre series called Banewreaker. I've read the first one of those, and will probably finish out the series, but the entire first half of the first book reads like a Silmarillion ripoff. The plot seems to be making different points, as the Big Bad God is a god of lust/desire, and may not eventually turn out to be the villain, but the setup and mythology are extremely similar, even to the language and naming conventions. I have decided to graciously assume that this is intentional on her part and will pay off somewhere later in the series, but I am not sure.
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Date: 2006-01-06 06:02 pm (UTC)Let me know if they pay off in the end, and I will give the series another try. :)
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Date: 2006-01-06 06:07 pm (UTC)I saw the second one in the Half-Price Books the other day, and was extremely disheartened to see something that looked perilously like Gandalf arriving on his white horse at the battle of Helm's Deep on the cover. :( Still, the style is good, if nothing else. I'm thinking it's a library-borrowing grade series, though.
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Date: 2006-01-06 11:15 pm (UTC)You might try "Dunn's Lady Jess" by Dorana Durgan, an older book but a favorite of mine.
Re: Banewreaker
Date: 2006-01-09 05:37 pm (UTC)I think she's really doing a good job about writing about mythological concepts as real people. In reading Banewreaker, it turns out that the Big Bad is made into the Big Bad and who is bad and who is good is significantly more complicated than what it originally sounded like. I wrote about some of this here.
Re: Banewreaker
Date: 2006-01-09 06:51 pm (UTC)It's odd, too, because I don't usually mind mythological retreads, if they're taking a different angle on the source material. I mean, I read scads and scads of Arthur, and never worry about it. I don't know why using Silmarillion as base mythology bothers me more.
Anyway, it hasn't stopped me from reading it, certainly.