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Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 4:39 pm
by jerom
Coma read books different way than I do.

What other fantasy series would you recommend though ? I might get my hands on a few, becuase I guess I dont dislike reading, I just only really like fantasy books.

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 7:07 pm
by Comadevil
No i just have read many fantasy books and with the 3rd and 4th book of Inheritance i more and more realized that character development is really not that good (motivations, thought process etc). It is also what people criticize in book reviews of Inheritance

Robert Jordan Wheel of TIme
Steven Erikson A Tale of the Malazan Book of the Fallen
Raymond E. Feist The Riftwar Saga
Tad Williams Memory, Sorrow and THorn
Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman Dragonlance Chronicles, Dragonlance Legends
David Eddings Elenium ( a more humourous one)

The first two are the most recent epic sagas, though u need some weekends to read even one of them. Robert Jordans Wheel of TIme is a 14 book saga with 600-1000 pages per book, the 14th and final book will be released end of year/beginning next year.
Steven Eriksons saga is a bit harder to follow but nevertheless epic. 10 books here with 900-1200 pages per book

Ther english books are quite cheap, i dunno how expensive they are when u buy them in your native language. In Germany they are then a lot more expensive

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 7:26 pm
by jerom
I might just borrow them for free at the library when some big holiday starts (I dont think my english is quite up to the task). Im a pretty fast reader (and relatively dedicated, which means I will only and only read for multiple days in a row) so that will be fine :-)

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 7:45 pm
by Comadevil
THis is also what i thought at ur age. But then money dictated english because english was only 50% of the price compared to german books. Only the first two-five books u need often dictionary. And today u haven even online dictionry. At my time i had to use a book which even didn't had all vocabluary :(

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 8:51 pm
by DutchNvG
Comadevil wrote: At my time i had to use a book which even didn't had all vocabluary :(
Damn, you're getting old Marco  :P


J-k.

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 9:03 pm
by Comadevil
U are totally right :(

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 10:57 pm
by RascalJones
Comadevil wrote: No i just have read many fantasy books and with the 3rd and 4th book of Inheritance i more and more realized that character development is really not that good (motivations, thought process etc). It is also what people criticize in book reviews of Inheritance

Robert Jordan Wheel of TIme
Steven Erikson A Tale of the Malazan Book of the Fallen
Raymond E. Feist The Riftwar Saga
Tad Williams Memory, Sorrow and THorn
Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman Dragonlance Chronicles, Dragonlance Legends
David Eddings Elenium ( a more humourous one)

The first two are the most recent epic sagas, though u need some weekends to read even one of them. Robert Jordans Wheel of TIme is a 14 book saga with 600-1000 pages per book, the 14th and final book will be released end of year/beginning next year.
Steven Eriksons saga is a bit harder to follow but nevertheless epic. 10 books here with 900-1200 pages per book

Ther english books are quite cheap, i dunno how expensive they are when u buy them in your native language. In Germany they are then a lot more expensive

I've only read one Fantasy series.  That was The Banned & The Banished series by James Clemens.  I really like the story, but I have nothing to compare it to. The only think I didn't care for was the apost'rophe ab'use.  Every na'me, every ci'ty....everything had an apostrophe in it.

The book names in series order are Wit'ch Fire, Wit'ch Storm, Wit'ch War, Wit'ch Gate, and Wit'ch Star.  I keep telling myself I'm going to re-read them, but then I keep forgetting.

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Sat Apr 07, 2012 6:48 pm
by Sporting_Lisbon
The Inheritance books are good but as Coma said they aren't *that* good. Character developing is poor and it is quite one-sided - we don't really get to know "the bad guys" nor their point of view other than "he's evil". Definitely not as good as Song of Ice and Fire or The Blade Itself books from Joe Abercrombie.


Has anyone read any of David Gemmel's books? They were very good, even though the stories seemed similar.

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Sat Apr 07, 2012 6:55 pm
by jerom
One of the main problems I had with inheritance was that I was accidentally starting to like the evil guy XD

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012 4:14 pm
by Sporting_Lisbon
Inheritance confirmed for worst book I've read in years.

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012 8:55 pm
by Soccerman771
Sporting_Lisbon wrote: Inheritance confirmed for worst book I've read in years.
Required reading?

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012 10:20 pm
by Sporting_Lisbon
Soccerman771 wrote:
Sporting_Lisbon wrote: Inheritance confirmed for worst book I've read in years.
Required reading?
Rofl I liked the previous books and I thought this one would be ok too. I suppose it was because I was much younger when I read them.

Filled with loads of pages with literally no action, poor character development, "simple" ending, last-minute boosts on the main character, etc.

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Tue Sep 18, 2012 4:30 pm
by murdilator
I'm not up to par on so many contemporary books, but I really like reading. Some for more entertainment and some at least to say that I've read them.

Hunger Games series (Hunger Games in the summer, the other two this fall).
Percy Jackson series (This spring. I realized it was for 12-year-olds+ after I had finished the last book, but it was pretty good even then)
Lord of the Rings - The Hobbit (this spring), Fellowship of the Ring (last year), Two Towers (last year and this year), The Return of the King (Late spring). (I had read these as a kid, but couldn't understand half of what was actually written.)
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court - Mark Twain (Summer, on a road-trip to Bergen)
Horatio Hornblower (first three books/seven books, then I got a bit sick of the book and just watched the series online. It was good but it got repetitive).
Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austin (This fall)
Little Dorrit - Charles Dikkens (partly two years ago, partly this fall, scene TV-series)


I think this sums it up. We don't have a TV at home because we would watch too much, lol. In Norway TV is so random so it wouldn't matter too much though. I like books better. Sort of just get in my own world a bit.

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Tue Sep 18, 2012 8:45 pm
by jerom
I read some Ludlum book this summer.... Never read any of his books but I kinda liked it (though it was a bit straightforwarded), was done in 2 days lol :-)

Re: The OFFICIAL Books thread

Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2012 12:44 am
by Soccerman771
jerom wrote: I read some Ludlum book this summer.... Never read any of his books but I kinda liked it (though it was a bit straightforwarded), was done in 2 days lol :-)
Was it Ludlum or one of his "famous" ghost writers?  Ludlum is great, the ghost writers - not so much...