The question is not what you have read, but what you enjoyed reading...
jh Send a noteboard - 06/02/2011 12:57:01 PM
But without that to guide me...
I'd say for fun and rather light, go for jim butcher.
For good and still readable, ekaterina sedia.
Dense and awesome, Umberto Eco.
Just a good book: the shadow of the wind, by zafon
Science fiction: I have not yet read anything better than Lord of Light
author crush: Neal Stephenson. Everything is good. Apart from snow crash. Don't read snow crash.
More malazan: Have you read esslemont? also, crippled god is out this month, maybe you don't have time for other books?
Sanderson is actually rather good too, so you could go that way.
I'd say for fun and rather light, go for jim butcher.
For good and still readable, ekaterina sedia.
Dense and awesome, Umberto Eco.
Just a good book: the shadow of the wind, by zafon
Science fiction: I have not yet read anything better than Lord of Light
author crush: Neal Stephenson. Everything is good. Apart from snow crash. Don't read snow crash.
More malazan: Have you read esslemont? also, crippled god is out this month, maybe you don't have time for other books?
Sanderson is actually rather good too, so you could go that way.
"People think it must be fun to be a super genius, but they don't realize how hard it is to put up with all the idiots in the world" - Calvin.
I need a book. A good book. A book that I will enjoy.
06/02/2011 08:25:51 AM
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The question is not what you have read, but what you enjoyed reading...
06/02/2011 12:57:01 PM
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Re: The question is not what you have read, but what you enjoyed reading...
12/02/2011 09:24:55 PM
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Have you read Foucault's Pendulum? That's been translated into English.
06/02/2011 05:09:55 PM
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Different things. Decadant things.
06/02/2011 10:10:52 PM
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Haven't read any Vandermeer, actually. You recommend him?
07/02/2011 12:26:35 AM
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Jeff is a friend of mine, so of course I would recommend him
07/02/2011 08:33:41 AM
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I've been looking for a hardcover edition of Là-Bas in French.
07/02/2011 06:05:27 AM
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I get the sense that would be very expensive if found
07/02/2011 08:38:37 AM
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Might as well ask American publishers where the obsession with hardcovers comes from.
07/02/2011 09:32:50 PM
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Don't libraries as a rule have hardcovers?
07/02/2011 09:56:07 PM
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I think you have two different questions there
07/02/2011 10:08:40 PM
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Yes, but those are matters of what one is used to, like I said.
07/02/2011 10:23:32 PM
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so they are buying paperbacks and turning them into hardbacks
09/02/2011 03:14:55 PM
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Pretty much anything by Neil Gaiman, esp. Good Omens (w/Pratchett). More recommendations inside ...
08/02/2011 05:43:22 PM
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