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Mmmmmm booksies. Elaine Send a noteboard - 22/01/2010 12:55:05 PM
Way back when Wotmania was young-ish and I got tired of waiting for RJ to come out with a new book, I really got into the fantasy genre. Spent a lot of time in specialist fantasy bookshops. Found Erikson.


Yay!

After the second and third books in the Malazan series - Deadhouse Gates and Memories of Ice - I found that everything else in the genre tasted flat, insipid and so derivative.


Nay :[

Cyberpunk - especially Richard Morgan - helped a bit, with liberal additions of House of Chains and Midnight Tides. But come the end of Midnight Tides I abandoned the genre.


Never got into Richard Morgan but Stephenson surely helped, as did Gibson.

Moved into crime fiction. Did most of them. Mrs. Druid is also partial to crime, so we have built up a lot of books in the past two-three years.


If postage wasn't outrageous we could share. I have gazillions. Have you read Caleb Carr? Only two about his main protagonist, though :[

Collectively, we have found a mutual preference for crime novels set in locations other than New York, London and other gritty places. Think the Donna Leon Commissario Brunetti series set in Venice; think Don Winslow's books set in San Diego and Mexico (I cannot recommend Winslow's "The Power of the Dog" too highly), think Colin Cotterill's Dr. Siri series set in Laos - whimsical fun.


See now, I haven't read the Donna Leon ones. Thank you. Have you read the Shardlake books by CJ Sansom? Historical-type crime fiction. Not great literature, but enjoyable enough.

Then along came Stieg Larsson. Like most right-thinking people I have an aversion to buying volume one of a trilogy then having to wait...and wait...and wait. So I left them alone. Until early December when finding myself in an airport bookshop with nothing to read. Bought the second at the airport bookshop on the way home. Mrs Druid bought the third.

The effect of the Millenium Trilogy? All the other crime stuff is now tasting flat, insipid and so derivative.

So brothers and sisters. Beware! Read Erikson and Larsson at your peril. You may never be able to read another word in their respective genres if you do. While you are contemplating, seems a good idea to avoid these wicked, evil if skilled authors with Scandinavian names altogether...Erikson...Larsson...mmm?

I must to non-fiction go, I fear. But wait! What is this I see? Gardens of the Moon by some guy called Steven Erikson! And this time I will know what he is talking about! :|


I haven't read Larsson, deliberately. I will get to him soon though :D
Elaine
Irish Honey
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What happens when you read the best stuff - 21/01/2010 11:44:42 PM 1004 Views
Have you read Glen Cook's BLACK COMPANY series? It's Erikson's primary inspiration. - 22/01/2010 12:30:27 AM 528 Views
Heh, I couldn't have put it better myself. - 22/01/2010 03:38:45 AM 547 Views
Surely have - 22/01/2010 10:31:01 AM 633 Views
Did you read MiƩviile's The City and the City? - 22/01/2010 03:07:57 AM 524 Views
I am planning to read Larsson - 22/01/2010 11:26:52 AM 490 Views
Mmmmmm booksies. - 22/01/2010 12:55:05 PM 567 Views
There are more genres for you to grow weary. - 22/01/2010 01:10:59 PM 569 Views
... perhaps I will be forced to read the Larsson someday. - 22/01/2010 08:04:52 PM 492 Views

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