Thargor wrote: » I read Quicksilver and the other two in the Baroque Cycle aswell and I must admit I just didnt get it, it just seemed like a series of wacky adventures followed by long boring stretches randomly jumping all over the place in time and in geography, right to the end I was waiting for something big to come along and tie the whole thing together and I was expecting it to be sci-fi related considering the author and then it would all become clear to me but that just never happened. It was very unsatisfying. Why was he using people like Issac Newton and other famous names for no reason if you know what I mean? Like say when someone like Arthur C Clarke does that you know they're going to be exposed to alien or modern tech or just an alternate history and then you get their reaction to it, but in the Baroque Cycle it was like he was just getting names for random characters off a big list of famous scientists for no reason, it drove me mental reading it.
cdgalwegian wrote: » Out of curiosity, these are tomes, not quick reads, and were continuations of a loose trilogy; why did you continue past the first, and even the second, if the first was driving you mental?
Thargor wrote: » Im a fast reader and finish what I start 99% of the time, plus it always felt like it was about to pick up.
cdgalwegian wrote: » I don't have the patience for that; life's too short, particularly apropos the amount there is to read. Have you read Cryptonomicon? Even though it was written before the Baroque Cycle it's set in the 20th, and has a type of closure to 'the cycle'.
Igotadose wrote: » A type of closure. Those family lines continue into "Reamde" and its sequel, too. I really enjoyed Cryptonomicon and Reamde, though the latter was kind of tongue-in-cheek. I think it also is widely disliked, too.
Igotadose wrote: » I really enjoyed Cryptonomicon and Reamde, though the latter was kind of tongue-in-cheek. I think it also is widely disliked, too.
Thargor wrote: » Anathem is absolutely brilliant aswell, such a genius concept and the little snatches of lore you get about whats going on outside the walls keeps you dying for more, I dont want to devour it but at the same time I cant leave it alone. He does have an irritating habit of over describing things to ridiculous degrees, it was kind of okay when he was explaining interesting concepts for space stations and propulsion systems but in this theres a lot of descriptions of architecture and sometimes he can get carried away and spend half a chapter describing it "The apex of the cloister was formed by 4 naves each perpendicular to the other, set at right angles to each apex were 4 supporting buttresses. The vertices of each buttress were connected by 4 arches, The arches were webbed to one another by systems and spans of tracery that swallowed the lower half of the Præsidium and formed the broad plan of the Mynster. The Mynster had a ceiling of stone, steeply vaulted. Above the vaults, a flat roof had been framed. Built upon that roof was the aerie of the Warden Fendant. Its inner court, squared around the Præsidium, was roofed and walled and diced up into store-rooms and headquarters, but its periphery was an open walkway on which the Fendant’s sentinels could pace a full circuit of the Mynster in a few minutes’ time, seeing to the horizon in all directions (except where blocked by a buttress, pier, spire, or pinnacle)." You actually wonder if he's taking the p1ss out of the reader sometimes but just like with Seveneves when he's on form its the best sci-fi you can get and the good bits outnumber the bad 10:1.
Beanstalk wrote: » After putting it off for over two decades I'm finally reading Raymond E' Feist and Janny Wurts Empire Trilogy. Really gripping intrigue and non-stop throughout the whole book. Very different to E. Feist's normal work - seems more real and mature.
seagull wrote: » That trilogy is my favourite part of the entire riftworld series. The levels of intrigue and backstabbing are ridiculous.
Thargor wrote: » I never even heard of it and I read Riftworld all my life.
shrapnel222 wrote: » wow, that's crazy! it's a great series, and the timelines intertwine to a certain extent, so you'll remember some scenes from the magician series popping up here and there on the kelewan side. well worth multiple reads
nhur wrote: » With alll the talk of Anathem - it's jumped to the top of my list... do I need to read other Stephenson books first?