In Under Heaven, Kay tells a story of honor and power, this time in a setting that evokes the dazzling Tang Dynasty of eighth-century China. In recognition of his service to the Emperor of Kitai, Shen Tai has been sent a mysterious and dangerous gift: 250 Sardian horses. Wisely the gift comes with the stipulation that the horses must be claimed in person. Otherwise, he would probably be dead already.
smacl wrote: » Just finished We are legion (We are Bob), a great romp and I'll certainly follow up with the rest of the trilogy over the coming months. Just starting into Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke for something a bit different.
Thargor wrote: » I just have to stop using Goodreads for my recommendations its just a sewer full of morons, they get excited over the most badly written crap, most recent was Dragon Mage by ML Spencer, apparently the greatest fantasy debut in years but its just so generic and cliched, another "But I cant do anything Im just a street urchin, oh wait Im actually the most powerful sorcerer that ever lived" which brings absolutely nothing new whatsoever to the table. I assume its the fact that the grizzled old mage that trained him had a husband this time thats gotten them excited and led to all the thousands of 5 star reviews, wow edgy.
Gary kk wrote: » I think you can stop at that the next one is crap. (We are Bob)
Thargor wrote: » Im really struggling for anything to read at the minute, there hasnt been anything good in so long, next up is Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay which might be alright:
pixelburp wrote: » I'm just reading that Becky Chambers has a new one coming on the 18th, "The Galaxy and the ground Within". Apparently it'll be the last one she writes set in the universe of "Long way to a small angry planet" and hopefully she'll find some of the verve lost in the last couple of books.
keane2097 wrote: » Confirmed.
The White Feather wrote: » I finished Gardens of the Moon recently and am now reading the next book in the series, Deadhouse Gates by Steven Erikson
The White Feather wrote: » Now just finished Memories of Ice and House of Chains next. Fantastic stuff so far!
nhur wrote: » Im seeing quite a few posts praising the Reality Dysfunction... Which I got about halfway through before ditching a long time ago. Does it continue in the same vein to the end of the book? (if not I might give it another go)
shrapnel222 wrote: » Both the Chinese based ones are fantastic.
Conall Cernach wrote: » I'm reading the Witcher books, on Tower of the Swallow now. I think it is fair to say that they are ****e. The short stories were diverting, the one with the striga being the best, but nothing to write home about.
Blackhorse Slim wrote: » Currently reading Bloody Rose, Nicholas Eames' sequel to Kings of the Wyld. Enjoying it a lot, about 1/3 of the way through and if anything it's better than the first. I've also recently read the first 2 Broken Earth books by N K Jemisin, very different but also fantastic. I have no. 3 ready to go when I finish Bloody Rose. And I'm slowly making my way through the Dresden Files books (book 5 up next). Lockdown has been pretty good for reading.
Yeahyeah42 wrote: » Going to read “the death gate cycle” read the 1st three books years ago and stopped for some reason and loved them also “Necroscope” by Brian lumley looks interesting - just to add found the death gate series (1st 3 books) superior to dragonlance just my opinion mind
Igotadose wrote: » Now working on "The City We Became" by N.K. Jemisin. Nice read so far, especially as I'm from NYC originally and recognize all the real-world locations.