Slow Show wrote: » Finally got past the 100th page of The Lovely Bones and now I'm flying through it. I'm not finding it *that* creepy and weird (if it gets worse than the first chapter, oh...) so far. Hopefully I'll get it finished tomorrow and move onto the next item on the agenda - Catch 22 when I'm not only reading chapters here and there and forgetting the majority of the wealth of characters introduced. Although I may start re-reading the Inheritance Cycle before the last instalment is released before that, seeing as I have forgotten just about everything.
Deleted User wrote: » You're getting through those fairly quickly! I'm still on Gardens of the Moon. It's slow-going but brilliant. Maybe I've just lost the knack of reading quickly.
Pygmalion wrote: » If it's fantasy books we're talking about, read Night Watch and its sequels. Awesome books, the films are pretty bad in comparison though ;_;
EuropeanSon wrote: » Reading House of Chains now. I had my doubts that The Malazan Book Of The Fallen could be as good as I was being told. More than 3000 pages into the series, the doubts are long gone. Steven Erikson is a genius.
Ginja Ninja wrote: » The silmarillion ...again.Why do I do this to myself,its so hard to read but I love it so
randylonghorn wrote: » Hmmmm ... just be aware that Tim Pat would have a very definite ... view of history. Still well worth reading though.
brummytom wrote: » I'm reading three at the moment, The Commitments (Roddy Doyle), 1916: The Easter Rising (Tim Pat Coogan) and A Short History of Ireland (JC Beckett). All great, but very different!
Jackobyte wrote: » I'm mature, swear! :pac: Sure, I'm almost 17! :P
marko93 wrote: » Ehm the city trilogy is for the "mature"... Have one of the books but never got around to reading it.
Jackobyte wrote: » Loved the original series. Demonata was meh, read the first 4, bought each of the rest as they came out but never read them. Own all 12. Read the first 4. Bad form by me Mr Crespley series? Never heard of that. Although I have read his "Koyasan" and "The Thin Executioner". Enjoyable but predictable. Just after looking him up and I think I may have to go read "The City Trilogy" now. :L
randylonghorn wrote: » I suppose if I tried to spread my love of Dickens in here, I'd get thrown out? >_>
Fad wrote: » Neil Gaiman or Terry Pratchett, both write fantasy-ish books, Gaiman's a bit darker, Pratchett is a bit funnier.
Jackobyte wrote: » I've had it out of the library for about a month and a half at this stage and I haven't gotten past page 26. I start it, read it lightly for a night, then abandon it before picking it up again 2 weeks later and doing the same. I suppose I should give it back to the library... *proceeds to start it again*
marko93 wrote: » All of them.. Read the original series over the past few days, now onto the Demonata series.. NEXT STOP MR CREPSLEY SERIES!