02-14-2012, 01:03 PM | #651 |
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I am thinking about reading How Few Remain next. I'm concerned though that my lack of knowledge concerning the Civil War will mean that I won't truly understand the impact of what happens in the book.
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02-14-2012, 01:27 PM | #652 | |
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It won't be a problem at all. There's a blurb in the beginning about how the South wins, then it jumps to the setting of the book.
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02-14-2012, 06:46 PM | #653 |
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It is a great book, purportedly book one of ten. On the bright side Sanderson is a pretty prolific writer right now. The approach is apparently to have one character and their specific back story dominate each volume while advancing the whole epic story all the way. From what I surmise from reading this volume twice, this is an epic tale he is crafting. |
02-14-2012, 09:26 PM | #654 |
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Anybody want to suggest which of these books I've already purchased I should dive into next? Rules: not in a series (my book club is starting a new book next week, so I need a filler for this week), short enough to be read in a week, and can't be too hard (so DFW is out).
Paper books (dead tree editions) Kindle books 1 Kindle books 2 Kindle books 3 Kindle books 4 Kindle books 5 Dennis, I agree with the rec for Way of Kings. If you haven't read Rothfuss' Kingkiller books, you might try those (first book is The Name of the Wind). Also there are the First Law books by Abercrombie (The Blade Itself is the start of a trilogy, plus there are The Heroes and Best Served Cold which are same-world books not directly part of the series). Also, Brent Weeks has a newish book out to start a new series, it's called The Black Prism. But were it me, I'd go with Way of Kings. I really liked Sanderson's work on the Wheel of Time books and his Mistborn books (speaking of, I have one more of those to read, a sort of sequel to the original trilogy). /tk
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02-14-2012, 09:39 PM | #655 |
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tk, Alloy of Law is good. It is a short read, not nearly as long as the books in the Mistborn Trilogy.
I recommend it for your short read this week although you'll likely get through it quickly. |
02-14-2012, 10:59 PM | #656 |
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I am reading Paint Your Dragon by Tom Holt. A nice bit of comic fantasy
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02-15-2012, 05:25 PM | #657 |
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Still reading the sample by Sanderson, not sure if I like (Not a big Jordan fan and he writes like Jordan)
However, Robin Hobb I have heard good and bad. If I was to read a Hobb series, what would be the first series I should read?
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02-15-2012, 05:52 PM | #658 | |
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The Farseer Trilogy was fantastic. I'd highly recommend it.
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02-15-2012, 06:29 PM | #659 | |
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I read the Farseer and then immediately read her follow up to it. Was one of the better fantasy series I've ever read. But I've always struggled getting into fantasy, so it's far from any type of high fantasy or anything. I enjoyed it more for the characters than anything. Last edited by Scoobz0202 : 02-15-2012 at 09:52 PM. |
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02-15-2012, 07:36 PM | #660 |
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I agree, I quite enjoyed that trilogy. I devoured it over a week. /tk
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02-15-2012, 07:50 PM | #661 |
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I may do a re read of that after I get done teaching this year. And tackle the next trilogy.
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03-22-2012, 08:32 AM | #662 |
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I just finished 11-22-63, and put it into my "don't bother" list. I liked a lot of the setup and concept, but didn't get much of anything from the execution.
I have mixed feelings about things from King I have read - I thought this one would be a good fit. Anyhow, I disagree with a previous poster in this thread - and I'd say that if all King wanted to do was tell *this* story, it could have easily been done in a 150-page novella. Had I known the scope to be as unambitious, especially in contrast to the premise, I would have skipped it. If you like the genre/concept of time travel and speculative fiction - here's a book that I'd really recommend, available on Kindle despite being out of print for some time: Amazon.com: Replay: Ken Grimwood: Books |
03-22-2012, 09:16 AM | #663 |
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Just finishing up re-reading "American Psycho".
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03-22-2012, 08:12 PM | #664 |
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I'm still working through Wild Cards. I really liked it at first, mostly because I kinda dig origin stories, and it was mostly a bunch of origin stories. But the later stories (I'm about 60% in) aren't all that great. I think maybe George R.R. Martin, as editor, front-loaded the anthology. I'm hoping the next few stories pick up.
I just finished reading Lies of Locke Lamora with the Sword & Laser book club. I didn't particularly like it. Oddly, I didn't particularly dislike it, either. I just couldn't get sucked into it. I think, as I said in my review, that it felt more like a tale of a moderately interesting person's day-to-day life. There are some points of high interest/intrigue, but mostly, it was hard to identify with why the main character really cared about being the best thief. It was a lot of pretty mundane stuff happening with some action here and there. I was bummed, as I really expected to like that book. S&L is getting ready to read The Magicians. Based on reviews from my Goodreads friends, this is truly a love it or hate it book. A lot of the complaints seem to be that it's a bit depressing, kinda like The Crow crossed with Harry Potter. I'm not very far in but am so far enjoying it well enough. /tk
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03-22-2012, 08:25 PM | #665 |
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I really liked The Magicians up until the end. Not enough to ruin the book for me, but enough that I haven't read the second yet.
And I REALLY enjoyed the first 90%. |
03-22-2012, 11:18 PM | #666 |
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Listening to REAMDE.
Reading a cupcake book DON'T PUT ME IN, by the guy with the ClubTrillion.com Blog, Mark Titus. |
03-23-2012, 03:45 AM | #667 |
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Finished reading Blackout and All Clear by Connie Willis - she's an amazing writer, that goes without saying from all the awards she's won (I think Blackout/All Clear were her 10th or 11th Hugo Award.) Anyway, these books follow on to the Oxford time travel universe she established in Doomsday Book, and are primarily focused on all aspects of London during the Blitz. She really did a ton of research on it and if you are at all interested in this topic or in some really well written books I recommend them.
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03-27-2012, 09:36 AM | #668 |
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Well, looks like i will be spending some cash on the Potter series in e-book
Associated Press- Harry Potter adventures go on sale in e-book form Home - Pottermore Shop
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03-27-2012, 10:30 AM | #669 |
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Too pricey for me for books i´ve allready read, maybe if they bundle them and cut off some of the price (like with the first 4 of Song of Ice and Fire).
I recently read Don´t put me in, Coach by former Ohio State walk-on Mark Titus. Thought it was a really amusing account of his time at Ohio State. He also chronicles the rest of his basketball career like HS and his AAU days (on the same team as Oden, Conley and Eric Gordon), but those are propably less interesting for most (me too, but i still think it´s only fair he gets to tell about that as well). Sometimes a little too much "frat humour" and for readers of his blog some things aren´t new, but still a very fun read and simply a very nice story for him to have. Walks a fine line as far as talking about former teammates, but does it in a self-ironic way and propably won´t get in trouble with them over it (other than maybe with Daequan Cook, he gets zinged pretty bad )
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03-27-2012, 10:40 AM | #670 |
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I've added Mark Titus' book to my list.
I just started reading the first Farseer book. I like it so far. |
03-27-2012, 10:58 AM | #671 |
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I am working on another Alastair Reynolds book, The House of Suns.
It is another of his standalones, I believe. It's very good so far. Really, for hard science fiction, Reynolds is an intriguing and inventive storyteller.
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04-12-2012, 01:05 AM | #672 | |
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Thanks for the recommendation, just finished this today. Great read, even if the first quarter felt a bit too "familiar" thanks to having read 11/22/63 - so many details are the same. After that though the books deviate from each other greatly. A an excellent idea and execution by Grimwood, will need to check out more of his stuff.
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04-12-2012, 09:53 AM | #673 | |
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Alright, just had the sample sent to the kindle, if I like the style, I will buy and read. Right now I am going back and re-reading all of Feists books in Chronological order so I can get my ducks in a row for A Crown Imperiled which released in March...
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04-12-2012, 10:51 AM | #674 |
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I was on vacation in Florida last week and finished reading the Spin series by Robert Charles Wilson - really good hard science fiction - the first book is Spin, the second is Axis, the third is Vortex. Each book follows slightly different characters but the overall concept is really good and I found them all very interesting.
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04-12-2012, 11:24 AM | #675 | |
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I am still reading this, but I accidentally left it at home once when I left for the day, so I started reading Lee Child's latest Jack Reacher novel to reach paperback The Affair. It's a prequel type of book, pretty solid so far, about Reacher's last days in the Army. I am alternating between The House of Suns and The Affair currently, which is odd in a way, because they are so different books.
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04-13-2012, 11:04 AM | #676 |
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I finally finished Wild Cards. I'm also halfway through Lev Grossman's The Magicians and getting ready to start listening to Earthseed. In May, my book club will be reading Hyperion, which I've read before, but am looking forward to rereading.
/tk
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04-25-2012, 10:13 PM | #677 |
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Looking for quick thoughts for a friend's request for a Science Fiction reading recommendation. (FWIW, she's got no real sci-fi background, but is an avid reader that is probably one of the "smarter" readers I know, very much into savoring a read)
Here's her request: "I'm looking for something really adventurous and not dark. On the edge of your seat, feel good type novel." Most of the sci-fi that comes to my mind is moreso thoughtful than feel good. So I"m reaching out to improve my recommendation. What ya got for me FOFC?
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04-25-2012, 10:23 PM | #678 |
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I read Divergent based upon recommendations. It hooked me, lets just say I finished it in 2 days and I managed to get very little sleep because I stayed up so late to read it.
Insurgent comes out in a few days and I will purchase it then.
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04-25-2012, 10:37 PM | #679 | |
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City and the Stars by Arthur C Clarke?
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04-25-2012, 10:57 PM | #680 |
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The American Republic, Volume I by Richard Hofstadter. Yeah, it's a textbook. But I found it for .50 at a yard sale and I have a soft spot for history. I've actually made it up to page 275 (over a fair span of time).
I still need to get my hands on another copy of Slaughterhouse Five.
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04-25-2012, 11:17 PM | #681 |
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From reading this thread, I decided to read Turtledove's How Few Remain starting in January and was hooked enough to read the next ten books that followed it in the timeline (called the Southern Victory Series, the next ten books covered the Great War, the interwar period, and then the unnamed "Second Great War").
Overall, the books were generally good reads but more for the story and the characters and the mix between reality and fiction as opposed to the writing itself. I became annoyed having to read about certain things over and over (like USA soldiers' rations being better than those at that CSA soldiers got and how bad USA cigarettes were compared to CSA cigarettes). These things would be repeated a few times in each novel and after reading so many of them over a few months it got tiresome. Once the Second Great War began, I also think Turtledove could have added a regular CSA solider/pilot/seaman sooner than he did, there were several USA characters like that but for awhile the only CSA characters were the president, the spy, and the boss of the prisoner camp. Now I have started The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet by David Mitchell but I am not far enough into the book to judge it other than to say I find the setting interesting. |
04-26-2012, 11:58 AM | #682 | |
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Heh...sounds like she would be fine reading some Asimov. Only problem he generally wrote in series, rather individual books.
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04-27-2012, 05:18 PM | #683 | |
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Philip Dick maybe? Though I am not sure about the feel good aspect that she is looking for. |
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04-28-2012, 02:10 PM | #684 | |
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Last edited by tyketime : 04-28-2012 at 02:10 PM. |
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04-28-2012, 08:24 PM | #685 | |
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I just finished Earthseed by Pamela Sargent. It's a Young Adult book and the cover is obviously trying to capitalize on the Twilight phenomenon, but it's actually a really good book. It's about a group of kids who were born and grew up on an interstellar ship, the DNA that created them sent away from Earth as a last hope for humankind. There were some interesting twists along the narrative and I found myself not wanting to stop reading. Another one I often recommend is Rendezvous with Rama. And Ender's Game is my typical science fiction recommendation. There's a really good thread in my book club (a science fiction and fantasy book club) about books you would recommend to someone new to or scared of the genre. It's got a ton of great recommendations (and some not so good ones), you might check it out (or have her do so): http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...d-of-the-genre /tk
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04-28-2012, 09:35 PM | #686 |
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I just finished James Salter's A Sport and a Pastime. I really had no idea what it was about other them reading gushing reviews of Salter's prose. It was a struggle. Oh well, you have that. On to the next one. Debating between
Cutting For Stone by Abraham Verghese A Conspiracy of Paper by David Liss Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clark Last edited by Scoobz0202 : 04-28-2012 at 09:36 PM. |
04-28-2012, 09:38 PM | #687 |
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Finally getting around to reading Fight Club...
TK, I might take up the Earthseed book too...
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04-28-2012, 09:42 PM | #688 | |
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I didn't care for Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell. From other reviews, and discussion at my book club, it seems to be a love-it or hate-it book. I thought it took too long to have anything actually happen and a lot of what was going on was written in tiring prose. I listened to the audiobook and couldn't wait for it to be done. /tk
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04-28-2012, 10:01 PM | #689 |
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I loved Jonathan Strange, but it definitely wouldn't appeal to everyone.
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04-28-2012, 10:52 PM | #690 |
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That's the vibe I've received from reading about it. I may start reading it side by side with one of the other two. I've read and heard nothing but positive things for Cutting For Stone both online and through acquaintances, but I read Whiskey Rebels from David Liss a few years back and meant to check out some of his other work. Oh, the tough decisions.
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04-29-2012, 12:26 AM | #691 | |
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Thanks. Next up.
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04-29-2012, 10:43 AM | #692 |
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I second the vote for Replay. That's a fun read. The execution wasn't as great as I hoped from how it started, but the concept was so interesting. It's a book I still think about and talk about years and years later.
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04-29-2012, 10:56 AM | #693 |
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I picked up A Conspiracy of Paper by Donald Liss at the Green Valley Book Fair, and it is an excellent book. The historical touches are there with a nice mix of fictional characters with real people and situations.
I'm looking forward to his other books.
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04-29-2012, 06:45 PM | #694 | |
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Well, I finally wrote my review for it, it's at GR. And I posted my review for Wild Cards, too. At some point both reviews I think are going to go on SFFaudio but I'm not sure when. I think people are paying attention to Earthseed due to a similarity with The Hunger Games. There are some similarities, though Earthseed is a very different plot. But both are YA, both have strong female leads, both are about kids. There are two other books in the Seed trilogy, which I haven't read yet. I'll be reading the next in the series, Farseed, after I finish a re-read of Hyperion with my book club. I've read that Farseed isn't nearly as good as Earthseed. It was also written some 25 years after Earthseed. Or at least, published almost 25 years later (Earthseed was 1983, Farseed 2007). /tk
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04-29-2012, 08:01 PM | #695 | |
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I had a couple of issues with the logic of some of the situations, but I guess that's normal for "time travel" type of story. Either way, really enjoyed it and my GF is hooked on it too at the moment.
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04-30-2012, 11:44 AM | #696 |
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Has anyone got some suggestions for good books depicting alternate history with and without fantasy elements ? And maybe books putting a different spin on folk stories/legends ?
Prefereably non-series (or at least short series, not 5,6 or 10 parts) or at least series where the order is loose. I know i am picky
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04-30-2012, 05:43 PM | #697 |
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I know of the Wheel of Time and A Song of Ice and Fire. Are there any other epic fantasy novel series out there? I think I know of a few trilogies, but are there any that are 6-10 books long? Are there any other epic series that aren't fantasy?
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04-30-2012, 06:34 PM | #698 | |
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Frank Herbert - Dune (main novel that could serve as a standalone and 5 sequels, plus a host of other spinoffs, sequels and whatnots by his son and Kevin Anderson) . Basically the equvalent to Tolkien or Martin in the Science Fiction sector, although it could just as well be labled Fantasy and it would fit just as much. Kind of similar to "Song of Ice and Fire" in that it really focusses on the character and the political/social stuff going on (Dune is a tad heavier on Politics though and adds religion into the mix) and the SF/Fantasy elements are tagging along rather than dominating the books. Star Wars copied a ton of stuff out of there as well. Stephen King - Dark Tower Series (many different influences, part fantasy, part SF, part Western, a bit of horror. Not allways consistently good imo, but extremely good for considerable parts) Jim Butcher - Dresden Files (crossover between fantasy and crime story) Jim Butcher - Codex Alera (this is more traditional fantasy) non-fantasy, mostly historical series : - Saxon Stories by Bernard Cornwell. 6 Books to date (near the end but at least 1 and maybe 2 books still to come), Chronicels the life of a fictional warrior in 9th century england, main character is constantly torn between loyalty to the english and friendship with the danish invaders. Also the Sharpe series by him is definitely worth checking out, although that wasn´t my cup of tea as i don´t find the time it plays in all that interesting -Ramses Series by Christian Jacq. Series chronicling the life of Ramses II (THE great pharao). Not allways historically acurate, but still very interesting. - Cicero Series by Robert Harris (Imperium is the first, Conspirata the 2nd, the 3rd is schedules to be released late this year). Well, it´s again in the title - Colleen McCullough : Masters of Rome . Describes the downfall of the roman republic, goes from about 110 BC to 27 BC. Not exactly politically correct in that it gives certain character the benefit of the doubt way too much, but that´s not taking a way from it being a kick ass story.
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05-11-2012, 11:48 AM | #699 |
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Kindle's Lending Library will be adding all seven Harry Potter books on June 19.
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05-26-2012, 03:40 PM | #700 |
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Just finished The Rising Tide by Jeff Shaara. Good book about the Allied campaign in North Africa and Sicily. I'm going to jump into Only Time Will Tell by Jeffrey Archer. He tells great stories.
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