Elesthor wrote:A Song of Ice and Fire by GRR MArtin is really really good, It's a bit long (more than 12 books) but it is one of the best fantasy novel i've ever read =)
hm? I don't think he even finished volume 5 by now.
Elesthor wrote:A Song of Ice and Fire by GRR MArtin is really really good, It's a bit long (more than 12 books) but it is one of the best fantasy novel i've ever read =)
Helel wrote:serapis wrote:The first 2 books of martin's series were good, but then they lost my interest. Reading about character after character you're given no reason to care about gets old, really fast. Still, in the hopes that the series would get better, I pressed on to feast for crows. This...was a mistake as evident by the pointless medieval lesbian bondage I can only assume was put in for some sort of fan service.
I can remember some sadistic rape scenes described in minute detail from this series, but no lesbian bondage. In which chapter was this?
serapis wrote:The first 2 books of martin's series were good, but then they lost my interest. Reading about character after character you're given no reason to care about gets old, really fast. Still, in the hopes that the series would get better, I pressed on to feast for crows. This...was a mistake as evident by the pointless medieval lesbian bondage I can only assume was put in for some sort of fan service.
Haven't touched the books since.
kirkmc wrote:I read about 3/4 of the first book - like 800 pages or something - before I came to the conclusion that I didn't care enough about the characters to want to read more. I didn't get to the medieval lesbian bondage part, apparently.
flOvermind wrote:I'm a bit surprised that nobody has mentioned Dune by Frank Herbert yet. Ok, it's not exactly recent, but it's still among my favourite SciFi series so I thought I'd mention it.
Sadly, I never got around to reading the whole series. Perhaps I'll resume it once I finished with my current "to read" backlog
I read the first three books of the six book series. The second book was a bit disappointing in comparison with the first, but it's still a good book. The first and especially the third are really great. I'm not really sure how I managed to stop after that one...
Regarding writing quality, I couldn't really tell, since I only read the German translations of the books.
freegame wrote:I'm reading Perdido Street Station from China Miéville.
It's hard to describe the genre exactly but it definitely has a lot of SiFi and Fantasy elements.
I mostly read (historical) fantasy books, I'm not a huge fan of SiFi books (some writers that wrote books I like are: Pullman, Meyer, Novik, paolini and Hobb) but this is a nice book unlike any book I have read before.
sumiyaka wrote:schultz wrote:kirkmc wrote:(snip)
"The man in black fled across the desert and the Gunslinger followed."
Best opening line in genre fiction. (If you've read the entire series, you understand why.)
Just one more recommendation for me to pick this up and finally read it. I'll get there eventually.
The first book "drags" a bit the first time you read it. But, its worth it to get into the series. Others I know have read the series more than once, and say the first book is better the second time around.
ethanb wrote:Isn't it required to read the first book again immediately after seeing how the seventh one turns out?
*whistles innocently*