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Last book you've read

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boco

Commodore
Commodore
I hope some of you like to read.
If you want, share with us what you're read, and say a few words about the book

I go first: Carlos Ruiz Zafon: Las luces de septiembre( september's lights)
It's about a mad toy inventor, that gave away his shaddow, and the shaddow tries to kill everyone that he starts to have feelings for
 
Jeffery Deaver - Carte Blanche:

(very minor and vague spoilers below, but you never know what some people will consider spoilers)



This is the newest James Bond novel, that reboots Bond and updates him for the 21st century, with him now being a veteran of Afghanistan rather than WW2. All the usual Bond players are there with some tweaks (especially Q, who is now of Indian descent and always called by name, never by codename or the name of the branch), and there are some decent villains in Noah and the Irishman with a comparatively weaker villain with less logical motives introduced later. There's an unresolved subplot involving the climbing deaths of Bond's parents.

Fans of elaborate Bond gadgets of old might be disappointed to learn that the bulk of the gadgets here are (while nifty) mostly just supercharged iPhone apps and at one point an inhaler/camera. Bond's fascination with fast cars (the Bentley is featured prominently), good food, elaborate drink orders, and women are all still intact however, with a more modern sensibility toward the latter (no Connery-style slapping women around and Bond is actually concerned with the consequences of potentially sleeping with a coworker who has just broken off a relationship).

Deaver, typically being a mystery/thriller writer (The Bone Collector, et al.), is entirely too concerned with twists and reversals that are often very contrived or obvious after the same trick had been pulled many time before. There must have been eight or nine times where the book implies that one thing happened and then suddenly it's revealed that the complete opposite occurred instead. It became tired after a while.

Overall it was still enjoyable though, and I'd give it a "B."
 
I recently finished Burroughs' Tarzan At The Earth's Core. It was enjoyable in that Burroughs way, but a bit odd. It was mostly a random sequence of events and coincidences against a backdrop of a flimsy plot that was resolved almost as an afterthought (and made David Innes look a bit weak in the bargain). But the flying Stegosaurus alone made it worthwhile. :D

I'm now reading The Plain Man by Steve Englehart, the third book in his Max August series.
 
March Violets by Philip Kerr - it's a noir detective novel, somewhat in the style of Dashiell Hammet or Raymond Chandler, set in 1936 Berlin. In addition to the usual murder mystery detective novel features, it deals with the additional aspects of all of the action taking place in a Berlin increasingly controlled by the National Socialists and preparing for the Olympics (and possibly war.) Interesting mix of genres. I quite enjoyed it; so much so that I am now reading the follow-up, The Pale Criminal, which is actually getting better and better as I read it. You can definitely see Kerr getting his "sea legs", in terms of the writing style and storytelling, as these 2 novels progress, and I've enjoyed watching that process.

Kerr apparently carries the protagonist, in a series of novels, into the 1950s. I'm looking foward to seeing where this ride takes me. :mallory:
 
It was a book about a Triblinka survivor, which I finished on Sunday. I'm now reading the 5th book in the Dexter series.
 
The Maze Runner by James Dashner. Well, I've actually been trying to read it since November. I'm enjoying it a lot, but I keep getting distracted by other things, and then I forget about it. I need to just sit down this weekend and finish it.
 
I hope some of you like to read.
If you want, share with us what you're read, and say a few words about the book

I go first: Carlos Ruiz Zafon: Las luces de septiembre( september's lights)
It's about a mad toy inventor, that gave away his shaddow, and the shaddow tries to kill everyone that he starts to have feelings for
That description reminds me of Gogol's 'The Nose', though that was more satirical than the 'September's Lights' sounds. These days I've started 'The Tenant of Wildfell Hall' by Anne Bronte. It is quite enjoyable so far but I am only in the early chapters yet.
 
Consider the Lobster, an essay collection by the late David Foster Wallace. It was superb, but on the downside: footnotes.
 
the last book i finished was the VGR novel, Children of the Storm, the latest by Kristen Beyer in the re-relaunch. (Christie Golden wrote four VGR post-finale novels. word of mouth says they're shit)

i really enjoyed it, it's continuing the story of Voyager's return to the Delta Quadrant as flagship of a fleet of nine ships and follows up on a plot point from the Destiny trilogy. great stuff.

now reading ST: Vanguard Declassified the latest in the series of TOS-era set books, with all new characters. this one's four shorter stories in one book. only started it yesterday, but still good so far.
 
I just finished Star Trek: Enterprise: Kobayashi Maru. I'm enjoying the ENT relaunch so far, but I'm taking a break from it for a while before I dive into The Romulan War: Beneath the Raptor's Wings.

I've also been reading Atlas Shrugged for a while now. That is one LONG book.
 
the last book i finished was the VGR novel, Children of the Storm, the latest by Kristen Beyer in the re-relaunch. (Christie Golden wrote four VGR post-finale novels. word of mouth says they're shit)

i really enjoyed it, it's continuing the story of Voyager's return to the Delta Quadrant as flagship of a fleet of nine ships and follows up on a plot point from the Destiny trilogy. great stuff.

Yeah, the Kirsten Beyer Voyager Relaunch books have been quite a step-up from the mediocre offerings of Christie Golden. Children of the Storm was outstanding.
 
I hope some of you like to read.
If you want, share with us what you're read, and say a few words about the book

I go first: Carlos Ruiz Zafon: Las luces de septiembre( september's lights)
It's about a mad toy inventor, that gave away his shaddow, and the shaddow tries to kill everyone that he starts to have feelings for
That description reminds me of Gogol's 'The Nose', though that was more satirical than the 'September's Lights' sounds. These days I've started 'The Tenant of Wildfell Hall' by Anne Bronte. It is quite enjoyable so far but I am only in the early chapters yet.

I suppose I should read The nose...I'm in the mood for some comedy
 
Just finished Flash and Bones by Kathy Reichs, number 14 in the Dr. Temperance Brennan series. Not her best, but still better than anything the show Bones has. (and I like the show, it just hardly has any resemblance to the books!)

Next up is Reginald Hill's new one, The Woodcutter.
 
I'm reading 'Inheritance' by Tara Palmer-Tompinson. I've no idea what it's about but it cures insomnia. For those not famliar with TPT let's just say the ghost wasn't even a writer :D
 
Just re-read The Lost Continent by Bill Bryson, in which he drives around America being alternately happy and curmudgeonly.
 
Just re-read The Lost Continent by Bill Bryson, in which he drives around America being alternately happy and curmudgeonly.

I adore Bill Bryson, he would be a major guest at my imaginary dinner party. Just about to start his "At Home".
I just love the way he writes, it's like listening to a friend.
 
My Soul to Take to take by Yrsa Sigurdardottir. Murder mystery set in Iceland. An architect is found dead near a remote Icelandic hotel. The hotel owner and some of the locals believe that the murderer is a ghost and is up the hotel owner's lawyer, Thora Gudmundsdottir, to find out the truth. 4/5.
 
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