Only because I'm freaking trying not to double post. Okay, third time's the charm. Next time, if there's a two or more week gap, I'm double posting, forget the rules.BBkat wrote:Wow, this place is really dead.
Welcome new member!ThrowingAces wrote:I love books, let me in!
Username:ThrowingAces
Favourite books/authors/genres:I'm all over the place, I like Fyodor Dostyevsky (probably spelled that wrong)... mostly historical non-fiction or realistic-fiction
Recommend ONE book! Tell us why it's great! From the Corner of His Eye- Dean Koontz, because that is an amazing book; not really creepy like most of his other books, but it gives a different view of the world
I'm taking Intro to Russian Lit next quarter! We're reading The Brothers Karamazov and Anna Karenina. I read Crime and Punishment senior year and loved it, so I'm really excited to be taking this class. (Thank goodness for being forced to switch from macro to micro econ and mixing up my entire schedule) It's actually the largest and most popular class at my college, taking up to 600 people and it always fills up.
Have you read The Devil in the White City? It's like the book that comes to mind whenever someone says historical non-fiction. It has a great narrative rather than expository style to it.
Is it really that much better than his other books? I read The Good Guy by Dean Koontz for my high school book club, and it was really awful.
Okay, and now on to my own recent readings.
I dropped The Invisible Arab by Marwan Bishara even though I was only like, fifty pages away from finishing. It was interesting learning about the changes going on in the Arab world, but...I don't know, it read like a long wikipedia article. It was all over the place and it threw way too many names and random factoids at you all at once. (I guess it wouldn't have been "too many names and random factoids" if I had been following the world news like I should, but I think a book should be able to stand on its own better than that.)
And then to detox, I read a bunch of smutty romance novels. Not going to comment much on them except it actually got annoying how many sex scenes they are. I don't like reading preteen romance novels because they're too innocuous, but it's equally terrible when the two main characters act like cat in heat the entire book and can't prove to the reader that they're actually a good fit outside of the physical stuff.
Right now, I'm in the middle of The Codex of Alera book 1, written by Jim Butcher (famous for The Dresden Files). It's so...cliché. I thought if this is an author who can come up with something as cool as The Dresden Files, surely his epic fantasy novels can't be that bad, and it's indeed not that bad, but oh is it ordinary. I'm about half way through, and you have the typical headstrong, brave female lead, the farm/shepherd boy who develops extraordinary powers, the country is threatened from without and within, blah, blah, blah. And then you have the typical elemental powers. There hasn't been a single unique that has stood out about the book so far. Why are epic fantasies so damn formulaic? From Eragon to The Wheel of Time to The Sword of Shannara, and now The Codex Alera, you change the character names, a couple side characters, tweak the magic system slightly, and voila, another epic fantasy novel. And it wouldn't be such a problem if I liked the mold, but I don't like the mold. It's getting very...moldy, pardon the pun.
The reason i didn't pick up another Dresden Files novel instead was because I checked out Buried in the Sky, a nonfiction book about climbing K2 (one of the highest mountains in the world and more dangerous than Everest), and I figured I'd be depressed enough without the Dresden Files adding to that.