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angelofboox

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Posts posted by angelofboox

  1. I really like these books! I read The Amulet of Samarkand at the recommendation of a friend, and didn't have high hopes - but couldn't put it down! I think a lot of bad children's fantasy got published that year and it sort of got lost among that. One thing that's really good about it is that it never seems to talk down to the reader (presumably child).

     

     

    When I got to Ptolemy's Gate, I was really curious about The Other Place...and I didn't think it was going to go there. But I was so glad Stroud decided to take that leap. The ending stunned me a bit, but it certainly wasn't a *bad* ending...

     

  2. Finally finished Something Rotten! I enjoyed it much more than Lost In A Good Book, I think, though can't put my finger on why. Also didn't notice the [relevance of] the title until I was about halfway through. Silly me!

     

     

    What are your thoughts on First Among Sequels? Should I read it sooner rather than later?

  3. Ooh, ooh! I'm indian (by ethnicity, not nationality) and we have an entire shelf or two devoted to indian books, because my mother reads them a lot. I read A Suitable Boy when I was 15 and it was great, but I haven't read it since (maybe I should, I think the politics went a bit over my head a the time). It certainly wasn't the first I've read, and there are a lot we own that I still haven't read, including The White Tiger, The Glass Palace, Brick Lane (does that count?), Six Suspects...etc etc.

     

    A few I really like are The Inscrutable Americans (really funny - I recommend if you want some comedy!), God of Small Things, Family Matters....

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  4. I'm so excited that the next book Scorpia Rising is out next Thursday, although I'm a little sad that it is the last in the series, but Horowitz has always said he would end the series while Alex was still a teenager so that the books were still about a child in a mans world, and I'm glad he's sticking to that.

     

    Oh, I haven't thought about this for ages and now it's coming out! I'll be sure to buy it, I'm excited about reading it. It's been a while since I read the last book, and I haven't re-read the series that much, so I always forget what's happened a bit - but the books are still so enjoyable. I almost don't want it to end well for Alex because...much as he's always wanted to return to being a "normal teenager" it's difficult to imagine that happening.

  5. His Dark Materials is certainly not just for teenagers, give it a try!

     

     

    If you like crime fiction, perhaps you should try China Miéville's The City and The City, which is....well fantasy, I guess, but the story has crime elements and it's set in a world like ours but with one specific city being the basis of a fantastical phenomenon. It's difficult for me to explain, but read it and you'll understand!

  6. I'm currently reading The Well of Lost Plots, and enjoying it. However, it can be a bit like reading A Clockwork Orange, half the words are made up! I really liked The Eyre Affair, but I'm not sure I enjoyed the sequels as much, because in a sense, you almost know what to expect...and even though the literary references (both subtle and overt) are a delight to come across, I do sometimes feel like I'm being battered over the head with them.

  7. Hi everyone :)

     

    I've recently taken over the biggest His Dark Materials and Philip Pullman website on the internets, and we could do with some new members/visitors! The site is a place for fans to get up-to-date news, reviews and information, discuss the books, and create a community; we have a forum and chat and it would good to see some Pullman fans from bcf over there!

     

    So if anyone's interested, get over to BridgeToTheStars.net, we're relaunching and rebuilding the website at the moment, so some of the website is in construction, but we have some really exciting things planned so hopefully some people might be interested :blush:

  8. Finished London, and wrote my thoughts on it so thought I'd paste them here :D There aren't actually any spoilers, just put it under the spoiler tag for length.

     

     

    I've just finished reading Rutherfurd's London, it's taken me a while to get through. For those who don't know about the book, let me briefly explain. London is a historical novel, which takes the reader through the history of London, beginning in Roman times and ending in more-or-less present day. Each chapter is set in a different time period, and in general the characters are somehow linked (usually being descendants) to characters from previous chapters.

     

    I found that I stopped and started reading a lot, perhaps I found some chapters very easy and interesting to read, and others more difficult to get through. In total, it's taken me two months to finish. The sheer amount of characters and length of the book means that they've already got a little jumbled in my head, but a few memorable characters do stand out...so perhaps that is somewhat of an achievement for Rutherfurd. I think, if a book is going to be so long, I would prefer characters that I can really find out about. By reading such an extensive piece of text based on the same set of characters (let's take, for instance, A Suitable Boy) I think a reader becomes so much more invested in them, and one can feel a lot more absorbed by their stories. London offers glimpses of a multitude of characters and time periods, so that one never really finds out too much about any particular character...there just isn't enough time. So I think it's almost better to view the book as a collection of short stories, than a novel.

     

    Being a Londoner brings an added extra to reading this book, the names and places are so familiar, and it's so interesting to read about the history (and etymology) of the places I visit on a regular basis. I've always enjoyed reading books set in London, for various reasons. For one, I think it seems to instil a sense of pride in being from London...so often I get told that people hate it because it's far too busy and crowded and noisy, and everybody hurries about (it's a city!) and nobody talks to each other. But on the other hand, I think it's easy for people to forget how great London is, and how colourful a history it has. The truth is, I like living here...and I like being reminded that I like living here, because in so many ways...London is awesome.

     

    I'm not usually a reader of historical fiction, for some reason it's just never been a genre that I can get really interested in. Sometimes when I was reading the book, I was unsure what was fiction and what was taken from fact, and that annoyed me.

     

    It skipped over quite a few things that would have been vastly interesting to read about, and at times that could be a little frustrating. Some important historical events were mentioned in passing or glossed over that I think I'd really have enjoyed reading about in more detail. However, understandably, the book is already 1300 pages long...spanning 2000 years...and the time periods covered by each individual chapter could (and no doubt do) have entire books dedicated to the events that happened in them. You might tell me I should go and read history books about those events then, if I really want to know about them, but I won't.

     

    All in all, it was a good read...but London wasn't really my preferred kind of book. If it were me writing it, I'd have done it so differently. But it wasn't me writing it. I do appreciate the amount of research and history that the book did get in, but I still felt like the whole thing was lacking in feeling for me, perhaps just because I couldn't get as engrossed in the stories and characters as I wanted to.

     

  9. I started London a couple of months ago, and I can't believe it's taken me so long to read it. I found that I kept reading it in stops and starts...for a while I'd rush through great chunks of it, and then stop for a bit.

     

    Currently, I'm nearing the end...it's been a great journey getting there. Have about a hundred or so pages left, I think - so may come back and review it once I read that! I feel like London often tends to exist as its own entity compared to the rest of the country, and it's always interesting reading about familiar places. What's it like for non-Londoners reading it?

     

    Does anyone know how his other books compare to London?

  10. I read the book due to its recent film incarnation. The book was good (I'm a huge Wilde lover, though I prefer the plays to this novel), the film was awful. Though I think my friends and I suspected as much before we went; we tottered along for the eye candy mainly.

     

    I kept laughing during it in the cinema (I have an unfortunate habit of doing this at inappropriate times) and at the climax of the film I had an uncontrollable giggling fit, during which I think the entire cinema managed to hear me splutter the words "but he looks like Voldemort"...

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