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Karsa Orlong

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Everything posted by Karsa Orlong

  1. Ooh! Ooh! Me too! I just made a journey up to the BIG Waterstones at Piccadilly Circus and got The Devil's Star and The Redeemer. I would've got The Snowman as well but I'm annoyed cos it's got a different style cover from the others
  2. Cool! I wish I could write as well as he does and play the guitar (although not at the same time, obviously!). I made the schoolboy error of starting Nemesis at about 11pm last night. Am feeling very tired this morning I read two other books in between The Redbreast and this, then I just couldn't wait any longer
  3. No, I have to admit that it hasn't achieved that. I know that if I'd really enjoyed it I would have been straight down to Waterstones on Monday to get the other two. Might be just me, though, because it has been getting very good reviews.

  4. Hi Kylie, just to let you know I read the Charles Stross book, The Fuller Memorandum. It was fun - well written and full of ideas - but I didn't realise it was the third book in a series, so there was a lot going on that went over my head!

  5. Finished The Fuller Memorandum by Charles Stross. 'Twas okay, but my enjoyment was slightly dampened because I didn't realise, until after I bought it, that it's the third book in a series Now reading Lee Child's first Jack Reacher novel, Killing Floor I've read several of the others but not this one, for some reason
  6. Yeah, all's good here, thanks. More than happy to have a read - you've got the email address?

  7. Hi Lauren, how's the writing going? Did you get any further with your investigations into James Ellroy?

  8. Just bought 61 Hours, Lee Child's latest Jack reacher paperback. Half price 'Book of The Week' in Smiths
  9. I bought Nemesis yesterday. I was tempted to buy all the rest as well, but forced myself not to. I'm really looking forward to it but I'm determined to read some other books first otherwise I'll rush through all the Nesbo books too quickly and I'd rather savour them. It is sitting on the shelf taunting me, though Mac, there's one particular plot thread that I suspect carries over into Nemesis, so it'll be interesting to know if/how it affects your enjoyment of the book. Without turning the thread completely over to Larsson, I agree about Lisbeth - brilliant character. My only problem with The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo was that she felt like the only real character in it - everyone else just seemed to be there to provide info dumps or for Mikael to jump in bed with! I have the others ready to read but Nesbo's dragged my attention away from them, so not sure when I'll get to them. I'm curious as to why the first two Harry Hole novels, The Bat Man and The Cockroaches, haven't been translated into English? From reading interviews with Nesbo, I understand they were far simpler affairs, and that with The Redbreast he kicked everything up a few notches, maybe that's why? It would still be interesting to read them, to fill in some of the background, as Harry's adventures in Australia and Thailand are mentioned a few times in The Redbreast.
  10. Blast Waterstones and their 3-for-2's. I went in to get Jo Nesbo's Nemesis and Robert Harris's Imperium but, as the latter was in the 3-for-2 deal, I naturally had to find two other books to get, so also ended up with Martyr by Rory Clements and The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson. I do try to stay away from bookshops, honestly, but buying books seems to be a bit like a drug at the moment
  11. Yeah, I read Neverwhere recently and thought it was fab
  12. Had a quick search and couldn't see a thread about this Norwegian author. I've just finished reading The Redbreast and am very impressed. I know there's at least one other person here who's read his work, so what do you think? Here's the blurb for The Redbreast, courtesy of his website: First thing to say, I thought the characters were great - flawed, witty and very human. The plot itself is a wonderfully tangled web with plenty of twists and turns, and I found that the non-linear structure - which jumps between events in the 'present' day (2000) and World War II - added an extra layer to an already intriguing story. There are also a few real edge-of-your-seat passages that he carries off brilliantly. I saw a poster on the tube this morning promoting Nesbo as 'The next Stieg Larsson', which I found slightly patronising. I can see where the comparison comes from but, based on this and The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, Nesbo's writing is a cut above, in my opinion. Can't wait to read more You can read the opening of The Redbreast here: Amazon.com
  13. Ah, that's interesting, thanks, cos I was looking at those as well. Someone also recommended Colleen McCullough's 'Masters of Rome' series to me - have you read any of those? Must admit, I'm kind of put off by the fact that she wrote The Thorn Birds ... ! I'm going to pop into Waterstones and pick up Imperium (amongst other things!) today. Might get Pompeii as well, or one of the Iggulden's you mentioned. Just as I started working my way through my TBR pile, too
  14. Muse tickets have finally arrived - yay!

    1. Coffin Nail

      Coffin Nail

      [sings]And you're feeeeling goooood! ;-)

    2. Karsa Orlong

      Karsa Orlong

      LOL! Definitely, cos (ahem) time was running out ;-)

  15. Jo Nesbo is evil! I've just been reading a particular sequence of events in The Redbreast - one of those sequences where he telegraphs what's going to happen and then proceeds to wring every last drop of suspense out of it. Brilliantly written, perfectly orchestrated. He's evil I tell you!
  16. Sign Of The Times by Queensryche
  17. It's next on my list of books to buy, that's for sure! I didn't actually say that you don't need to read the first book, just that I still enjoyed Lustrum immensely even without having read Imperium, as you can tell from my comments, above. I'm certainly looking forward to an enhanced re-read of Lustrum at some point, even though I've only just finished it.
  18. It was great fun! Very inventive and slightly insane. I didn't like it quite as much as The Stars My Destination, but that's a pretty high bar to jump over, imo Going to read the Charles Stross book after I've finished my current read, so I'll let you know what it's like
  19. Well at least you're giving it a go You obviously need to drink more Robert Harris coffee
  20. Since last posting I've read Lustrum by Robert Harris and The Demolished Man by Alfred Bester, and am now about 250 pages into The Redbreast by Jo Nesbo
  21. The blurb, courtesy of Amazon: I bought this on a bit of a whim. I didn't realise that it was the second book in a trilogy and, fortunately, it didn't matter because it stands alone perfectly well. I'd been seeing the posters for it regularly on my tube travels and, having been watching Spartacus: Blood & Sand (not that that tv show particularly reflects history!), my curiosity about Ancient Rome had been piqued. So, when I saw this book in Waterstones' 3 for 2 offer it leaped out at me. Lustrum tells the story of five years in the life of Cicero, from his year as Consul to the following years on the Senate, and his manoeuvring and battles with all the people named in the blurb above, particularly Caesar. I don't know a lot about those times - and someone who has studied the period might find fault with this book, I really don't know - but I found it absolutely enthralling. From the first page to the last I had a real struggle to put it down. Harris tells the story in first person from the viewpoint of Cicero's secretary, Tiro. His writing style flows beautifully and gives the story an energy and pace that I had not expected at all. With all the conspiracies and backstabbing that goes on, and the number of characters involved, it could quite easily have been confusing - but it isn't. The characters leap off the page and you can imagine that this is how they really were. Naturally, Cicero's speeches play a large part in the novel and Harris works them in seamlessly. Considering it's a book essentially about politics it is amazingly tense and exciting and - most importantly - easy to follow. I found this to be a brilliant, thrilling novel. If it has done one thing, it has made me hungry to find out more about the period in which it is set, and the people it portrays, and I don't think you can pay a historical novel a higher compliment than that. Highly recommended
  22. Apart from C J Sansom's Shardlake books, the novel that springs immediately to mind is Wolf Hall which, being about Thomas Cromwell, features Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn quite prominently. I thought it was brilliant
  23. I finished A Maiden's Grave last night. It was my first Deaver. At the start I thought I wasn't going to like it. Then it got very tense and exciting and I loved it - right up until the last 30 pages where it seemed, to me, to go completely off the rails. All the way through something was niggling at the back of my mind, one particular thread that none of the good-guy characters seemed to pick up on when it was 'smack-you-in-the-face' obvious. Even though that thread turned out to be the big twist I still thought he executed it well, but then he opted for a Hollywood style ending which I found very disappointing, which is a real shame because up until that point I thought it was brilliant. Still, one of the best thrillers I've read for a while, so I shall definitely look into getting some more Deaver
  24. I finished Jeffery Deaver's A Maiden's Grave last night (well, early this morning, actually!). Next up is Lustrum by Robert Harris.
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