jamieanderson1968
Well-Known Member
The only SW book I have ready is Splinter way back in the last century. Oh and the space zombies one. I like a good zombie book.
The only SW book I have ready is Splinter way back in the last century. Oh and the space zombies one. I like a good zombie book.
There is a space zombie Star Wars book?The only SW book I have ready is Splinter way back in the last century. Oh and the space zombies one. I like a good zombie book.
Death Troopers - a prison barge stumbles across a "missing" Imperial Star Destroyer, but it is far from empty.There is a space zombie Star Wars book?
I've read most of the books in the above pictures in the last 5-6 years, and other than the Jedi Academy Trilogy (which is just important plot-wise) all of the above books are good, with stuff like the X-Wing series and anything Zahn writes being some of the high points of Star Wars as a multimedia franchise (imo). I've also read my fair share of bad books during that time (stuff like Children of the Jedi and The Crystal Star come to mind), but have since dropped all those off in those little community libraries you see on the street. I'd go to bat for any of the books I've kept.As a kid of the 90s I was squarely in the Kevin J Anderson / Michael A Stackpole era of Star Wars novels. Every now and then I've flirted with revisiting them, but have a feeling I'd be underwhelmed. Maybe one day I'll dip a toe into the current era.
The Heir to the Empire trilogy is very new-reader friendly and known as a great jumping on point for a reason. Gave them to my step-dad a couple christmas's ago and as avid Star Wars fan since '77, but someone whos consumed zero material outside of the films, he's head over heels for them. Started the expanded universe really; they're very cinematic books.I've heard nothing but amazing things about the Thrawn books but haven't read 'em yet, myself.
I need to read more Leonard. I read quite a few when the Get Shorty sequel came out. Sadly I really cannot remember what I have read and not read. I dislike mysteries but love a good crime novel.Book 1: Great Expectations, by Charles Dickens
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Great Expectations? Great book!
Despite his cultural ubiquity, I've never really read any Dickens prior to this. I've been meaning to, and decided to go with this, which is on the shorter end (for Dickens). I generally knew the plot due to exposure from Wishbone, but had a cracking time reading it nonetheless. Don't know what to say; guy can write. I want to pick up a few more Dickens this year; my goal is two books a month, and based on my current pace I should be able to devote a month or two to a single book.
I'm open to anyone's Dickens recommends!
Book 2: Swag, by Elmore Leonard
(apologies for the downright awful cover)
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Every now and then I pick up some Leonard; he writes snappy dialogue and driving plots. I really gobbled this one down, too; I went to Florida last week and basically finished this on the flight there.
Elevator pitch: a used-car salesman teams up with a petty crook after catching him trying to steal a car from the lot. The salesman develops a dozen rules for armed robbery, mostly revolving around being very careful with your money/company, as well as only robbing sure things and walking away the moment things seem dicey. (This reminds me of an episode of the superlative Criminal podcast, in which a man goes on a bank robbery spree, just to see if he can; he goes in unarmed, gives the clerk a note asking for the cash drawer, and just walks away with or without the money).
Lo and behold, the two criminals turn against one another. Ironically, it's the author of the rules who begins throwing them out the window, leading to tensions. Lots of Leonard's novels have been made into movies, and this could be a pretty fun one.
Book 3: Pnin, by Vladimir Nabokov
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Another goal of mine this year is to reread a few favorites. Oddly enough, my goodreads rating from initially reading this ~10 years ago was three stars. It's remained in my mind since, however, so I read it over the rest of my Florida trip.
I love Nabokov; he has such a way with words that just bowls me over. Pnin especially is a witty story, focusing on a middle-aged Russian professor trying to adjust to life in America. He's the subject of derision from his peers and is portrayed by the unnamed narrator as a bumbling, ineffectual fool. However, he's also deceptively graceful and sweet.
On the heels of this I ordered The Defense; I realize I've only read four Nabokovs, though I've read all of them twice now.
Loved the books and re-watching the TV series right now.January 2023, Books #1-5
Read Bosch #7 over the holiday break and then started devouring The Expanse. Seriously, this is it when it comes to epic popular Sci-Fi adventure. I'm already obviously familiar with the series, but it's so great revisiting the source material. The world building, the inventiveness, the characters, it has it all. I'm currently on Nemesis Games. Thinking I should take a pause after that one just to let it simmer and make the fun last longer.
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Loved the books and re-watching the TV series right now.
I also recommend the novellas/short stories as they fill in some gaps and backstory. They are all collected in Memory's Legion. The wiki page indicates where the novellas fall in relation to the novels
The Expanse (novel series) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
I strongly recommend anything by Moshfegh; Lapvona was one of my favorites of last year, and My Year of Rest and Relaxation is maybe the great 9/11 novel.January 2023
Book 1: Ripley's Game - Patricia Highsmith
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Not quite a tradition yet but, for the second year running I started my reading year with the next (this is the third) in the Ripley series. I enjoyed this a whole lot, indeed much more than the second in the series that was something of a let down following the classic first title. This was a welcome return to Ripley at his Machiavellian best albeit, he only really features for the latter two thirds of the novel. Highsmith's customary suspense is used to great effect in this one and she manages to once again make us fall for people that are at best flawed, at worst psychotic criminals.
Book 2: Eileen - Ottessa Moshfegh
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I enjoyed this atmospheric and at times creepy tale of a young woman suffering a troubled home life with her drunk father, pushing her way through her day job at the local young correctional facility full of bad boys. When a brash, beautiful new educator joins the facility and takes an interest in Eileen that nobody else seemingly ever has, our protagonist's world starts to spiral. Well written and crafted story, narrated 50 years after the events outlined took place, it did feel throughout like what it was, a debut novel but with a whole lot of promise. I'll have no hesitation reading more from this writer.
Book 3: Booth - Karen Joy Fowler
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This may very well have been one of the best books I think I've ever read. I really, really enjoyed it. It's the story of a period in history that led up to and included the assassination of Lincoln. Scattered with quotes from Abe's speeches, this history is pieced together through the biographies of the family of his assassin, John Wilkes Booth. It reminded me stylistically of those other historical fiction novels by Hilary Mantel, the way rather extraordinary occurrences are delivered with a deadpan matter-of-factness and how the telling of really important historical figures are told by the secondary and tertiary people around them. The Booths were a really fascinating family that will sadly be remembered by most people for containing a Presidential assassin. This book paints a truly three-dimensional portrait of them: Lincoln, slavery, emancipation and the civil war were all just things that happened around them. Really great stuff, highly recommended.
Book 4: The Shards - Bret Easton Ellis
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I rarely buy books on release, content to wait for the price to drop but, Bret Easton Ellis has consistently been one of my favourite writers since my discovery of him in my teens, and this is his first novel in 13 years so I had to splurge.
An autofiction depicting a young Bret growing up in early '80s L.A. where both a serial killer and home-invading, pet-killing cult has infiltrated his and his friends lives, this book never failed to entertain. It delivered what Ellis does best: affluent, over-sexed, over-drugged youth with their teen angst and dramas plus all the fun of a thriller genre to boot. At ~700pp it could have done with some tighter editing at times, there's several instances of repetition as the story unfolds but, it's Bret, and I'm still finding myself a bit of a fanboy even in my late 40s and it's really made me want to reread his past novels again too because my memory of them has faded so much over the years.
Book 5: L.A. Woman - Eve Babitz
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This was a lot of fun. Tales of women, young and old, who don't want to conform to the norms of their respective eras and opt to be girls behaving badly. What little I know about Babitz, her lead in this, Sophie, appears to draw heavily on her own life growing up as artist and groupie in L.A. referencing her work as an album sleeve photographer and her time with Jim Morrison.
Eileen was the last thing I hadn't read by her, and I finished back in December. She has to be one of my favorite working writers. My Year of Rest and Relaxation is superb and my favorite of her's so far too. Her short story collection is also great.I strongly recommend anything by Moshfegh; Lapvona was one of my favorites of last year, and My Year of Rest and Relaxation is maybe the great 9/11 novel.
I only heard about the new Ellis yesterday! I’m surprised it’s getting such strong response after a decade of his right-leaning, trollish crankism. I stopped listening to his podcast because I got tired of hearing how hard it is to be a white man these days. I might have to read Shards out of completism, however; I’ve read everything up to this (I went to college in socal, and his writing was a balm amidst the culture shock), and this has shades of Lunar Park, which I thought was silly in a great way.