Fantasy and Sci-Fi Novels
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Post Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 10:38 pm 
 

The Kur were the invading species. I'm in the middle of rereading the Gor series now, even though I know them all.
You'd be shocked at the number of women who spontaneously combust at the thought of domination, and I don't mean in a bad way. I learned this back in the days when I was a thrash metal singer. Believe me, if you knew how many women fantasize about being dominated, you'd hit the floor.
99% of the animal kingdom is about male domination. As a few people here know, I breed endangered reptiles, and I see it every day. I've had male turtles KILL females while breeding.
Regardless of Norman's personal bent, no one can deny he has a unique genre of books. I certainly tend to agree with his general theme; most males in America are hobbled by societal strictures telling them that males and females are completely equal. Any idiot knows this is untrue. On the average, males are physically stronger and more aggressive (well, they are SUPPOSED to be), and females are smarter. Fact of life.
So, back on topic......
I've always been a big fan of the Blade series by Jeffrey Lord. Somewhat cheesy, but the concept of completely unique dimensions was brilliant. He wrote 36 books, fer Chrissakes, all different!


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Post Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 10:54 pm 
 

Deadlord39 wrote:and females are smarter. Fact of life.


:scratch:

So, now we know that Deadlord's wife reads over his shoulder as he types.  

Unless, of course, you mean the fact that we are stronger in almost every way and yet we let them tell us what to do and pretty much run the world...cause we is dumb.   :evil:

Mark  8)


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Post Posted: Sat Jun 09, 2007 12:38 am 
 

Nah, my wife is the best. I kick ass, and she takes the names.
I think my favorite series has to be Saberhagen's Swords books. I'm sure I mentined it before. Incredibly addictive.


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Post Posted: Sat Jun 09, 2007 2:57 am 
 

Dennis L. McKiernan - The Iron Tower Trilogy.  Total 'Lord of the Rings' knockoff but is still a decent read.

Not so much a knockoff as an initially planned sequel to LoTR.  However; Tolkein's estate would not permit any sequels, so he rewrote it and turned it into his own world.  His current fairytale series of books has proven to be rather interesting ...

Don't think I've seen another of my favorite authors mentioned ... Robert Heinlein.  Just too bad the movie version of Starship troopers got butchered so badly.

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 10, 2007 2:50 pm 
 

I am enjoying a re-read of Michael Moorcock's work.

As an adult, I can see the flaws that were not apparent to a high school student.

Still, Moorcock has a sort of refreshing charm...a writer who is specifically not imitating Tolkien and one who is not somehow obsessed with contemporary gender politics or in love with Mother Nature.

Mark  8)


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 2:40 am 
 

*bump*

What are you reading right now?  Is it fantasy/sci fi, or are you reading a different genre?

Non-fiction?

What book is open or bookmarked at your house right now?


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 7:51 am 
 

FormCritic wrote:What are you reading right now?  Is it fantasy/sci fi, or are you reading a different genre?


The Elegant Universe - Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory by Brian Greene.

I am looking for some physics related twists that I can use in the Thursday night Call of Cthulhu game that I run for some of my friends.  :twisted:

Edit: I have some issues with some of the simplified examples that he uses to explain relativity. The measurement ones that he uses overlooks the fact that the act of measuring the moving object to show that it has become "shorter" also means that the item (ruler) that he talks about would also become shorter which would invalidate his conclusions.


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 9:33 am 
 

FormCritic wrote:*bump*

What are you reading right now?  Is it fantasy/sci fi, or are you reading a different genre?

Non-fiction?

What book is open or bookmarked at your house right now?


Re-Reading Freakonomics...Postively brilliant book written by a Economics genius with a very unique way of looking at the world around us.

Just finished Jonathan Latimer's "Solomon's Vineyard" (great crime/noir novel), started Jim Thompson's "Nothing More than Murder", I'm in a bit of a crime/detective phase right now.

Mike B.


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 2:09 pm 
 

FormCritic wrote:*bump*

What are you reading right now?  Is it fantasy/sci fi, or are you reading a different genre?

Non-fiction?

What book is open or bookmarked at your house right now?


Two books:

The first Del Rey Conan anthology and, thanks to Jason's inspiration, The Confusion, by Neal Stephenson.

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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 2:38 pm 
 

FormCritic wrote:*bump*

What are you reading right now?  Is it fantasy/sci fi, or are you reading a different genre?

Non-fiction?

What book is open or bookmarked at your house right now?


Right now I am reading Pearl Harbor by William Forstchen and Newt Gingrich. It is a good read as are their other books, specifically a Civil War based trilogy about the Confederates not being stupid and attacking the Union army at Gettysburg and what happens afterward. I would highly recommend them to anyone. I also have open of Eric Flint's 1632 books that I am half-way through.

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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 3:08 pm 
 

FormCritic wrote:*bump*

What are you reading right now?  Is it fantasy/sci fi, or are you reading a different genre?

Non-fiction?

What book is open or bookmarked at your house right now?


Two books:

If on a Winter's Night a Traveller, by Italo Calvino, which is really good.  
I have also just bought Then we Came to the End by Joshua Ferris - although I have not opened it yet - a friend of mine recommended it.


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 4:07 pm 
 

I am always in the process of re-reading The Stand, by Stephen King.

I am reading An Army at Dawn, by Rick Atkinson. (US in North Africa at the start of WWII.)

My at-school reading is Conquest, by Hugh Thomas (Castillians conquer the Aztecs...an epic story with no identifiable good guys.)

The Cornelius Chronicles, by Michael Moorcock is my bedtime reading.  (I would describe this set of books as proto-cyberpunk.  Moorcock's characters seem to be decadent just for the sake of decadence. Halfway through, I have not yet managed to figure out what is going on in the first book, The Final Program...no idea.)

The best poetry book I have read lately is A Night Without Armor, by Jewel (the pop star).

Something by Zelany needs to be on my reading list soon.  Perhaps a re-read of the Amber novels, or Creatures of Darkness and Light.  I thought that Lord of Light was Zelazny's best single book.


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 4:16 pm 
 

FormCritic wrote:I am always in the process of re-reading The Stand, by Stephen King.

Regular edition? Or super-sized?

FormCritic wrote:Something by Zelany needs to be on my reading list soon.

Roadmarks!

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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 4:16 pm 
 

Ah...Zelazny...
The very first D&D game I ever played in 1978 was based on his Nine Princes in Amber series. Very cool...it got me hooked on RPG's.
I have always had a fondness for the works of Zelazny and other than the Nine Princes series, my favorite of his works is a toss up between Creatures of Light and Darkness and Lord of Light.


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 4:23 pm 
 

I bought an unabridged copy of The Stand at Saint Vincent De Paul for 45 cents.

Roadmarks?


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 4:26 pm 
 

Roadmarks is a stand-alone novel by Zelazny, circa 1978 or 1979, I think. It's just a personal favorite and definitely not one of his better-known works.

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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 4:57 pm 
 

FormCritic wrote:I am reading An Army at Dawn, by Rick Atkinson. (US in North Africa at the start of WWII.)


I have been meaning to pick up a few of his books based on some reviews I read.  I saw Army At Dawn in hardback this past weekend at HPB but decided not to get it because I had about $60 worth of stuff in my hands at the time ($40 of that was the Band of Brothers DVD set).  I am also looking for The Day of Battle which is about the WWII campaign in Sicily and Italy.

I just finished the newest Star Wars: Legacy of the Force novel Sacrifice.  Star Wars novels are one of my guilty pleasures....definitely better than the last three movies.  :wink:

I am currently reading Flyboys: A True Story of Courage by James Bradley.  After that I am planning to read The Longest Winter by Alex Kershaw.  I have recently been on a WWII tear, reading most of Stephen Ambrose's books.

Let me know how it goes Mark.

  

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Post Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 4:59 pm 
 

FormCritic wrote:I am always in the process of re-reading The Stand, by Stephen King.


I used to try and read The Stand once a year.  Can't do it anymore.  Instead I have been reading his novella The Mist from the Dark Forces anthology once every 18 months.  It is still my favorite work of his.

  
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