This was a very busy week for me, hardly got time to read 100 or so pages. Still reading Grave Peril by Jim Butcher. Book 3 of The Dresden Files.
What about all of you, what have you been reading?
The Tibetan book of the dead for beginners by Lama Lhanang Rinpoche.
The fifth season by N. K. Jemisin
I don’t know much about “The Tibetan Book of the Dead”, is it too difficult, that it needs a beginner’s edition? Or is it just a translation, named like that?
The Fifth Season is pretty good. How are you enjoying it?
It’s more of a tibetan book of the dead for dummies kind of thing. It summarizes the teaching of the tibetan book of the dead.
I actually have a bit of hard time with the fifth season. I find the writing style a bit hard to follow and I have some difficulty relating to anything.
It’s more of a tibetan book of the dead for dummies kind of thing. It summarizes the teaching of the tibetan book of the dead.
Ah okay. Thanks for the info.
I actually have a bit of hard time with the fifth season. I find the writing style a bit hard to follow and I have some difficulty relating to anything.
I agree. The series is quite dry, and writing style is a bit hard to follow. Overall, it’s still a good book. Though, I am not sure I would recommend finishing it if you aren’t liking it much.
Have heard many good things about the Discworld series for the longest time, but never brought myself to read it. Decided to change that with The Colour of Magic. Loving it so far!
:) I started my Discworld journey in the middle with The Truth and since then have zigzagged my way through the entire series, and have never regretted a second of it. The Discworld is a gold mine of history, beliefs, dark humour, and profound thoughts. I’m glad you’ve found your way to it.
GNU PTerry
Discworld is definitely one of my absolute favourite series. GNU P Terry.
:)
It’s nice to see a mention of GNU Terry Pratchett. 😀
“A man’s not dead while his name is still spoken.” -
❤️
I’m reading Kambaramayanam, a 12th century Tamil epic. It’s written in my mother tongue, Tamil, but the language has changed so much over centuries that I am using a guide to understand the old Tamil words and phrases and the nuances behind the verses. I’m really enjoying it so far.
Two Tamil books in one week!
Languages change over time, and any language that has survived for so long would have gone with many evolution.
Yeah reading the book, I can see how the words from then have evolved to words from now, and it’s very rewarding when I’m able to understand a verse without any help from the guide.
Yeah, it must be. I sometimes have trouble understanding words of current teenagers, so understanding something from 12th century must definitely be rewarding.
Finished “Sapiens” by Yuval Noah Harari and didn’t like it at all. Next on the docket is “The Republic of Thieves” by Scott Lynch, really digging the Gentleman Bastard Series.
Glad to see I’m not the only one who didn’t like Sapiens. I think it should’ve ended after the first few chapters. I’m terrified to know there’s a sequel where he theorizes about the future.
I think it should’ve ended after the first few chapters
Had the same feeling. At the end, I felt like the author tried to prove a thesis by ignoring any historical happenings that didn’t corroborate and stretching the veracity of those that did.
I’m terrified to know there’s a sequel where he theorizes about the future.
I hope that he’s better at assessing the future than the past.
It became evident in the later parts of the book that it was more about Harari’s pet theories rather than actual science.
- Finnegans Wake - my ‘big read’ which I am doing over the year along with a group over on reddit: one of the only things that still has me dipping into reddit now. Fascinatingly incomprehensible.
- Tchaikovsky’s Children of Time - some good, thoughtful worldbuilding and a solid story.
- Robert Brightwell’s Flashman’s Waterloo - one of his series of Flashman prequels featuring the uncle of George MacDonald Fraser’s protagonist. Very well researched and entertaining
- A collection of Neil Munro’s Para Handy tales - gentle humour and a glimpse of a very different world - albeit rather stereotypical and patronising in some ways.
However, I don’t have a great deal of time to read at the moment, and with several on the go at once, I am taking a good while to get through them.
I have James Joyce’s Ulysses in my to-read pile for over a decade, but it looks so daunting, so never started it.
Nice collection of books that you are reading. Have fun!
Mistborn 5, I finished Mistborn 3 long ago but couldn’t get into the changes Sanderson made in book 4 at the time when it came out, but now I’m really enjoying the adventures of Wax & Wayne, also now I’m really paying attention to the Cosmere related details, but what I’m really waiting for is the next Stormlight Archive novel.
*Mistborn
I haven’t started the second era of Mistborn, was waiting to get all the books first. Now that I have the whole series, I am wondering if I should re-read the original Mistborn series before starting the Wax & Wayne. I remember the story, but I don’t remember all the characters, and smaller details. Would I miss them if I read the next books without refreshing those details?
Lol yeah Mistborn, thx
Yeah the series constantly references the main characters from the original trilogy.
I read the original trilogy probably more than a decade ago, so I’ve had to go to Sanders’s book wiki and remind myself of some of the details of some of the characters, I also had to do it to get a better grasp on which characters are “Cosmere centric characters” which are the characters that are in both Mistborn and Stormlight Archive, and will probably eventually be in the prequel series Sanderson is writing, which is a pain in the butt since those specific characters have many names.
Thanks for the feedback. Guess I should just re-read the original trilogy first. The books aren’t that big so shouldn’t take to too long.
I’m on the 2nd, the Well of Ascension. It’s a bit slow, but I hear it really ramps up!
Loved mistborn, but couldn’t get into the Wax & Wayne stuff. I bought the latest book, but I just can’t get excited about it.
See that was my problem when I first picked up #4 almost a decade ago, but now I’m completely into the books rn, there’s some really interesting intrigue going on in the series, and the way the powers are evolving in a more modernized society is pretty cool, although Sazed admits in the fifth book that humanity hasn’t quite progressed as far as he’d hoped they would.
Also Wayne is a fantastic character, he’s not the main character, but the way Sanderson writes him is really fun and interesting.
The original Frankenstein.
feels funny to find out or remember that these popular monsters were created by someone in an original story. How do you like it?
I was surprised to find out who Frankenstein actually is, when I read the book. How are you enjoying the book?
Reading The Three Body Problem, and also listening to Remarkably Bright Creatures
Just finished this book! Hoping I can find The Dark Forest some time today.
It’s taken me a minute to get into it, but it seems to be getting a little easier now that I’m probably a third of my way through
Ah, a book by Chinese author, don’t recall if I have read any (not counting Wuxia web-novels), how is it? Remarkably Bright Creatures also looks interesting. Adding both to my wish list.
It’s interesting, but it felt a bit sluggish to get into. It could be a translation thing? It’s picking up now, though.
I would love to hear your review after you have finished the whole series.
Been in an ‘old gods’ mood, so I’m currently re-reading The Child Thief, by Brom. Probably gonna go on to some Neil Gaiman stuff after that. Likely Good Omens
I was recently in the mood for some crime books, but now getting in the mood for more lovecraftian stuff, though haven’t looked up anything in that genre yet.
How to Sell a Haunted House by Grady Hendrix.
Not a whole lot of spooky stuff happening so far, but I’m pretty happy to be an only child.
Do share how you like the book. And should I, as not an only child, should read it? 😀
Michael J. Sullivan JUST dropped the final book of his new trilogy, so I’m going to be diving into that next.
If you haven’t heard of him, do yourself a favor and read the Riyria Revelations trilogy. It starts out light and fun, and by the third book you realize that he’s no lightweight. There was a well thought out plot and intricate world building that was under everything the whole time.
I love all his series in this universe.
You’ve intrigued me!
I was just trying to remember the name of these books! I got distracted and never finished the first book but I want to pick it up again
Riyria Revelations is on my wish list. Let’s see when I get to them.
Still reading The Brothers Karamazov. Just started few days back. Like it so far.
Finished Project Hail Mary? How did you like it?
I just finished, A series of unfortunate events #2 - The Reptile Room
I am also re-reading Discworld in order and have read Men At Arms, next its Soul Music
Currently I am reading, John Scalzi - Old Man’s War, and so far its a good!
I end up zigagging in the Discworld. One day, I’ll have a go at reading it in order.
GNU PTerry.
I have read Discworld both by series (Wizards, Witches, The Watch, …) and in order, the good thing with reading in order is that you get a break from the different characters and you notice the cameos easier.
I should give it a try.
I have been following John Scalzi on Twitter (and now mastadon) for many years, but I still haven’t read anything from him. I think it’s about time I do something about it.
I was going to start on Ian M Banks’ Culture series, but I read a few reviews that said his writing style is a bit repetitive, and then I found John Scalzi, my first impression of Old Man’s War reminds me a bit of Pratchett and Douglas Adams, and I hope it continues in that fashion.
That’s a very high praise. Going to get it as soon as I can now.
I finished Old Mans War it is still good!, Scalzi does a good job with the world building, and just FYI it’s a bit gory from time to time.
Minor spoiler about the setting
I like the multiverse approach to interstellar travel it allows for endless possibilities.
Having watched Rick and Morty helps with understanding multiverse idea (Currently its a less crazy version).
I checked with my local shop, they didn’t had Old Mans War, going to order it online. Thanks for the info!
“The sweet salt of Tamil” by Tho Paramasivan translated from the original Tamil by V. Ramnarayan.
Tamil is the world’s oldest surviving language and is spoken by about 90 million people. The author writes so well, you feel like you’re chatting with an old friend. The OG version of the book in Tamil, titled Ariyappadatha Tamizhagam (the hidden Tamil country), is a good read too, but a friend gifted me the English version, so this week I’m enjoying the English version of a beloved book.
Tamil also has a very beautiful script. I like how it looks.
Surprised to see another Tamil book in the comments. If you’re tamil, feel free to join !kuttichevuru@lemmy.world and help us get the community off the ground. It’s a casual tamil chat community.
Thank for the invite, I’ll definitely check it out.
I’m not reading it, listening to the audiobook so I hope it’s okay I comment but Project Hail Mary! It’s sooooo good! It’s my first audiobook also
That’s on my list, how you liking it so far?
I love it. Have 2 1/2 hours out of 16 of the audio book and it’s so good. I’m a bit of a nerd myself so it scratches that itch but also is a great book in general
Books are books, listening, reading, doesn’t matter.
How are you liking the book? It’s next on my list to read.
It’s amazing! I really do like it. I love space and science so it really grabs me there but overall it’s just a great book