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Are you ready for the rapture??
Message
From
21/07/2006 15:48:58
 
 
To
21/07/2006 14:16:09
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01136603
Message ID:
01138706
Views:
16
I just found a series of books that I think are absolutely awesome. Of course, howie won't like em cause there's lots of strong women in these stories, but oh well.

Jim Butcher's "Dresden Files" series. Harry Dresden is the main antogonist. He's a private dectective in Chicago, who also happens to be a wizard. So Harry is always dealing with vampires, faeries, trolls, etc. And I like the style it's written in. A quote from the backcover of #4, "Summer Knight":

"It seems simple enough, but Harry knows better than to get caught in the middle of faerie politics. Until he finds out that the fate of the entire world rests on his solving this case. No pressure or anything....".

>>Alan, out of curiosity, have you read Robert Heinlein?
>>
>>Kevin
>
>I was many moons ago. I started with this "Future Histories" anthology, and then I gobbled up his stuff until "Time Enough for Love" and "Friday" - neither of which I could stomach. I got the impression that he felt passed by by the 60's and wanted everybody to know what a cool guy he would have been had he known then what he knew now.
>
>Some of his work will stand forever as shining examples of what a great book should be. Obviously, "Stranger in a Strange Land", "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress", "PodKayne of Mars" a few others. In fact, "Stranger..." is pretty much a landmark in SF, probably on a par with Clarke's "Childhood's End", LeGuin's "Left Hand of Darkness", and Dick's "The Man in the High Castle".
>
>One of those rare books that actually changed some people's lives. Of course, you have to overlook the fact that Heinlein was a military man and a "man's man" in some of what he says (he did like to pontificate), but great writing is great writing. I just don't know what happened to him. Somewhere in the 70's he justs seemed to lose it (at least for me).
>
>IMHO, Phil Dick is still the greatest SF writer that ever was. Followed closely by Gene Wolf and Alfred Bester. Then maybe Heinlein, LeGuin and a few others. A newer one who has come on strong for me is Richard Morgan. "Altered Carbon" may be the best SF I've read in a decade.

(On an infant's shirt): Already smarter than Bush
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