Thursday, May 28, 2015
Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett
I've always been a bit curious about Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels. There are just so many of them though that it makes it look kind of intimidating to dive into. So after reading a couple of interesting articles on the Onion's AV Club (one of which served as a handy guide on where to start and the other comparing the author to Kurt Vonnegut) I figured I'd give one a shot.... And you know I liked it. The series is set in this fantasy world called Discworld but the books follow several different characters. This particular book, Guards! Guards!, is about the City Watch of Discworld. Basically they are the bumbling police of the city that nobody pays any attention. In an attempt at a political coup someone magically summons a dragon so that it can be slayed by someone pretending to be a descendant of an old lineage of kings who would then act as a puppet king for the person that summoned the dragon. However things go wrong and the City Watch has to figure out a way to save the city. I laughed several times which must mean that I liked it. Sometime soon I'll have to try reading another book from the series... this one gets a B+.
Thursday, May 21, 2015
Dune Messiah by Frank Herbert

Thursday, May 14, 2015
Book # 22 - To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf

Oh yeah, the book also mentions Middlemarch and Anna Karenina.
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Horror Book # 5 - 'Salem's Lot by Stephen King
'Salem's Lot is Stephen King's second book and has all of the usual tropes that show up in his later works... the protagonist is a writer, it is set in a small Maine town, characters have psychic flashes, a child plays an important role, etc... This time the story centers on vampires and how they are able to take over a remote town in just a few days. And these aren't the romanticized type of vampires, these are the violent bloodthirsty kind. There are quite a few scary scenes and I was surprised at how willing King was at killing off characters throughout. He also builds tension up very well in the first half of the book when the town suffers a rash of disappearances and accidents and no one yet suspects that it may be the work of something evil. I enjoyed the book overall but I could have used a bit more characterization of the main vampire. I feel like King didn't really explore his motivations very much or try to give his actions any justification.
While reading it I couldn't quit thinking of the book as a small town version of They Thirst by Robert McCammon which came out a few years later. Maybe because that book was set in Los Angeles I liked it a bit more... I'll give 'Salem's Lot a B+.
Monday, May 4, 2015
William Shakespeare's Star Wars by Ian Doescher

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