Brown is very hit or miss for me. He has a new one coming out called Inferno. Maybe I'll get it from the library. Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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I "liked" The DaVinci Code
I LOVED "Angels & Demons"
I have yet to read "Lost Symbol"
I ordered "Digital Fortress" but it's in a box somewhere...need to remember to try & read it. By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
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Loved the Da Vinci Code, Okay with angels and demons. But then after reading them u realized that if u include the lost symbol they are basically all the same booki kinda. | |
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My cousin is getting her trilogy book series published this year. But through a publisher and it will be available in all book stores in the USA. I'm not certain on the roll out for the rest of the world. I have not read any of them. 99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment | |
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I wanted to read Vanity's book, but I hear it was pure poetry and that it would bring tears to my eyes.
99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment | |
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imago said: ?
There are so many, I don't even know where to begin.
First, the sequel to Odd Thomas by Dean Koontz: Forever Odd
Where the first book was just brilliant, this one was tedius. I'm not sure why.
And unfortunately, Haruki Murakami's "Norwegian Wood" bored me to tears, where I absolutely love his other works, especially Kafka on the Shore.
Same here! I was ticked at how awful it was. Walk in the fog...walk in the fog...walk in the fog...the world is saved. I'm firmly planted in denial | |
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Fyodor Dostoyevsky (Crime and Punishment)...that was a good one.
I tried to get into The Brothers Karamazov but failed....I may try again one day. Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Both were good but I liked Angels and Demons better than The DaVinci Code too.
The Lost Symbol, not so much. Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Her misuse of vocabulary words is hilarious!!
It reminds me of some of the essay papers I get form students who obviously are writing in their native languages, but using some kind of translator to produce the English versions they submit to me.
Sentences like "I want to dominate the English" are common. | |
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I gave up on Koontz years ago...my favorite book by him is Midnight. Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Another one that surprised me how bad it was:
Children of the Mind by Orson Scott Card. He had written several brilliant books in the series:
Enders Game : Brilliant Speaker for the Dead: Brillant x 2 Xenocide: Really good
then, he ended the series with the lackluster Children of the Mind.
Ender (the protagonist in the first book) spends most of his time in a bed in this one. I found it depressing. | |
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I will say I was amazed at how much I did not like "Wicked". I'm firmly planted in denial | |
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Well, this post ^^ should be nominated in my other 'worst' thread. | |
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imago said:
Well, this post ^^ should be nominated in my other 'worst' thread. * * I'm on a roll! I'm firmly planted in denial | |
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i've tried, tried, tried and tried to read a Jane Austen novel...but goddamn, i am not ment to read her work, she's boring, its like reading the booklet to getting a car license.
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Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. I tried. I hated it. I keep saying I'll try to reread it as an adult...
My classroon-mate uses it with her 4th-period AP class. I feel sorry for those kids. "Love Hurts. Your lies, they cut me. Now your words don't mean a thing. I don't give a damn if you ever loved me..." -Cher, "Woman's World" | |
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[img:$uid]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/1d/Twilightbook.jpg/250px-Twilightbook.jpg[/img:$uid]
my experience with twilight started with the first movie. a friend dragged me to opening weekend of the first movie. after sitting through it, i really couldnt understand the fuss. i found it to be very silly and poorly written. being as the books had started it all, i thought "well the movie must have been a bad adaptation, the book must be better."
oh, what a fool i was. i bought the first book, and read it only to discover the movie is actually better.
when the second movie opened i thought "well, maybe it was just the first book was bad and they get better in the second", so i bought a ticket.
halfway through the second movie i just left, and never returned to any of the books or movies. Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely. - Lord Acton | |
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[img:$uid]http://worldsstrongestlibrarian.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/hannibal-186x300.jpg[/img:$uid]
i loved silence of the lambs the movie, so i read the book. i loved silence as a book so much i read "red dragon' and then watched the first movie version. and when thomas harris announced the third book in the hannibal series and the return of clarice starling, i got waaaay excited. i pre-ordered a copy and picked it up the day of release.
and i hated it so much that i will never read another thomas harris book again. jesus, what a shit show... the book is so over the top, it should come with a warning label. lecter has gone from a supporting character (as he should always be) to the lead... and youre expected to believe him as a sympathetic lead. the characters are like the kind of slimy stereotype cartoons you would see in a ralph bashki movie. and worst of all; he completely betrays clarice (who was once an icon of a strong feminist woman) with a bullshit anti-feminist ending that no one in their right mind would believe.
when i was finished with the novel i was so pissed i threw it across the room and vowed i would never read harris again.
and i didnt. i never bothered to read or see the fourth book/movie in the series "hannibal rising" and a lot of people didnt either.
he ruined the franchise and characters with this one.
ugh...
[Edited 2/10/13 6:14am] Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely. - Lord Acton | |
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That book was really disappointing for some reason. I've read all of DB's others and enjoyed them, even though they were all ridiculous at times, and virtually all the same story told and retold again. [Edited 2/10/13 16:13pm] My Legacy
http://prince.org/msg/8/192731 | |
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Vanity's book was almost impossible to read for any length of time. What with the font and the colored print on black paper, just too much.
One lauded author I just cannot get into is Toni Morrison. I was discussing her books with a friend, and she said, "Shit. Toni Morrison on drugs." | |
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Short answer... no. | |
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Now that's even worse. She sought "illiterate" editors? I guess she didn't have the funds for a professional. Why didn't you offer to edit it for her, especially if it was wrought with typos and grammatical errors?
I love editing, but when a writer is just incompetent and ignorantly, I try to gently steer them in another direction. While I was employed in the dean's office of a major university, I was often asked to edit reports, letters, etc. One day I received a draft of a grant a tenured professor submitted for approval. At the time, I didn't know who had submitted it. After reading/editing the first paragraph, I asked the dean, "Who wrote this? Is this a paper one of your grandchildren wrote for a class?' She just shook her head in disgust and told me to do the best I could. But I tell you, I could not believe the woman who wrote it had achieved full tenured professorship. She wrote on a 6th grade level! | |
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One day, I saw on her FB page that she had written a couple of books, so I wanted to support her... little did I know...
I don't know if they are really illiterate, but I wonder how her friends thought that crap was okay... (to/too, there/their/they're... words spelled wrong...) I would have gladly helped her. "Love Hurts. Your lies, they cut me. Now your words don't mean a thing. I don't give a damn if you ever loved me..." -Cher, "Woman's World" | |
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I read beloved , that was good and vanity's book at a friend's place I didn't care much for it.. | |
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OMG - I tried to read that once. I now call it "One Hundred Years to Read the First Chapter."
I loved Little Women - but I read it when I was 9. (I still have my hardcover copy, in fact.) We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Jane Austen is hilarious! Same with George Eliot. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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I can't read Jane Austin either though.
I mean, it's really tough when you get back from a long day of huntin' and fishin, and working out in the shed building things, to have to sit down and read something like Jane Austin. | |
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You have never built a damn thing in your life. I imagine you've sewn a few though. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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That's the one with which I had the most problem! | |
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I used to tell my mother to read her books and let me know what the story was about, Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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