Hriston
Dungeon Master of Middle-earth (He/him)
I'm reading A Book on Nymphs, Sylphs, Pygmies, and Salamanders, and on the Other Spirits by Paracelsus.
My buddy is all about DCC, so I kind of feel like I have to read at least book 1.Over the last week I read the first Dungeon Crawler Carl book, which I found disappointing after how much I'd seen and heard it hyped up, and Red Rising, by Pierce Brown, which I thought was fantastic.
Both are the first books in series; I don't really feel too compelled to go on in the DCC series, but damn, I can't wait to continue the story that starts in Red Rising.
DCC might have sat better with me if I hadn't seen and heard such high praise for it, but I found it... all right. It has one of the things that annoys me most in books with alien species- the aliens (at least the ones we talk to) are all just too human.
Yeah, I have a couple of friends who raved and raved about it. It's not bad, but I don't feel any compulsion to read further. It's one of those series where I would if I had the next book around and I didn't have anything else to read.My buddy is all about DCC, so I kind of feel like I have to read at least book 1.
I'm planning on picking up the next couple at the library on Monday!Red Rising was great. Don't want to spoil any more of it, so come back when you are done with at least first trilogy (I read up to what was released at that point, and then never got back to it. Happened with the Expanse too) and we can compare notes...
Paracelsus' stuff is wild. There are some great ideas for gaming in it, though.I'm reading A Book on Nymphs, Sylphs, Pygmies, and Salamanders, and on the Other Spirits by Paracelsus.
Rivers of London-coded lolI'm reading A Book on Nymphs, Sylphs, Pygmies, and Salamanders, and on the Other Spirits by Paracelsus.
I'm just finding out about this, but unless the Wikipedia article on this is wholly wrong, you're engaging in some spectacular historical revisionism of a pretty unfortunate kind!That still bothers me. The whole of the sci-fi fantasy community coming together to mercilessly bully a kid over a book he wrote at 16. Utterly unforgivable.
I would definitely have to agree re: the climax and prose. It feels like some significant section of development and plot progress is kind of just missing, like it technically makes sense, but it is a very sudden climax to the book, and it doesn't help the book.The climax of the book came on suddenly, and, although I enjoyed the setpiece sequence at Skygarden, I found the prose a little overwrought at times and the big twist to be somewhat telegraphed, even if I did think it was plausible
I find Aaronovitch’s plotting rather uneven and prone to sudden jumps, especially with regards to action scenes. I think he is more of a characters and jokes guy.I would definitely have to agree re: the climax and prose. It feels like some significant section of development and plot progress is kind of just missing, like it technically makes sense, but it is a very sudden climax to the book, and it doesn't help the book.
I actually didn't find the twist to be telegraphed myself, it made complete sense in retrospect though.
He's definitely done some good action scenes, especially in the more recent books but yeah I'd broadly agree.I find Aaronovitch’s plotting rather uneven and prone to sudden jumps, especially with regards to action scenes. I think he is more of a characters and jokes guy.