delericho
Legend
I finally finished "Vanity Fair" on Friday. There was a moment of horror when I discovered that my copy was missing pages 531 - 580 (with the next 50 pages duplicated instead), but of course the text is available online so I read it there.
It was pretty good, though not the best book I've read this year. In particular, he had a good line in sarcasm that I appreciated.
After that, I read through "The Bell Jar" by Sylvia Plath, which I got through in two days - it was rather shorter than VF, and the language was a little more accessible, too. Again, it was okay - better than "Catcher in the Rye", which was the book it most reminded me of, but then I find CitR rather over-rated, so that's not a great accolade.
I'm still waiting for this month's Pathfinder, so I'm marking time with "How to be a Time Lord" from BBC books. And I'm also gradually reading through the 5e DMG. One chapter in, it's already doing well - that first chapter reminded me of 2nd Ed's "Campaign Sourcebook and Catacomb Guide", which I consider one of the best DM's books I've ever read.
It was pretty good, though not the best book I've read this year. In particular, he had a good line in sarcasm that I appreciated.
After that, I read through "The Bell Jar" by Sylvia Plath, which I got through in two days - it was rather shorter than VF, and the language was a little more accessible, too. Again, it was okay - better than "Catcher in the Rye", which was the book it most reminded me of, but then I find CitR rather over-rated, so that's not a great accolade.

I'm still waiting for this month's Pathfinder, so I'm marking time with "How to be a Time Lord" from BBC books. And I'm also gradually reading through the 5e DMG. One chapter in, it's already doing well - that first chapter reminded me of 2nd Ed's "Campaign Sourcebook and Catacomb Guide", which I consider one of the best DM's books I've ever read.