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November - What are you reading?

Horacio said:
I'm beginning Robin Hobb's Assassin's Apprentice, the first book of hers that I read... And I'm loving it :)

It is good! I 3rd the recommendation. She is an awesome writer and everyone that I have given the book to has thought so...

In fact she is the reason I read Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn: The Final Empire. Normally I don't pay much attention to recommendations on the cover (or back) of books, but Robin Hobb's name caught my eye. I am so glad I trusted my gut. Mistborn is awesome.
 

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I just finished Tim Powers' Declare. Here's what I'm reading now:

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I didn't see a December "What Are You Reading?" thread...

Anyway, I finally finished the Potter series. I was pretty disappointed with Deathly Hallows. I just felt it didn't go anywhere for most of the book.

[spoilers]
Rowling also found a way to bring Dumbledore back to explain everything to Harry once again. <rolleyes emote here>

And could the epilogue be any more cookie cutter and lame? Ugh. I had heard that there was an epilogue and I was actually looking forward to something like Harry becoming a badass Auror and hunting down the rest of the Death Eaters instead of living happily ever after with Ginny a la Spider-man. No such luck.

[/spoilers]

Borrowed the Narnia compilation from a friend so I might read that next.
 

Currently reading Human Action by Ludwig von Mises. Very interesting but it's dense and an incredibly slow read, I think I average 20 pages per day which is about a fifth of my usual speed. Anyhow I'm getting there :)

When I've finished reading this book I will reward myself by reading Bad Men and Book of Lost Things by John Connolly. John has quickly become one of my favorite fiction writers and I can wholeheartedly recommend him to anyone who enjoy thrillers/mysteries with a slight supernatural touch.
 

The Aliens sequel as it should have been.

Earth_Hive_Book.jpg
 

Michael Chabon's "Gentlemen Of The Road: A Tale Of Adventure" AKA 'Jews With Swords' was quite enjoyable.

"Boots and the Seven-Leaguers: A Rock-and-Troll Story" by Jane Yolan, a YA book that was a nice light quick 'recharge' book for me. Gog the troll and his Pooka buddy try to score tickets to the big music event of the Kingdom under Rhymer's Bridge, but things go awry when his little brother goes missing and the pair have to venture into the fairie woods to look for him.

"Hero" is a superhero prose novel by Perry Moore (executive producer for the Narnia series). Thom Creed is the son of disgraced non-powered superhero Major Might. Discovering he has superpowers himself, he petitions to join The League and is placed in a probationary team with a group of almost 'Mystery Men'-level losers who nonetheless learn to use their powers in some pretty inovative ways. Thom also outs himself as his world's first gay superhero. It's obviously a 'first novel' (though he has plans for an entire series of books about Thom and a possible movie); the pacing is off in a lot of places, some of the situations are painted a bit broadly for my taste, but at least he avoids two hideously cliched plot points I was terribly afraid he was going to use and gives a nicely entertaining story in the end. "Soon I Will Be Invincible" is still a much better superhero prose book, but I'll see what the next Moore book is like.

Right now, I'm on "Making Money" by Terry Pratchett, where Mr Lipwick from 'Going Postal' has been tapped to run the Ankh-Moorpork Bank and Mint.
 

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