I am out of good series to read. I was reading The Sword of Truth series, but that ended. I am into the Dresden files, but I am all caught up on every book, short story, novella, and TV series. I got sick of the Wheel of Time. I have read the Greywalker series and I have started the most recent book, but that series is only so-so. I have been reading The Hollows series and I am interested in it, but I don't find it all that good. I love the Lord of the Rings, but you can only read them so many times in a given period of time. I was reading the Song of Ice and Fire back when it first came out, but then there was such a long hiatus that I never got back to reading it because I had forgotten so much stuff. I am watching Game of Thrones to get refreshed though.
In any event, if anyone could suggest a good series I would be most appreciative.
I just finished the 20 book series of Captian Jack Aubrey & Dr. Steven Maturin by Patrick O'Brian. Well worth the 3-4 months it took to work though them. VERY worthwhile reading.
The Chronic -
WHAT?!
- cles Of Narnia
8)
At what point did you get sick of Wheel of Time? It does get better eventually. If you quit at book six it's probably not worth it, but if you made it to nine or ten then it's worth pushing through to the good stuff. Books 12 and 13 were great.
Definitely get back into Ice and Fire. If you don't have reading time, see if your library has the audiobooks. Book five comes out in April.
Quote from: CoS on June 09, 2011, 01:27:48 AM
I just finished the 20 book series of Captian Jack Aubrey & Dr. Steven Maturin by Patrick O'Brian. Well worth the 3-4 months it took to work though them. VERY worthwhile reading.
Not sure about this series. I'm not really one for historical fiction, but I will look into it and maybe pick up the first book.
Quote from: ncannelora on June 09, 2011, 01:06:08 PM
The Chronic -
WHAT?!
- cles Of Narnia
8)
I loved this series as a kid and I just re-read the whole thing like a year ago. I have been enjoying the movies as well. We're about to get taken to a dreamworld of magic!
Quote from: Kal-el on June 09, 2011, 01:07:58 PM
At what point did you get sick of Wheel of Time? It does get better eventually. If you quit at book six it's probably not worth it, but if you made it to nine or ten then it's worth pushing through to the good stuff. Books 12 and 13 were great.
Definitely get back into Ice and Fire. If you don't have reading time, see if your library has the audiobooks. Book five comes out in April.
I read through the Wheel of Time to book 10. I couldn't even follow what was going on anymore and when I tried reading book 11 I realized I was so out of touch with who all the minor characters were that I didn't even care any more what happened. If I do get back into this series I'm going to either have to re-read all the books or get a serious refresher course. I'm not sure I'm willing to do that though.
The Song of Ice and Fire is really good. I have all the books and I have read the first three, just not the fourth. I liked it a lot when I was reading it, but I started it ten years ago, so I just need to re-read the first three. As much as I like the series, the books have been taking too long to come out and that is why I still feel like I am lacking a good series to read.
I've always been a fan of the Dragonlance Series, specifically the main books by Hickman & Weis. The Chronicles trilogy and Legends trilogy are classics. War of Souls is good too, not as good as the older ones, but entertaining enough.
For general fiction, I read Dan Brown and Chuck Palahniuk. They aren't series writers, but both are excellent. Palahniuk especially, if you're into real twisted stuff.
I'm a fan of the books by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. Particularly the Agent Pendergast novels.
the Dexter book series is great if you are dark-minded.
Quote from: Palatinus on June 09, 2011, 02:02:17 PM
I read through the Wheel of Time to book 10. I couldn't even follow what was going on anymore and when I tried reading book 11 I realized I was so out of touch with who all the minor characters were that I didn't even care any more what happened. If I do get back into this series I'm going to either have to re-read all the books or get a serious refresher course. I'm not sure I'm willing to do that though.
The Song of Ice and Fire is really good. I have all the books and I have read the first three, just not the fourth. I liked it a lot when I was reading it, but I started it ten years ago, so I just need to re-read the first three. As much as I like the series, the books have been taking too long to come out and that is why I still feel like I am lacking a good series to read.
Crossroads of Twilight (WoT 10) was painful, and Knife of Dreams wasn't much better, but Gathering Storm really turned it around. If you could find a good refresher online (maybe try dragonmount.com) I'd recommend pushing through 11.
I'd recommend the same for SoIaF. If you can find a summary online then I would push on with 4, but that's a lot of rereading to do.
You could get Brandon Sanderson a try. I'm not a huge fan of his dialogue, but the stories are fun and his magic systems are fun and well detailed. The Mistborn series (three books) was fun and Way of Kings 1 was enjoyable too (I haven't ready Warbreaker or Elantris yet).
I totally +2 the SoIaF. I just plowed all the audio books in a row about a month ago. It was completely worth it just to hear Roy Dotrice voice Dolorous Edd. Though, the 4th book wasn't as good without his voice acting. (The guy who voiced it was "meh," so I was tempted to actually read that one.)
Quote from: Hot Rod on June 12, 2011, 02:28:51 AM
I totally +2 the SoIaF. I just plowed all the audio books in a row about a month ago. It was completely worth it just to hear Roy Dotrice voice Dolorous Edd. Though, the 4th book wasn't as good without his voice acting. (The guy who voiced it was "meh," so I was tempted to actually read that one.)
Thankfully, Roy will be back reading for the fifth book. Those audiobooks are fantastic.
Quote from: Kal-el on June 12, 2011, 11:31:32 AM
Thankfully, Roy will be back reading for the fifth book. Those audiobooks are fantastic.
Kickass!
Yeah, they're fantastic. My eyes hurt way too much after reading fine print for hours. Also having free hands/eyes to do other things is pretty sweet.
by the way, some consider them a little juvenile, but I really enjoyed THE HUNGER GAMES trilogy. It was a very quick read, well written, and a good story.
Stephen King's The Dark Tower series was excellent. There is a disclaimer before the final chapter that says "If you are happy with that ending, stop reading here." Aside from the chapter that came after that disclaimer, that series was awesome, plus I hear it's in the works for a 2013 film.
Also reading Eragon. The 4th book is due out soon. It's an interesting read, but it's pretty clear where he drew his inspirations... ::cough, cough::TOLKIEN::cough,cough::
Brian Jaques has an intersting series which starts with Redwall. I haven't read them all as there are more then 16 books, but it's not one continuous story.
Quote from: Kyle on June 09, 2011, 02:14:27 PM
I've always been a fan of the Dragonlance Series, specifically the main books by Hickman & Weis. The Chronicles trilogy and Legends trilogy are classics. War of Souls is good too, not as good as the older ones, but entertaining enough.
For general fiction, I read Dan Brown and Chuck Palahniuk. They aren't series writers, but both are excellent. Palahniuk especially, if you're into real twisted stuff.
A fellow Dragonlance reader right here! Chronicles and Legends trilogy are my all time favorite fantasy novels. My interest waned after all that 5th Age nonsense but War of Souls and The Dark Disciple trilogies drew me back in. Currently finishing up Dragons of an Hourglass Mage.
If you're into Young Adult Novels - I would recommend either the Ranger's Apprentice Series by Flannagan or the Homelanders Series by Klaven, both really well done. But if you want something deeper I reccomend the Circle Trilogy by Ted Dekker - Excellent excellent series.
Finished up Dance of Dragons (Song of Fire & Ice). I hear the HBO series A game of Thrones was a goo adaptation too.
Quote from: CoS on February 21, 2012, 03:20:17 PM
Finished up Dance of Dragons (Song of Fire & Ice). I hear the HBO series A game of Thrones was a goo adaptation too.
I read the first three books around the time the third one came out and have not read any more since, but the series is really excellent. I have been trying to get everyone I know to watch it. I highly recommend it especially if you liked the books.
New series with a movie due out next month. The Hunger Games (Catching Fire and The Mockingjay would be books 2 and 3.)
I flew through all 3 books in that series in just about 8 days. Not a difficult read in the slightest, but fascinating right from the beginning. A little slow at the start of the third book, but by that point you are extremely invested in the characters and it picks up again pretty quickly and carries that momentum through to the end.
Quote from: Demacus on February 24, 2012, 05:04:18 PM
New series with a movie due out next month. The Hunger Games (Catching Fire and The Mockingjay would be books 2 and 3.)
I flew through all 3 books in that series in just about 8 days. Not a difficult read in the slightest, but fascinating right from the beginning. A little slow at the start of the third book, but by that point you are extremely invested in the characters and it picks up again pretty quickly and carries that momentum through to the end.
I agree. I was hesitant because I know they're "young adult" novels, but they really didn't resemble that sort of pulp. In fact, if I had to compare them to another author, I'd say they're closest to Ray Bradbury in their concept and character development (although, these are quite a bit more violent than any Bradbury I can remember reading, and I've read TONS!)
Very true. Suzanne Collins does an excellent job of character development and story telling, without being "Twilight" horse-shit fiction.
Quote from: Demacus on February 24, 2012, 06:13:24 PM
Very true. Suzanne Collins does an excellent job of character development and story telling, without being "Twilight" horse-shit fiction.
I agree. My wife actually brought the first book home this week, I thought "here we go" but I picked it up to look through and ended up reading the darn thing cover to cover - very easy read with good content.