I'm a pretty voracious reader, and most of what I read is sci-fi/fantasy.
Sf/f is my favorite! It's like 90% of what I read, and drives my family crazy, but hey. Sf/f is awesome.
... And you've also inspired me to make my first post in this thread! Here's some of what I can recall reading lately––
––At the moment, Robin Hobb's
Farseer Trilogy. The first of five trilogies (fifteen books all told, which is quite a lot) set in the same world, the Farseer Trilogy encompasses
Assassin's Apprentice,
Royal Assassin, and
Assassin's Quest. If you look up the names of some of the other books in her bibliography, they're all very similar, and rather tricky to remember. I can't keep track of any beyond these three.
Anywho, the Farseer Trilogy, as well as *looks it up* the Tawny Man Trilogy and the Fitz and the Fool Trilogy, is told from the point of view of FitzChivalry Farseer, the bastard son of the former heir to the throne. Without legitimacy, he has no claim to the crown, but he's still privy to all the court intrigues of the castle, and after a time is trained as the king's assassin (in secret, obvs).
––Previously, the first non-sf/f thing I'd read in a while: Joseph Heller's
Catch-22. It somewhat disjointedly follows the plotline of John Yossarian, an American bombardier during World War II. It's written as a bit of a satire, and Heller's writing style isn't for everyone, but I found it very comedic. IMO the weirdest part of it is some screwing around with chronology that results in the twelfth chapter taking place at almost the same time as the first one, from almost the same viewpoint. By that point, though, the weird chronology makes enough sense that the reader doesn't feel totally lost.
––Recently-ish, Guy Gavriel Kay's works
Tigana and
The Summer Tree. I personally never really got into Kay's writing style––it's very much after the style of Tolkien, and while I love and respect his work for what it is, I always found his style of writing to be kinda slow and the characters hard to keep track of, almost like he was writing more for his own benefit than the reader's. Guy Kay is in a lot of ways Tolkien's successor––iirc he assisted in the editing of
The Silmarillion––and writes fantasy very much like the legend himself. So, uh, if Tolkien is your thing, I'd totally recommend Guy Gavriel Kay! ^.^
I've also got quite a lot of stuff lined up to read in the near future, as I was rereading one of my favorite series ever starting last year (
The Wheel of Time, by Robert Jordan) and accumulated rather a veritable mountain of stuff I meant to read but couldn't get around to.
Wheel of Time, for reference, is a fourteen-volume series with a total word count of nearly 4.5M.
It's a brilliantly written series, y'all should totally read it, I'd be more than happy to jabber at you for any length of time about it, and I really didn't mean for this paragraph to get onto this track.
Mea culpa. So, here's what I've been meaning to read and will likely start once I've finished the Farseer Trilogy (in no particular order):
- The Black Prism, Brent Weeks
- Lord Foul's Bane, Stephen Donaldson
- The Magic of Recluce, L.E. Modesitt
- The Once and Future King, T.H. White
- The Three Musketeers, Alexandre Dumas
- The Professor and the Madman, Simon Winchester
- The Furies of Calderon, Jim Butcher
I'm currently reading through Malazan Book of the Fallen for the first time. It's a very long, complex, character-driven series (completed!) that is tough to start (it literally throws you into the middle of the action with no explanation) but incredibly rich and rewarding. I'm actually planning on rereading it again shortly after I finish, since apparently it's a very different series the second time around (since you understand everything a bit more fully).
I've heard a lot about this series! I keep meaning to take a closer look, but haven't found a copy of the book yet. I love books that are more rewarding the second time through; can't wait to hear how it goes. ^.^
I suppose the question I'm asking is which of these books I should actually read. I don't like Dickens and have started Wuthering Heights and got quite apathetic about it, but I've read Of Mice and Men and actually enjoyed it, so The Grapes of Wrath is a decent choice. But I know nothing about the other 3 books on the list, and was wondering if any of them are actually any good. Which book do you think I should read? :L
I don't love John Steinbeck too much myself (I think a large part of it has to do with the fact that he just doesn't write happy endings ;~; ) but practically all my English teachers swear by him, so I guess I'd second Grapes of Wrath!