sophistry: ([Tea] reading)
Sophie ([personal profile] sophistry) wrote2007-01-17 12:50 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

Also! I am toying with the idea of trying to read my height in books this year, since my total amount of leisure-reading last year was utterly appalling. I've made a good start - I'm not far off finishing my second book of the year. But my problem is this: I have a horrid tendency to buy books based on an eye-catching cover/title, a neat-sounding blurb, and a cursory scan of a random page or two to ascertain a reasonable command of prose and the English language on the behalf of the author.

Which books, inevitably, turn out to be bad - a contributing factor to my abysmal record in finishing books in the past year.

So, friendslist:

REC ME BOOKS.

I do like a good historical setting; I've just finished Imperium, by Robert Harris, which was rather good, and I'm currently reading The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, which is set before and during the American Revolution. Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell OWNED ME IN THE BEST WAY, as did Temeraire and anything O'Brien. I wantses The Lies of Locke Lamora, but every time I have the cash on me, the bookshops are just out. I dig Pratchett and Gaiman, and love like oxygen fantasies in which characters and plot take precedence over Great Big Epic Fantasy Worlds (without, of course, ignoring the latter completely). I tend to like my futuristic settings in my tv shows as opposed to my books, but I'm willing to let someone try to sell me on one, if it's awesome enough. Likewise, I'm perfectly willing to be sold on novels not of the sci-fi/fantasy genre (cf, the first two I mentioned), though I draw the line at chick-lit. Mostly, what I want out of a book is a ripping good yarn. Books of miscellany and academicness are also good - there's a history of swordfighting I'm eyeing at the moment, and wondering whether I can find a cheap copy of Hero With A Thousand Faces.

So in conclusion: I'll give anything a try, once.

REC ME BOOKS.
wintercreek: A stack of books, the top one open. ([misc] addicted to the written word)

[personal profile] wintercreek 2007-01-26 03:12 am (UTC)(link)
I am terribly late to the party here, but I wanted to throw in a few things:
-very, very strong seconds/thirds/whatevers for Mary Doria Russell and Connie Willis, which you are probably already sold on
-Barbara Kingsolver! Anything of hers, really, but especially Prodigal Summer and her collections of essays, High Tide in Tucson and Small Wonder. PS is full of this lyrical, sleepy beauty overlaying human drama, and then it all coalesces in to a marvelous overarching theme that gets clearer and more nuanced with each reading. I love it. I'll never stop rereading. And the essays are pure Kingsolver, being observant and funny and intelligent and poignant. This woman really knows what it means to be human.
-[livejournal.com profile] pegkerr's The Wild Swans. It's the fairy tale "The Wild Swans" told in seventeenth century England intercut with 1981 New York's gay community during the rise of AIDS. Heartbreaking and gorgeous.