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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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it was reasonably entertaining
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:05, 2 replies, latest was 16 years ago)
I tried not to get sucked in. I was trying to read a manly book while the mrs watched it.
I failed
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:14, Reply)
I'm imagining you reading something like Sniper Down whilst slowly lowering the book to look at the hot girl in Glee... then raising the book when the footballer boy comes on.
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:22, Reply)
it's book 11 of 11 of the gradually worsening Sword of Truth series.
it has quite a lot of violence in it
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:22, Reply)
DiT reads quite a lot of crazy books full of violence and wars and planes and junk... I tend to read books on zombies, vampires, serial killers, random autobiographies and books by Stephen Fry... between us we have quite a 'special' collection! :S
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:28, Reply)
the mrs likes james patterson and michael connelly, stuff like that
I've got some horror stuff, mainly james herbert and stephen king.
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:31, Reply)
and I like Jeffrey Deaver too! :D
James Herbert is ace and has the ability to scare the shit out of people... Stephen King did... he's lost it a bit now! :(
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:51, Reply)
not all horror, but good and weird
James Herbert is a bit too horrifying for me. I've read Lair and Domain I think. '48 is my fave though.
James Patterson is getting worse. Especially the ones he writes with other people. I'd avoid those if I were you.
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:55, Reply)
Stephen King has written some brilliant short stories. If you like his then you should have a look at Richard Matheson, because Stephen King basically learnt everything from Richard Matheson.
You're right about James Patterson, he is getting worse, the same applies for Dean Koontz.
A really really great book that's out at the mo is called The Strain and its by Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan. Its ace and is going to be a trilogy. It was the best book I read last year and would highly recommend it to those that like a bit of a thriller/action book.
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 11:02, Reply)
especially as I managed to get a Charles Brookmyre book from Fopp for £2 the other day and have crossed that off the list.
although I've lost my list :-(
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 11:07, Reply)
I've lost my list too! :(
Maybe you should set up a wish list on Amazon or something to keep track of the books you want, at least that way you'll have a hard copy somewhere! :D
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 11:12, Reply)
It started off awful, with a medieval peasant organising a vote to ban fire right on the very first page. How much worse could it have got?
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:37, Reply)
admittedly there was some bollocks in them, but believe me they have got worse. The last 6 or so books have been so full of completely bollocks philosophising and increasingly complicated descriptions of how magic works in ridiculous ways.
However, I've persevered and I'd quite like to know how the whole lot ends.
This book seems to be centred on the main character having been captured by the enemy, having disguised his identity, and being made to take part in a rugby-like game which is at the centre of the "Old World"'s way of life.
In the bit I just read he twisted someone's head until their neck broke during a game. great stuff
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:42, Reply)
I saw the first episode on 4od... looks like I'm going to have to play catch up via the internet... booo!
(, Tue 12 Jan 2010, 10:18, Reply)
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