Orogrande is one of the finest rockhounding areas in New Mexico.
STOP IT! I don't need another hobby. Thankfully, florida is sand and shells to the limestone, about 100' down.
Orogrande is one of the finest rockhounding areas in New Mexico.
I certainly understand. My compulsion to collect rocks was under control until my wife caught the bug. She's even more obsessive than me. When we moved here it was primarily because of the outstanding collecting possibilities and a very active local club. And we bought this particular house partly because there's an abandoned copper/gold/iron mine 200 yards away.STOP IT! I don't need another hobby. Thankfully, florida is sand and shells to the limestone, about 100' down.
Follet’s Pillars of Fire
Any fantasy type readers out there? I'm looking for recommendations. New or old. I'm about 2-3 weeks from finishing up my kindle backlog and will be caught up on a few different series. One off books are fine, or trilogies, but prefer series that are under five books. (I'm not diving back into Song of Ice and Fire. I quit reading them for a reason.) I use fantasy pretty loosely. Wizards, swordplay, but also altered history/steam (or clockwork) punk. Not so much the sci-fi end of the spectrum though.
I've been reading through all of Brandon Sanderson's works. My favorites are the Mistborn series, The Reckoners series and Skyward. Since you specifically mention steampunk, The Rithmatist was pretty good too.Any fantasy type readers out there? I'm looking for recommendations. New or old. I'm about 2-3 weeks from finishing up my kindle backlog and will be caught up on a few different series. One off books are fine, or trilogies, but prefer series that are under five books. (I'm not diving back into Song of Ice and Fire. I quit reading them for a reason.) I use fantasy pretty loosely. Wizards, swordplay, but also altered history/steam (or clockwork) punk. Not so much the sci-fi end of the spectrum though.
Up next is a re-read of To Kill a Mockingbird, followed by a first time through Go Set A Watchman.
Sometime around the 2004 timeframe I went through and decided to read several of the "classics" which I had never been assigned in school; To Kill A Mockingbird was one of those. Now that there is a "sequel" I want to read it, but it's been long enough that I need to revisit the original first.
You may like it, but the "sequel" was never meant to be released and likely coerced out of Harper Lee by unscrupulous individuals. I personally did not.
I haven't researched it deeply, but I've heard it was controversial both due to subject matter and also due to the circumstances of its publishing.
But my wife bought it and it's sitting on the bookshelf, so I figure I might as well give it a shot. At least I'll learn what the controversy is all about.
Zipping my way through John Steinbeck's East of Eden. Holy cow, Steinbeck can write. What a masterclass in character development. Though, this book is partly non-fiction, as one of the families involved are real characters from his mother's side of the family, early settlers in the Salinas Valley, just east of Monterey Bay in Calif.
I've read several of his classics, but I might stick with him and read through some of the books I missed.
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It's supposedly a rough draft of "To Kill A Mockingbird", evidenced by passages that were used in both novels. You may enjoy it and I definitely don't want to sway you or give the wrong impression.
That is a pretty good list off the top of your mind! I agree with most of those. I would add Peter F. Hamilton's books: especially The Great North Road, Pandora's Planet, and Judas Unchained. And Pournelle's The Mote in God's Eye and The Prince series.I have given most of my paper story books away, my bookshelf now has a mixture of reference books for brewing, fly tying, backpacking, motorcycle repair, and I.T. related books of all sorts.
My story books are all in digital format. That library is more than 600 strong. Some of my favorites being:
The Safehold series by David Weber
The Honor Harrington series by David Weber
Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card
Dune by Frank Herbert
IRobot by Asimov
HHGTG by Douglas Adams
The Dark Elf trilogy by Salvatore
The Dragonlance Chronicles by Margeret Weis and Tracy Hickman
The Hobbit and TLOTR series by Tolkien
The Frankenstein series by Dean Koontz
The Harry Potter books by J K Rowling *If you do the audio books you MUST get the ones with Stephen Fry as the narrator!
Dragonriders of Pern by Anne McCaffrey
The Lost Regiment Series by William Forstchen *He said he would expand the series, but has so far not done so. The last book does not provide closure at all, just a warning if you are one who needs closure.
I know there are MANY excellent ones that I am forgetting, but those rose to the top of my mind.
That is a pretty good list off the top of your mind! I agree with most of those. I would add Peter F. Hamilton's books: especially The Great North Road, Pandora's Planet, and Judas Unchained. And Pournelle's The Mote in God's Eye and The Prince series.
What is the best new scifi you have read in the last couple of years? These days I struggle to find new books that I like the way I like the old ones.
Right now I'm reading Cormac McCarthy's The Crossing. It happens not too far from my neighborhood. I just finished his novel All the Pretty Horses. He's one of the great underrated American authors IMHO.
That was the first book I read by him. Definitely an eye opener that made a lasting impression, He has an amazing way with characters and dialogue-it perfectly fits the character every time.He's brilliant, with a daunting vocabulary and incredibly intense characters. Have you read Blood Meridian?
Well for sure then read The Road. Post-apocalypse, not the fun kindThat was the first book I read by him. Definitely an eye opener that made a lasting impression, He has an amazing way with characters and dialogue-it perfectly fits the character every time.
Well for sure then read The Road. Post-apocalypse, not the fun kind![]()