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Yeah, Hail Mary is a fluffy quick read. The Dan Brown of scifi LOL, pretty accurate. Altho Dan does quite well in terms of sales, so not a bad place to be.
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What put me off Dan Brown was realising that the structure and sequencing of each book was identical = they were clearly, in hindsight, written to the same pattern.
He's not the only author who does that, of course. I once made the mistake some years ago of reading two Patricia Cornwell books back to back having never previously read anything by her. I haven't been able to touch her writing since. Other than the character names, the books were essentially identical.
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Aja Jin wrote:
Yeah, Hail Mary is a fluffy quick read. The Dan Brown of scifi LOL, pretty accurate. Altho Dan does quite well in terms of sales, so not a bad place to be.
If sales and money are the reasons to write - and those are understandable motives - Dan Brown is a success. Without going into detail, I find his actual books personally unreadable. But I’d swap bank accounts with him!
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starexplorer wrote:
Aja Jin wrote:
Yeah, Hail Mary is a fluffy quick read. The Dan Brown of scifi LOL, pretty accurate. Altho Dan does quite well in terms of sales, so not a bad place to be.
If sales and money are the reasons to write - and those are understandable motives - Dan Brown is a success. Without going into detail, I find his actual books personally unreadable. But I’d swap bank accounts with him!
I thought the first one was quite good. The rest (I read a couple), were kinda the same. So yeah, same approach.
Last edited by Aja Jin (8/16/2021 7:15 am)
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Finished Abercrombie's The Trouble with Peace and jumped straight into the Bobiverse via the first book, We Are Legion.
Wow, what a contrast. Joe had me turning virtual pages at a ferocious rate because I needed to know what would happened to characters I've come to care about as I start to realise the long game he has been playing over all the earlier books in that universe.
Whereas Legion had me turning pages simply to get to the end, A procession of variations on a theme, the various Bobs had me so confused at times I had to go back to the chapter heads to remind myself which POV version was in play. It reminded me a little of Scalzi's Redshirts which is a book I have been unable to finish to this day. All sizzle but no steak imo.
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I am not going to defend the Bobs. I have been extremely uncertain of whether they have any merit beyond the curious ability to group many topics of interest under a single umbrella.
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I just re-read I Am Legend. I'd forgotten what a good read it is. And the ending is amazing. Highly recommended. PS Don't judge it by the movies
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Yeah, the movie was a bit lame.
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HRHSpence wrote:
Yeah, the movie was a bit lame.
That's one reason why I tend to avoid movies that are based on books, although some aren't too far off, I still want MY interpretation of the story, characters, scenes, etc., instead of the director's interpretation. For that, I rely on the book.
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Matheson's I Am Legend? Yes, I remember it well. It is indeed a good book.
I'm currently reading Adrian Tchaikovsky's The Expert System's Champion, and I discovered last night that there is a new Alastair Reynolds book imminent, set in the Revelation Space universe!