I agree that Bleak House is his best. Great Expectations, A Tale of Two Cities, and A Christmas Carol are up there too. One of the rare British male writers I've ever enjoyed reading.
just started this one. Preachy doesn't begin to describe it. SK can't help himself these days.Zombie Jon Snow said:
Just finished Holly by SK. Decent entry in the SK bibliography. Always enjoyed Holly Gibney involved stories of which this is the 6th I think. Yes it is a little preachy in the COVID aspects which King claims it is not (just grounded in real world events of the time period it is set). But it did not distract me much.
It is good and different. I felt the first third had great character development, the middle third was good but lagged a little, and he hit a home run with a page-turner conclusion.The Marksman said:
Finally finished Fairy Tale by Stephen King. I was truly blown away by the novel; it's quite honestly one of the best books I've ever read. King just knocked it out of the park coming up with this one.
Have you tried The Powder Mage trilogy? Brian McClellan has a continuation trilogy called Gods of Blood and Powder also. Both are complete with some accompanying novellas.G.I.Bro said:
Today I read "An Inheritance of Magic" by Benedict Jacka. Now I have another series to wait on books for.
rynning said:It is good and different. I felt the first third had great character development, the middle third was good but lagged a little, and he hit a home run with a page-turner conclusion.The Marksman said:
Finally finished Fairy Tale by Stephen King. I was truly blown away by the novel; it's quite honestly one of the best books I've ever read. King just knocked it out of the park coming up with this one.
brew82 said:
Just finished Shogun by James Clavell. I enjoyed it, looking forward to the upcoming tv series.
I do have a question, do the other novels in his Asian saga continue the story from Shogun or are they separate stories altogether?
If I don't continue Clavell's series I'm thinking about reading Winston Churchill's set of books on World War 2. Has anyone read Churchill's books?
Nice read Boys in the Boat last year before a trip to Seattle. Enjoyed it and it made me want to take a rowing class.DG-Ag said:
Currently reading "The Boys in the Boat" and "Masters of the Air (Audible)."
That's funny. We have a rowing machine in our gym here at work. Finally got on it the other day after I started reading the book!210 said:Nice read Boys in the Boat last year before a trip to Seattle. Enjoyed it and it made me want to take a rowing class.DG-Ag said:
Currently reading "The Boys in the Boat" and "Masters of the Air (Audible)."
The Asian saga is awesome. They are all stand alone books. A couple of the books have different generations of same family. That is more an Easter egg than anything.brew82 said:
Just finished Shogun by James Clavell. I enjoyed it, looking forward to the upcoming tv series.
I do have a question, do the other novels in his Asian saga continue the story from Shogun or are they separate stories altogether?
If I don't continue Clavell's series I'm thinking about reading Winston Churchill's set of books on World War 2. Has anyone read Churchill's books?