The Night Watch series just got progressively worse. I liked all of them, though. - Edit 1
Before modification by Ghavrel at 01/01/2010 10:18:52 PM
I ended up reading 52 books in 2009, though The Original of Laura should hardly count as a book, even when Dmitri Nabokov's introduction is included. You can see my list in my profile if you're curious. I resolved that in 2010 I am not going to even try to read 50 books. My goal will only be 20 as I expect the year will be very busy for work and I'm mulling over the idea of mastering another language (and I really mean "mastering", not just studying), which would take away from reading time significantly. I'm thinking Tibetan, or Akkadian, or maybe just an easy language from the Romance family that I already know (like Portuguese or French), though "mastering" the latter requires a lot of work on slang and stylistics. Any thoughts on which to pick?
I counted that book last year. I think it's about as valid to list as The Original of Laura - I had finished it in under an hour. Still, I loved the way it looked (I got the fun version with the skull on the cover in the big book-shaped bo
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I think Lolita is one of the best books I have ever read, and certainly one of the best I've read in English. It's just wonderful prose writing.
I couldn't get into Zelazny. I have the whole Amber series but just couldn't bring myself to go back to it after having read about 50 pages.
It's the best of the series. I'm 2/3 of the way through the next book (Day Watch) and just can't bring myself to finish it for 2 years now.
I loved the Illuminatus trilogy. Damn fnords are everywhere, though. Apply these comments to the later books in the series listed.
A short, fun but dated book.
Of all the Eco books I've read this is the one I liked the least. It started out well and then just made a turn to the absurd. I liked the whole idea of a lying main character but at the point where it stopped being a stretching of history and started parroting the more bizarre stories of Marco Polo et al., I just lost interest. I think Eco has some fascination with the grotesque. I certainly don't.
No, seriously, you aren't counting a book on contract law, are you? If so, why???
Of all the Eco books I've read this is the one I liked the most. It was wonderful, it was well-researched and I found myself wondering whether Eco hadn't really stumbled upon something and was signalling to the reader that there was a big conspiracy, but doing it through fiction.
The Tales of Beedle the Bard – J.K. Rowling
I counted that book last year. I think it's about as valid to list as The Original of Laura - I had finished it in under an hour. Still, I loved the way it looked (I got the fun version with the skull on the cover in the big book-shaped bo

(Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov)
I think Lolita is one of the best books I have ever read, and certainly one of the best I've read in English. It's just wonderful prose writing.
Lord of Light – Roger Zelazny
I couldn't get into Zelazny. I have the whole Amber series but just couldn't bring myself to go back to it after having read about 50 pages.
Night Watch – Sergei Lukyanenko
It's the best of the series. I'm 2/3 of the way through the next book (Day Watch) and just can't bring myself to finish it for 2 years now.
The Eye in the Pyramid – Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson
I loved the Illuminatus trilogy. Damn fnords are everywhere, though. Apply these comments to the later books in the series listed.
A Canticle for Leibowitz – Walter M. Miller, Jr
A short, fun but dated book.
Baudolino – Umberto Eco
Of all the Eco books I've read this is the one I liked the least. It started out well and then just made a turn to the absurd. I liked the whole idea of a lying main character but at the point where it stopped being a stretching of history and started parroting the more bizarre stories of Marco Polo et al., I just lost interest. I think Eco has some fascination with the grotesque. I certainly don't.
Contract Law in Scotland – Hector MacQueen and Joe Thomson
No, seriously, you aren't counting a book on contract law, are you? If so, why???
Foucault's Pendulum – Umberto Eco
Of all the Eco books I've read this is the one I liked the most. It was wonderful, it was well-researched and I found myself wondering whether Eco hadn't really stumbled upon something and was signalling to the reader that there was a big conspiracy, but doing it through fiction.