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Gurkhal

Auror
More books for me. This time two classics: "The Proud Tower" by Barbara W. Tuckman and the first book in the "Flashman" series by George MacDonald Fraser.
 
More books for me. This time two classics: "The Proud Tower" by Barbara W. Tuckman and the first book in the "Flashman" series by George MacDonald Fraser.
I loved the Flashman books (have reread them several times) but sincerely doubt they'd be published these days.
 

Gurkhal

Auror
I loved the Flashman books (have reread them several times) but sincerely doubt they'd be published these days.
I haven't read it but from reviews it does not sound very PC. Still I had it recommended and given its reviews I hope it will be a good read and I'll read the rest of the series as well.
 
It is masterfully written but very, very far from PC. Flashman was a cad and a bully (as depicted in Tom Brown's Schooldays), but also funny and urbane. He's a faithful representation of a C19 English gentleman: privileged, snobbish, a deceitful womaniser, racist, both bully and coward and just thoroughly appalling.

I suppose that's how such people were in the 1840s but some will put it down in disgust. It was written in 1966 when the world was significantly different from today and, despite being brilliantly researched and an absolute masterpiece of storytelling, I doubt any publisher would touch it now without some very fundamental revisions.
 

Gurkhal

Auror
It is masterfully written but very, very far from PC. Flashman was a cad and a bully (as depicted in Tom Brown's Schooldays), but also funny and urbane. He's a faithful representation of a C19 English gentleman: privileged, snobbish, a deceitful womaniser, racist, both bully and coward and just thoroughly appalling.

I suppose that's how such people were in the 1840s but some will put it down in disgust. It was written in 1966 when the world was significantly different from today and, despite being brilliantly researched and an absolute masterpiece of storytelling, I doubt any publisher would touch it now without some very fundamental revisions.
I'll make sure to brace myself before I get into it.
 
I've recently starting reading kindle books in an effort to broaden my exposure to literature. I decided, while looking for my next read, that I would try to find something very contemporary, a book published this year, preferably something obscure.

Scrolling through recent releases in fantasy, most of what you find are romances, but eventually I found something that looked a little more up my alley, A Thief's Gift by James Haddock. Self published, but the author is hugely prolific, and it was bathed in thousands of glowing reviews. I think the average score was around 4.8. I was (and still am) naive about how Amazon reviews work, so I thought "how bad can it be"?

As it turns out, extremely bad! One of the worst things I've ever read, in fact. It probably wouldn't occur to me to be so negative about it if it weren't for all the great reviews, which in hindsight feel like gaslighting. I'm curious about what was going on there. I'm talking 1-3 thousand five star reviews on all this guy's books. Could it be a Robert Stanek situation, or is this a broader problem with Amazon book reviews? Just looking around, its hard to find anything below about 3.5 stars average. Also, the guy doesn't have any Wikipedia page or anything like that. You would think if he was really selling thousands and thousands of books, he would have some notability.

Well, I read it, so I guess the joke's on me.
 

Devora

Sage
This will be fun by EB Asher
Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson
The Divine comedy [trans. John Ciardi]
The left hand path of darkness by Ursula k Le Guin
The bell jar by Sylvia Plath
The bards blade by Brian d Anderson
 

Karlin

Sage
I picked up Calculating God, Robert Sawyer, 2000. In a street library. A decent read, interesting ideas. He tries to deal with creationism and, to a lesser extent, abortion. I found the characters a bit on the shallow side.
 

pmmg

Myth Weaver
Most of the books I have bought recently are books I really had no interest in. I just read them to give reviews, so some might review mine. I can see amazon is holding two reviews on my book, cause I think those reciprocating did not really read it, and amazon knows is. What can you do? Some people try to cheat the system. I can assure, l have read every book I've reviewed.

I am about to get four books I have little interest in, cause that's how the review round works. One seems to be a romance with a strong theme of love, another is a book aimed at children, the third is a biography of someone escaping Guadalajara to an adopted family in the US., and the fourth is a biography of Franz Shubert, an 1800's composer.

None of these I would probably read if left on my own, but we'll see what they got. They may all be surprisingly good.

I'd hate to read someone's biography and not like it, and have to say so. That seems excessively mean. I mean...its their life story, who am I to say they got it wrong. That one may be the hardest.
 
I'd hate to read someone's biography and not like it, and have to say so. That seems excessively mean. I mean...its their life story, who am I to say they got it wrong. That one may be the hardest.
I'm sure it's possible to have an interesting life but also be a lousy writer.

The opposite is certainly true - plenty of decent memoirs where not much happens but the writing is exquisite.
 
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