So, you may have guessed what I read over the weekend. I enjoyed it. But then, Vimes is my favorite. Not that I would object to another Witches or Death installment.
I started Anansi Boys, and have Son of a Witch in the queueueueueueue.
It's a .gov holiday today, so we're not terribly busy, and traffic was non-existant. Always fun, that.
I started Anansi Boys, and have Son of a Witch in the queueueueueueue.
It's a .gov holiday today, so we're not terribly busy, and traffic was non-existant. Always fun, that.
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That might explain why it's so quiet here today. It's a stat holiday in Canada, but I work almost exclusively with Americans, so I'm in at work.
What's the official American excuse for taking (Canadian) Thanksgiving off?
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It's been Columbus day here for decades, but most places outside the Federal govt. and associated contractors, and banks of course, who will close for any excuse, don't observe it.
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Anansi Boys, to me, was fun, light, and ultimately, forgettable. It was enjoyable, so I don't regret buying it, but I was hoping that Gaiman would flex his novelist muscles a bit more.
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I agree that Night Watch is his strongest work to date. I can't recommend it as a starting point of Pratchett, since it works on so many more levels when you know the rest of the Guards books, but he really was brilliant in that one.
I don't remember which LJ I talked about this before, but I think the major flaw in Going Postal was that it followed Night Watch. It's a really, really, really good book, but suffers in the comparison.
Thud! is, IMHO, his 2nd strongest work ever, ranking right behind Night Watch. Damn, can't lj-cut in comments, so I won't say *why* I think that, other than it involves _Where is my cow?_ and Vimes' uncompromising integrity. That entire scene could have gone so many ways, yet PTerry managed to make it humorous without making Vimes a caricature. That whole scene literally took my breath away.
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_Anansi Boys_ is in the to-be-read pile, but has to wait till I've finished Peter F. Hamilton's _Judas Unchained_ - second half of the Commonwealth saga, in which a wormhole network connects the worlds. Taking the train to a different planet is space travel of a sort I haven't seen before. I'm just fearing that it'll have another of his deus ex machina endings...
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So what's Son of a Witch?
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