Thursday, September 22, 2005

Fictitious

In the spirit of vulnerable, transparent blogging, I thought I would share with you my current reading habits. I've noticed that I only read fiction books when I go on vacation. I think that the reason why this is the case is that I want to have a book that just passes the time easily while I'm trying to fit a six-three frame into a hobbit-sized airplane seat for a couple of hours.

And I've noticed that the longer the vacation, the longer the book. For my 3 week trip to Brazil I read this:



For my 3 day trip to Mexico I read this:



But during the short periods of non-vacation, I seem to only read non-fiction books. There are two reasons why this is the case. I enjoy learning new things. And I feel I should at least attempt to do something productive or redeeming with my reading time. Key word here, attempt:



And no, I don't consider McLaren fiction.

But now, for next week's Seattle vacation, I have returned to my geek roots to pick of the 700 page fantasy classic:



To be honest, most people see fantasy novels as not much better than the average cheap romantic novel. But if millions of adults are reading cute children's fantasy novels about a bunch of persnickety school kids with magic sticks then I shouldn't be embarrassed about reading this.

So far its pretty good, as the reviews said, the characters are more raw, and colored with shades of grey instead of black and white. People die, bad things happen to good people, the seedy underbelly of humanity is exposed. I'm sure some good stuff will happen in it too, but in most fantasy novels such as potter books, you know that the unwitting, misunderstood, underdog hero will ultimately triumph over his clearly evil foes. (which is why people read them, nothing wrong with that)

Back in college, I really enjoyed Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series:



The characters (even the many female ones) were entirely believable and full of depth even while in a fantastical setting. But I really got pissed off and felt abused when after around book 8 in the series, the plot slowed to a spine-numbing crawl. Book 11 is out now, and they say that things have started picking up again for the final book 13, but I don't think that I can ever go back.

There's a lot of crap in Fantasy and SciFi, but these writing genres also allow a good writer a huge array of freedom to talk about the human condition in accurate, but refreshingly entertaining ways:



I guess why I also enjoyed several of Percy's novels (while not exactly scifi/fant) is that I can identify with the characters because they are human (in every sense of the word, and not just human in the sense of ethical or unethical actions).

But anyway, with this new series, I at least know what I'm getting into up front --- a total of 6 books with a very probable chance that all will be published before the author dies... and maybe the start of a lot more fiction between vacations.

4 Comments:

At 9/23/2005 7:57 AM, Blogger Zuriel said...

Ender's Game is an awesome book.

 
At 9/23/2005 9:16 AM, Blogger j-lay said...

i really enjoyed the five love languages. a must read for everyone.

 
At 9/28/2005 9:15 AM, Blogger Shannon said...

the entire ender series (including the ender's shadow books) are really great. it's one of those books that really makes you think about reality.

john, have you read any douglas coupland?

 
At 9/29/2005 2:11 PM, Blogger BU said...

I'll have to check him out. thanks shannon.

 

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