Tom Dincht wrote:"Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian". I don`t feel like I need to explain. It`s my 500th time through it.
"Monster" by Frank Perretti. Really good survival horror. I would like franky to continue the Veritas series though.
uc pseudonym wrote:I find your "no plot" statement interesting, and assume you must be using a very exclusive definition of "plot." While the plot is never what one would call complex (it stays about like it was for the first third, if I recall), once Ransom stops ambling about it is always moving in some direction.
However, I certainly wouldn't read it for the plot, either. The book interested me most when it dealt with the philiological aspects, and the angels, both of which you may not have gotten to yet.
Bobtheduck wrote:From what I hear, That Hideous Strength is even more deeply philisophical than Perelandra.
Bobtheduck wrote:My definition of Plot is this [etc.]
TurkishMonky wrote:Conquerors Pride by Timothy Zahn. so far excellent, and Timothy Zahn is still my favorite sci fi writer.
Fractal geometry is a novel way to comprehend nature. Fractals, phenomena displaying self-similarity, are being uncovered in the solar system, in our home galaxy- the Milky Way- and, most tellingly the largest structures of the Universe.
Puritan wrote:I'm working on the Second Chronicles of Thomas Covenant by Steven Donaldson. The Thomas Covenant books are interesting, the main character is a leper anti-hero, and the author brings the problem of sin out to the fore. Not to spoil plot points, but the actions of the characters keep having repercussions throughout the books, with the main character even making a mistake he immediately greatly regrets, but which continue to have extremely negative consequences throughout the series.
the_lizardqueen wrote:I just finished "The Life of Pi", it was..interesting.
I see, thanks for the explanation ^_^Technomancer wrote:That was a pretty cool book. The point though is that it is left up to the reader to decide whether the narrator is telling an actual story, or whether the animals represent a different set of events. The alternate explanation is developed a little at the end of the book. Of course, the story as a whole could be taken as a metaphor for religion itself (which is a theme that permeates the novel).
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 18 guests