What books are you reading?

Read a spooky book for the Halloween season each year. Just finished Hell House by Richard Matheson and was pretty letdown. Would say 5/10.

Characters seemed to be to hung up on different types of phenomina and explaining it away how it proved their point of view and the others were wrong, and less concerned that shit was flying across the room, tables being elevated, being physically attacked by unseen forces, and apparitions forming right in front of them.
 
One of my top 10 books .
I just finished it. The middle of the book was really good. Then ending I thought could've been better but it was a really good book overall.

What do you think of No Comebacks so far? I love short stories and I like Frederick Forsyth's writing style.
 
I just finished it. The middle of the book was really good. Then ending I thought could've been better but it was a really good book overall.

What do you think of No Comebacks so far? I love short stories and I like Frederick Forsyth's writing style.


I'm enjoying it, certainly more than his later novels .
 
I just finished the series called Super Powereds by Drew Hayes. Like Harry Potter but college X-men kinda story. Way more adult than Harry Potter. I didn't think I would even make it past the first book, but it was a pretty good series.

Now I picked up a random book at work called Parallel Lines by Ridley Peterson. Never heard of him, but it's interesting enough so far.
 

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Sorry forgot to respond.

Ya the Conan books. I'm not gonna read a ton, but I know they have a few at the used book store here.

So Robert E Howard wrote 17 short stories that were printed in pulp magazines and one novel that were published during his lifetime (he committed suicide in 1936). He also had three more short stories that were not finished during his lifetime but were finished like 20+ years after he died by another author by the name of L Sprague de Camp. In addition to finishing those three stories L Sprague de Camp and a few other authors wrote a number of other Conan books which are considered “pastiches”. The original stories from Howard, along with the pastiches, were bundled together and sold as a series of 12 books published by Lancer in the 1960s and 1970s as shown here:


conan-vintage-lancer-and-ace-full-set-from-my-weekly-raid-v0-4u2k1impr59f1.jpg


The Lancer collection is also famous for featuring cover artwork done by the legendary Frank Frazetta on about 2/3rds of the books.

I have not read the Lancer books, and have in fact read no Conan pastiches. I have only read Robert E Howard’s original works which were bundled together twice, once as a three book collection published by Del Rey:

three-volumes-all-of-howards-conan-stories-v0-i83paohd1xnc1.jpeg


And once as a single giant tome, the centenary edition:

favorite-non-del-rey-editions-of-the-original-conan-stories-v0-vws3475l8om81.jpg


I have the centenary edition which my wife got me for my birthday in 2016 or 2017. Most Conan “purists” go for either the Del Rey collection or the Centenary Edition and avoid the Lancer set because they maintain that the pastiches are significantly inferior to Howard’s original Conan stories.

One of these days I may try to hunt down some old copies of the Lancer books and check them out to judge for myself.

In terms of which Conan stories I liked the most that’s not easy to answer. I liked all of them, but I do have a few favourites including the Scarlet Citadel, the Slithering Shadow, Black Colossus and Rogues in the House. Among the fandom the most popular seem to be Tower of the Elephant, Queen of the Black Coast, Beyond the Black River and Red Nails.

Howard’s single Conan novel, the Hour of the Dragon, is pretty good too, albeit it basically just a “best of” existing Conan stories as it largely combines the plots of the Scarlet Citadel, Black Colossus and the Phoenix on the Sword into one longer story to be marketed towards British audiences who wouldn’t have been exposed to the short stories that were only published in pulp magazines in the US.

I’m curious what Conan books are available at your used book store, if they’re the Lancer books or if they’re the Del Rey books. If they’re the Del Rey books I’d suggest jumping on them if you really want the “authentic” Robert E Howard Conan experience.
 
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The Will of the Many (2023) was a pretty great read. Dark, fantasy, mystery with good world building and atmosphere, good plot, good characters/dialogue.

sequel comes out in a few weeks, but the first book acts as a pretty good stand alone.
 
So Robert E Howard wrote 17 short stories that were printed in pulp magazines and one novel that were published during his lifetime (he committed suicide in 1936). He also had three more short stories that were not finished during his lifetime but were finished like 20+ years after he died by another author by the name of L Sprague de Camp. In addition to finishing those three stories L Sprague de Camp and a few other authors wrote a number of other Conan books which are considered “pastiches”. The original stories from Howard, along with the pastiches, were bundled together and sold as a series of 12 books published by Lancer in the 1960s and 1970s as shown here:


conan-vintage-lancer-and-ace-full-set-from-my-weekly-raid-v0-4u2k1impr59f1.jpg


The Lancer collection is also famous for featuring cover artwork done by the legendary Frank Fraser’s on about 2/3rds of the books.

I have not read the Lancer books, and have in fact read no Conan pastiches. I have only read Robert E Howard’s original works which were bundled together twice, once as a three book collection published by Del Rey:

three-volumes-all-of-howards-conan-stories-v0-i83paohd1xnc1.jpeg


And once as a single giant tome, the centenary edition:

favorite-non-del-rey-editions-of-the-original-conan-stories-v0-vws3475l8om81.jpg


I have the centenary edition which my wife got me for my birthday in 2016 or 2017. Most Conan “purists” go for either the Del Rey collection or the Centenary Edition and avoid the Lancer set because they maintain that the pastiches are significantly inferior to Howard’s original Conan stories.

One of these days I may try to hunt down some old copies of the Lancer books and check them out to judge for myself.

In terms of which Conan stories I liked the most that’s not easy to answer. I liked all of them, but I do have a few favourites including the Scarlet Citadel, the Slithering Shadow, Black Colossus and Rogues in the House. Among the fandom the most popular seem to be Tower of the Elephant, Queen of the Black Coast, Beyond the Black River and Red Nails.

Howard’s single Conan novel, the Hour of the Dragon, is pretty good too, albeit it basically just a “best of” existing Conan stories as it largely combines the plots of the Scarlet Citadel, Black Colossus and the Phoenix on the Sword into one longer story to be marketed towards British audiences who wouldn’t have been exposed to the short stories that were only published in pulp magazines in the US.

I’m curious what Conan books are available at your used book store, if they’re the Lancer books or if they’re the Del Rey books. If they’re the Del Rey books I’d suggest jumping on them if you really want the “authentic” Robert E Howard Conan experience.

I bought like the first three (I believe) books a while back but haven't gotten round to them yet. Always heard great things about them

At the moment I'm binging on Cormac McCarthy. Have re-read Blood Meridian and No Country (Only two I'd read before), reading The Road right now and then I'll read a few more of his books afterwards. Amazing writer
 
So Robert E Howard wrote 17 short stories that were printed in pulp magazines and one novel that were published during his lifetime (he committed suicide in 1936). He also had three more short stories that were not finished during his lifetime but were finished like 20+ years after he died by another author by the name of L Sprague de Camp. In addition to finishing those three stories L Sprague de Camp and a few other authors wrote a number of other Conan books which are considered “pastiches”. The original stories from Howard, along with the pastiches, were bundled together and sold as a series of 12 books published by Lancer in the 1960s and 1970s as shown here:


conan-vintage-lancer-and-ace-full-set-from-my-weekly-raid-v0-4u2k1impr59f1.jpg


The Lancer collection is also famous for featuring cover artwork done by the legendary Frank Fraser’s on about 2/3rds of the books.

I have not read the Lancer books, and have in fact read no Conan pastiches. I have only read Robert E Howard’s original works which were bundled together twice, once as a three book collection published by Del Rey:

three-volumes-all-of-howards-conan-stories-v0-i83paohd1xnc1.jpeg


And once as a single giant tome, the centenary edition:

favorite-non-del-rey-editions-of-the-original-conan-stories-v0-vws3475l8om81.jpg


I have the centenary edition which my wife got me for my birthday in 2016 or 2017. Most Conan “purists” go for either the Del Rey collection or the Centenary Edition and avoid the Lancer set because they maintain that the pastiches are significantly inferior to Howard’s original Conan stories.

One of these days I may try to hunt down some old copies of the Lancer books and check them out to judge for myself.

In terms of which Conan stories I liked the most that’s not easy to answer. I liked all of them, but I do have a few favourites including the Scarlet Citadel, the Slithering Shadow, Black Colossus and Rogues in the House. Among the fandom the most popular seem to be Tower of the Elephant, Queen of the Black Coast, Beyond the Black River and Red Nails.

Howard’s single Conan novel, the Hour of the Dragon, is pretty good too, albeit it basically just a “best of” existing Conan stories as it largely combines the plots of the Scarlet Citadel, Black Colossus and the Phoenix on the Sword into one longer story to be marketed towards British audiences who wouldn’t have been exposed to the short stories that were only published in pulp magazines in the US.

I’m curious what Conan books are available at your used book store, if they’re the Lancer books or if they’re the Del Rey books. If they’re the Del Rey books I’d suggest jumping on them if you really want the “authentic” Robert E Howard Conan experience.
I bought novelizations of Conan the Barbarian and Conan the Destroyer. Haven't read them yet. You ever check those out?
Conan_the_Barbarian_novel.jpg
Conan_the_Destroyer_novel.jpg
 
So Robert E Howard wrote 17 short stories that were printed in pulp magazines and one novel that were published during his lifetime (he committed suicide in 1936). He also had three more short stories that were not finished during his lifetime but were finished like 20+ years after he died by another author by the name of L Sprague de Camp. In addition to finishing those three stories L Sprague de Camp and a few other authors wrote a number of other Conan books which are considered “pastiches”. The original stories from Howard, along with the pastiches, were bundled together and sold as a series of 12 books published by Lancer in the 1960s and 1970s as shown here:


conan-vintage-lancer-and-ace-full-set-from-my-weekly-raid-v0-4u2k1impr59f1.jpg


The Lancer collection is also famous for featuring cover artwork done by the legendary Frank Fraser’s on about 2/3rds of the books.

I have not read the Lancer books, and have in fact read no Conan pastiches. I have only read Robert E Howard’s original works which were bundled together twice, once as a three book collection published by Del Rey:

three-volumes-all-of-howards-conan-stories-v0-i83paohd1xnc1.jpeg


And once as a single giant tome, the centenary edition:

favorite-non-del-rey-editions-of-the-original-conan-stories-v0-vws3475l8om81.jpg


I have the centenary edition which my wife got me for my birthday in 2016 or 2017. Most Conan “purists” go for either the Del Rey collection or the Centenary Edition and avoid the Lancer set because they maintain that the pastiches are significantly inferior to Howard’s original Conan stories.

One of these days I may try to hunt down some old copies of the Lancer books and check them out to judge for myself.

In terms of which Conan stories I liked the most that’s not easy to answer. I liked all of them, but I do have a few favourites including the Scarlet Citadel, the Slithering Shadow, Black Colossus and Rogues in the House. Among the fandom the most popular seem to be Tower of the Elephant, Queen of the Black Coast, Beyond the Black River and Red Nails.

Howard’s single Conan novel, the Hour of the Dragon, is pretty good too, albeit it basically just a “best of” existing Conan stories as it largely combines the plots of the Scarlet Citadel, Black Colossus and the Phoenix on the Sword into one longer story to be marketed towards British audiences who wouldn’t have been exposed to the short stories that were only published in pulp magazines in the US.

I’m curious what Conan books are available at your used book store, if they’re the Lancer books or if they’re the Del Rey books. If they’re the Del Rey books I’d suggest jumping on them if you really want the “authentic” Robert E Howard Conan experience.
Thanks, I will try the British version novel set.

Just ordered The Hour of the Dragon. I will look at what the used store has next trip in. They were up front with the older books wrapped in plastic. so probably collector type books.
 
I bought like the first three (I believe) books a while back but haven't gotten round to them yet. Always heard great things about them

At the moment I'm binging on Cormac McCarthy. Have re-read Blood Meridian and No Country (Only two I'd read before), reading The Road right now and then I'll read a few more of his books afterwards. Amazing writer
The Road and No Country are excellent books. I have Blood Meridian, but never picked it up.
 
Im writting a small book ,
THE TINY WITNESS
Consciousness in the Silence of the Cosmos

it will have 7 chapters

The Moment of Realization: Nature’s Innocent Violence
Nature’s Indifference
The Birth of Morality Inside Us
Religion and the Transfer of Moral Authority
The Human Conscience Confronts the World
Consciousness and the Question of Purpose
Meaning in a Neutral Universe


its a work in progress , but i have few sentences from the intro available to share with you
let me know if you would like to read the complete piece


“The Vastness of Space We Live In”


We live on a small blue planet orbiting a medium-sized star, one of hundreds of billions in the Milky Way galaxy, which itself stretches over 100,000 light-years across and contains a similar number of stars. Our Earth, tiny compared to the Sun, resides in the Orion Arm, about 27,000 light-years from the galactic center, a speck in the vast cosmic landscape. The distances to other stars are so immense that light from our nearest stellar neighbor, Proxima Centauri, takes 4.2 years to reach us.

To imagine the scale, if the Sun were the size of a basketball, Earth would be a tiny pea about 2 millimeters across, and a human standing on that pea would be smaller than an atom, completely invisible, utterly minuscule in comparison. Even a grain of sand would dwarf a scaled human in this model. The universe beyond our planet is silent, without air or a medium to transmit vibrations, sound cannot travel as it does on Earth. Standing near a supernova, we would see the explosion, feel its light and energy, but our ears would perceive nothing.

Most of the universe is dark; stars that give off light make up only a tiny fraction of the observable cosmos. Vast regions remain cold and empty, stretching across unimaginable distances. In this silent, dark, and cold expanse, life on Earth is a rare and fragile exception. Yet somehow, despite the indifference of space, consciousness emerges, we exist, we observe, and we are alive.

Across this enormous expanse, human beings exist as microscopic observers, our awareness flickering on a tiny planet amidst billions of stars and countless galaxies, aware enough to notice the vastness around us, yet powerless to affect it. The universe itself is ancient, about 13.8 billion years old, as determined from observations of the cosmic microwave background radiation and the expansion of space. Earth has existed for roughly 4.54 billion years, and life has thrived here for about 3.5 billion years.

Homo sapiens, our species, emerged roughly 300,000 years ago. This estimate is based on fossil evidence from Jebel Irhoud, Morocco, where remains have been dated to approximately 280,000–350,000 years ago, and is supported by genetic studies of human populations. While this site currently provides the oldest known Homo sapiens fossils, ongoing research may uncover older specimens elsewhere. Readers are encouraged to explore these findings and draw their own conclusions, as the story of human origins continues to evolve.

Recorded human history, using fully developed writing systems capable of capturing complex ideas and events, occupies only the last ~5,000 years, beginning in ancient Sumer and Egypt. Humans created symbolic representations, carvings, and cave paintings tens of thousands of years earlier, such as the Chauvet Cave paintings (~32,000 years ago), but these are not considered true writing in the conventional sense.

To make this tangible, if we compressed the 13.8-billion-year history of the universe into a single calendar year, the Big Bang would occur on January 1, Earth would form on September 2, life would appear on September 25, complex animals would emerge around December 5, dinosaurs would roam the Earth by December 24, and humans would appear only around 11 minutes before midnight on December 31. Recorded history would occupy only the last 10–11 seconds of the year.

In the midst of this cold, dark, and silent cosmos, life emerges against all odds. Consciousness flickers on our tiny blue planet, aware of the vastness, yet entirely alone in perception. The indifference of the universe becomes clear: stars live and die without care for our existence, galaxies swirl in silent grandeur, and cosmic events unfold without intention. And yet, somehow, against this backdrop of emptiness, we exist, we think, we question, we feel. It is here, in this improbable island of life, that the first spark of awareness takes hold , the quiet beginning of consciousness in the silence of the cosmos.
 
So Robert E Howard wrote 17 short stories that were printed in pulp magazines and one novel that were published during his lifetime (he committed suicide in 1936). He also had three more short stories that were not finished during his lifetime but were finished like 20+ years after he died by another author by the name

conan-vintage-lancer-and-ace-full-set-from-my-weekly-raid-v0-4u2k1impr59f1.jpg


The Lancer collection is also famous for featuring cover artwork done by the legendary Frank Fraser’s on about 2/3rds of the books.


In terms of which Conan stories I liked the most that’s not easy to answer. I liked all of them, but I do have a few favourites including the Scarlet Citadel, the Slithering Shadow, Black Colossus and Rogues in the House. Among the fandom the most popular seem to be Tower of the Elephant, Queen of the Black Coast, Beyond the Black River and Red Nails.


Frank Frazetta I think you meant for the artist name ? I guess autocorrect buggered you up...


Queen of the Black Coast and Beyond the Black River get my votes .

And regards the pastiche , I quite like some of them , been a couple of well known authors contributed, Poul Anderson did Conan the Rebel and Robert Jordan ( yes , Wheel of Time author) did several including Conan the Destroyer which I haven't read..
 
Frank Frazetta I think you meant for the artist name ? I guess autocorrect buggered you up...


Queen of the Black Coast and Beyond the Black River get my votes .

And regards the pastiche , I quite like some of them , been a couple of well known authors contributed, Poul Anderson did Conan the Rebel and Robert Jordan ( yes , Wheel of Time author) did several including Conan the Destroyer which I haven't read..

Yes, Frazetta. JFC autocorrect sucks sometimes, and I just didn’t notice, lol.

But yeah, one of these days I do want to check out some of the pastiches, but before I do I should really read my Conan comics that I’ve been collecting since February. I’ve kind of overdid it, and my wife would likely kill me if she knew how much I’d spent on them over the last 8 months, and I haven’t even kept track of myself, but suffice it to say I’ve got a LOT. I’ve got the first 115 issues of the 1970s Conan the Barbarian comic and the first 71 issues of Savage Sword of Conan, basically Roy Thomas’ entire run. Then I have pretty much the entirety of everything Dark Horse put out while it had the license from 2003 to 2018. Then on top of that I’ve got everything that Titan has put out since it got the license two years ago. So yeah, it’s probably like $800+, maybe even well over $1000. Don’t tell the Mrs., lol.
 
Yes, Frazetta. JFC autocorrect sucks sometimes, and I just didn’t notice, lol.

But yeah, one of these days I do want to check out some of the pastiches, but before I do I should really read my Conan comics that I’ve been collecting since February. I’ve kind of overdid it, and my wife would likely kill me if she knew how much I’d spent on them over the last 8 months, and I haven’t even kept track of myself, but suffice it to say I’ve got a LOT. I’ve got the first 115 issues of the 1970s Conan the Barbarian comic and the first 71 issues of Savage Sword of Conan, basically Roy Thomas’ entire run. Then I have pretty much the entirety of everything Dark Horse put out while it had the license from 2003 to 2018. Then on top of that I’ve got everything that Titan has put out since it got the license two years ago. So yeah, it’s probably like $800+, maybe even well over $1000. Don’t tell the Mrs., lol.

I have all the DH and Titan runs , several Savage and a lot of the original Marvel run . Like you said, expensive ..
 
Razorblade Tears by SA Crosby.
About 3/4 done. Pretty good book, 2nd I've listened to from this author. Reminds me of old Donald Goines books. Gets a little woke/preachy at points but overall a fun, action packed ride so far, and the author has a really good voice for audio books.
 
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