Author Topic: The Literary Thread  (Read 3416 times)

The 'end battle' with Galbatorix was a bit odd and poorly wrote, otherwise I thought it was pretty good

Ender's Game is maybe a seven for me. Orson Scott Card a negative eleven.

The last Alex Rider book was so bad I felt like burning it, I was expecting something really good for the last one and it was appauling.
i thought it was alright. i didn't really like the final two as much as the rest, but there was enough in the last one to keep me up a while reading.

the hunger games is also a good series even though it's overhyped. i think that the first one is the best one, though.

Life of Pi?

The movie was good but never read the book. Want to.

Life of Pi?

The movie was good but never read the book. Want to.
I kinda laughed a bit when I heard how his name pronounced, But in the end the movie looks pretty nice.

Life of Pi?

The movie was good but never read the book. Want to.
the only good part of that story is at the end where you can decide what really happened

Anyone else read the Daniel X series? I read book one and felt like shooting the author.
I confused this with a book by John Grisham, Theodore Boone. I don't know how I did that.

20,000 leagues under the sea.

The Alchemyst. pretty good series. also the Edge series when i was younger.

The Alchemyst. pretty good series.
I liked that series aswell, it was a little cheesy at some parts though. Mortal Engines is a pretty good book and series

It's currently 3 in the morning and I'm reading The Racketeer, by John Grisham. Quite a suspenseful book if anybody's interested in that kind of stuff. And wtf am I doing awake.. :/

Read all of the Hunger Games
Died slightly inside

20,000 leagues under the sea.
Ah, that's a good one.
Jules Verne was a very good author. I really enjoyed Journey to the Center of the Earth and Around the World in Eighty Days as well as Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. It's also pretty amazing that he wrote about riding to the moon and to the bottom of the ocean 100 years before mankind actually did it. People at the time thought he was crazy, but Verne was a visionary. He's known as "the father of science-fiction". That's pretty cool.
I also enjoyed his Michael Strogoff. My first book by him was Two Years' Vacation.
So yeah... I've read alot of Verne :P
« Last Edit: January 19, 2013, 06:53:56 AM by King Leo »

Read all of the Hunger Games
Died slightly inside
lol it was a good book but hype ruined it