Originally posted by mhatchett
					
						
						
							
							
							
							
								
								
								
								
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 Ben, I should be able to give my quick take on it in a few days...Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_clinton
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 I really dug RECURSION.Originally posted by Jargendeli View PostJust finished: THE SENTENCE IS DEATH by Anthony Horowitz, ENDURANCE by J. A. Konrath, DARK SITE by Patrick Lee, RECURSION by Blake Crouch. Just started THREE LAWS LETHAL by David Walton.
 
 JimTwitter: https://twitter.com/ron_clinton
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 Reading Still Life With Cross by Preston and Child. Also working on Mongrels by Stephen Graham Jones. Like Crows not quite sure what I feel about Mongrels. I like the story but I don't like the way it's being told. In my experience with Stephen Graham Jones this is an on going problem.He tells good stories but his voice doesn't come through.
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 That’s been my experience as well, unfortunately.Originally posted by bookworm 1 View PostReading Still Life With Cross by Preston and Child. Also working on Mongrels by Stephen Graham Jones. Like Crows not quite sure what I feel about Mongrels. I like the story but I don't like the way it's being told. In my experience with Stephen Graham Jones this is an on going problem.He tells good stories but his voice doesn't come through.Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_clinton
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 This is a really slow, slow burn, and I’m having trouble keeping up any momentum with it. I’m about 2/3 of the way through, and not sure if I’m going to reach the finish line. Too much meandering and stalled plotting, too much internal exposition about things of no consequence (a page+ describing a fallen tree?), and the basis of the book — chasing a man who stole his dog — is just a tiny fraction of the book, the rest taken up with musings and meandering...there’s little threat, little menace to keep the reader compelled, let alone engaged. This feels like a book in search of a story arc, and settling instead for fractured bits and pieces.Originally posted by RonClinton View PostCurrently reading Fletcher's A BOY AND HIS DOG AT THE END OF THE WORLD. So far, so good, but it is early.Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_clinton
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 Yeah, I wish I was enjoying it as much as you did as I was really looking forward to it based on the theme and the dozens and dozens of glowing reviews, but it’s just not hitting the right notes for me. To my mind, there’s a way to do this kind of reflective, literary’ish post-apocalyptic fiction — Peter Heller’s wonderful THE DOG STARS leaps instantly to mind — but this book swings and misses. I’m determined to finish it, but my expectations are tempered, to say the least.Originally posted by mhatchett View PostThere were some laggy parts, maybe I was in a reflective mood, but I enjoyed it. I will say, it is not action driven LOL!!Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_clinton
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