There's very little by Cussler in "his" recent books.I actually like Clive Cussler... his books are awesome to read while I was travelling... on bumpy roads... and where it's not really important if you jump a couple of sentences forward or backward... just lovely timepass with no actual thinking required.
There's very little by Cussler in "his" recent books.
A message I received loud and clear in my youth. I have not learned anything since that would cause me to question it.Anything by James Joyce.
Ugh. The only "Cussler" books I found worth reading are the Isaac Bell series. Mostly free of nautical nonsense.Ah but there used to be in the good old days when Dirk Pitt would meet an old prospector in the desert/jungle/tropical island who would introduce himself as "Clive Cussler"![]()
Anything by James Joyce.
I guess I'm going to be the odd one out here and say that I love Joyce. Yes, his work is difficult to read, some bits more than others, for me at least the effort is worth it. I find his word plays in particular to be fascinating.
I like Joyce up to __Finnegans Wake__.
What's so bad about __Dubliners__? I ask this of people who don't like any Joyce. There's a range there.
As a balancing view, I'm a bit sad O'Brien never lived to finish the 21st book in the Aubrey series.
And also that he killed off Barrett Bonden in the 19th.
Dave
The best way to read Finnegan's Wake is to have someone else read it to you, ideally someone with the proper accent. Or at the very least, read it out loud paying special attention to the pronunciation (if you do it right, you should end up with a vaguely Dubliner accent). The music of his language really shines through.
Nitpick: O'Brian. He was a fake Irishman, but not a very good one. Fun to read for the characters and the food, but the plots....
And Diana.
What about the plots? You can't say they were unrealistic?
Anything by Freud. Absolute crap.
The Cochrane-based ones, especially the first of the series, were a bit closer to reality than most. But Aubrey would have needed a TARDIS to make all those voyages halfway around the world and back in about five years.
Let me guess, your father was very much into Freud which is why you hate him.
I actually found him having sex with a blow-up doll that bore Freud's face. When I was five. But yes, close enough.
I guess I'm going to be the odd one out here and say that I love Joyce. Yes, his work is difficult to read, some bits more than others, for me at least the effort is worth it. I find his word plays in particular to be fascinating.