Series that go on and on and...

Started by goat major, 07 March 2012, 09:38:24 AM

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Hertsblue

08 March 2012, 08:59:46 AM #15 Last Edit: 08 March 2012, 09:30:18 AM by Hertsblue
Quote from: FierceKitty on 07 March 2012, 12:00:12 PM
   Doesn't count. There are really only about three books in the series once you've struck out what he plagiarised from Adams, Allen, Waugh, Beachcomber, Monty Python, Twain....

Perhaps it's just my warped sense of humour, but plaigiarised or not, I never found any of these authors anywhere close to being as funny as Pratchett.  :P
When you realise we're all mad, life makes a lot more sense.

www.rulesdepot.net

Techno

Agreed Ray.
Even tho' I would hardly describe myself as a 'book worm'...I DO notice bits that TP has 'borrowed'....from wherever.
Doesn't stop me really enjoying the novels in the slightest.....I love 'em ! :-bd
Cheers - Phil.

Lord Kermit of Birkenhead

One deffinatly not borrowed, Sledging Elephants from Movives, Movies.

IanS
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Techno


Lord Kermit of Birkenhead

It's also one not to read in a Pub, split most of a pint on that one.

As for endless ones - E.C. Tubbs - the Dumerest Saga, and isn't there something like Perry Rodan as well.

IanS
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mollinary

Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey Maturin series for me. Came to them late, was completely sold on them, still am. The great advantage of such a long series of novels is by the time you get to the end of the last one, you've forgotten enough about the first to start again (or at least that works for me!).  I just find them so funny, and witty, and I keep finding new things to burst out laughing about. They are great stories, and wonderfully observed.  They have been my bedtime reading, a chapter a night, more or less, for the  last two years - and I am coming to the end of the series for the second time, and about to start again.  All I can say to the sadly deceased author is "I drink to you sir, in bumpers, three times three!".

Mollinary (aged 57 1/3)
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Maenoferren

Quote from: ianrs54 on 08 March 2012, 09:35:43 AM
One deffinatly not borrowed, Sledging Elephants from Movives, Movies.

IanS
very true :)
one of my favourite autors and to be honest i dont care where he gets his ideas from :D :D
Sometimes I wonder - why is that frisbee geting bigger - and then it hits me!

Hertsblue

Quote from: mollinary on 08 March 2012, 06:45:21 PM
Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey Maturin series for me. Came to them late, was completely sold on them, still am. The great advantage of such a long series of novels is by the time you get to the end of the last one, you've forgotten enough about the first to start again (or at least that works for me!).  I just find them so funny, and witty, and I keep finding new things to burst out laughing about. They are great stories, and wonderfully observed.  They have been my bedtime reading, a chapter a night, more or less, for the  last two years - and I am coming to the end of the series for the second time, and about to start again.  All I can say to the sadly deceased author is "I drink to you sir, in bumpers, three times three!".

Mollinary (aged 57 1/3)

Hear him, hear him! The other great feature of O'Brian's writing is his ability to capture early nineteenth century attitudes and mores. No revisionist modern-day PC - ism in his stories.  :-bd
When you realise we're all mad, life makes a lot more sense.

www.rulesdepot.net

Legate

"The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan. I stopped reading at Book 10..."

A buddy of mine got about that far as well, and gave up.  I don't think an ending is in view even now. :o

Captain J Aubrey

I stopped reading the Horus Heresy with Descent of Angels. I started the series when it first came out. I was sorting my wedding out then. It's six years now... Surely it must end soon.

Completely agree with the Patrick O'Brian. I finished the Surgeons Mate at the start of the week. I been slowly buying them over the last year as I feel you can't rush those books. They are like a fine wine - made to be savoured. I need to get the rest though before the issue a new edition and change all the covers.

Ben Waterhouse

Patrick O'Brian for me also, along with the incomparable Flashman!

Malbork

Surprised nobody has mentioned Alan Mallinson's Hervey (light dragoons) series.

Starts at Waterloo and works its way back and forth from the Peninsula to S. Africa and the Greek War of Independence. The latter volumes have got a bit slow, but period detail is good and I find them easier to read than O'Brien's books (only managed one and a half  :(); i reckon the latest, vol 10?, should be out in paperback shortly.

They are certainly not page-turners in the Cornwell style but repay a sunny afternoon in the garden with a beer or two.   ;)

Hertsblue

Quote from: Malbork on 19 April 2012, 01:09:11 PM
Surprised nobody has mentioned Alan Mallinson's Hervey (light dragoons) series.


Read two or three of them but found Hervey a bit two dimensional. Same with Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe series - his later medieaval books are much better. I enjoyed Azincourt.

If you're into whodunnits, I strongly recommend Lindsey Davis's Falco series. Not sure how "Roman" the plots are, but great fun.
When you realise we're all mad, life makes a lot more sense.

www.rulesdepot.net

Ben Waterhouse

Quote from: Hertsblue on 20 April 2012, 09:17:40 AM
Read two or three of them but found Hervey a bit two dimensional. Same with Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe series - his later medieaval books are much better. I enjoyed Azincourt.

If you're into whodunnits, I strongly recommend Lindsey Davis's Falco series. Not sure how "Roman" the plots are, but great fun.

Au contraire, I found young Hervey's character a believable representation of his time and class, very unlike the chippy late 20th century Sharpe and his proto PIRA sidekick Harper....

Malbork

QuoteIf you're into whodunnits, I strongly recommend Lindsey Davis's Falco series. Not sure how "Roman" the plots are, but great fun.

Thoroughly enjoyed the first 6 or so but I think things fell apart a little. I agree they are great fun even if the whodunntit aspect is a bit more Agatha Christie than Robert Graves.

Have to agree with Ben re Sharpe & Co.  The medieval and Wessex books are better IMHO. In this time period the Oathsworn series by Robert Low is worth a look for Viking lovers.