Ossicle Wrote:I only started reading them a few months ago and am really enjoying them.
I've read:
RELIC
RELIQUARY
CABINET OF CURIOSITIES
RIPTIDE
THUNDERHEAD (about ten pages from the end right not)
I bring them up because many of them take place in New York City and are loaded with factual information about the city's streets and buildings. As a native New Yorker this brings an added dimension of fun, and also strongly reminds me of FPW's similar, lovingly detailed locations -- so I feel like the stories take place in the RK universe, even though Jack himself never makes an appearance.
FPW, if you're reading this, I'm curious if you've ever met Preston and/or Childs and if anything fun was said!
-Oss
This thread really belongs in "off topic discussions" rather than the RJ section.
At any rate, there are tons of posts and threads about Preston/Child. I was at book signing for them recently in the B&N at Lincoln Square. See this thread:
http://www.repairmanjack.com/forum/showt...ston+child
Here's another on Preston/Child:
http://www.repairmanjack.com/forum/showt...ston+child
And another:
http://www.repairmanjack.com/forum/showt...ston+child
And another:
http://www.repairmanjack.com/forum/showt...ston+child
And there are many posts on the various "who's reading what" threads about Preston/Child books.
My favorite has been "Thunderhead," but they are all excellent.
I just re-read "Relic" and "Reliquary" and LOVED them all over again. I can't believe that I'd forgotten that Pendergast makes his first appearance in "Relic." I read the book long ago.
I have a problem, though, with their setting of the Museum. In "Relic" in particular, they mention that offices in the Museum look out over Riverside Drive. They also mention that the Museum looks over Central Park. Huh? I got the impression they were not referring to offices in any towers or upper floors of the building, either.
Of course, theirs is a fictionalized version of the Museum, i.e., The New York Museum of Natural History. But the building itself, forget about all the underground tunnels that play such an important part in the stories, would have to be as wide as the entire West Side, running from Central Park West all the way over to Riverside Drive. That would be one hell of a mammoth building and would block traffic on Amsterdam, Broadway and West End Avenue.
At the recent book signing, I was surprised to see how different Lincoln Child looks compared to his photos in "Relic" and "Reliquary." Granted they were written about 10-12 years ago (?), but he looks like a different person.