Just finished reading Iron Man by Peter David. (It's an adaptation of the film.) It...was good. Really good. I like how he expanded on certain things, gave it back story, ect. But I found it suffered from the same flaw I found in the Fable books David wrote: he rushed it. Specifically at the end. He spent a ton of time building up the story, getting into it, making it really awesome and great...and then squeezed the final battle into the last twenty or so pages of the book. And about half of that was Pepper's POV, not Tony's. :/ And then there was absolutely no transition (unlike in other parts of the book) between the fight ending and the very final chapter. Just a sudden cut. I just don't know why David seems unable to end a novel well. Either he's getting lazy by the end of it, is being rushed, doesn't want it to end--I don't know. But I find the end of a lot of his books to be...dissatisfying. Iron Man needed about another ten pages at the very end and then it would have felt like things had been wrapped up better.
On the plus side, I found Pepper to be much more enjoyable in the novel than in the movie. She was fun, relateable, and, thank the gods, didn't suffer from the same blah-bland-unoriginal cast David seems to give a lot of female characters. (Seriously, I can't remember the names of any of the female OCs he created for his Fable novels...not even the main female love interest in The Balverine Order and she tried to eat the main characters....) Obadiah wasn't a character of any great emotional depth or investment, but...I know next to nothing about the Iron Man comics, so *shrugs* I dunno if he's true to character but he made for a cool villain (if only that fight had been longer...). Rhodey was great; I really enjoyed seeing the relationship between him and Tony go from pseudo-friends to something more genuine.
Overall...the book was good, but the end just...needed something a little more. Most likely will end up reading it again, though. >_>