07-08-2009, 12:17 PM | #201 (permalink) |
follower of the child's crusade?
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Im reading the Martin Beck detective novels at the moment.
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"Do not tell lies, and do not do what you hate, for all things are plain in the sight of Heaven. For nothing hidden will not become manifest, and nothing covered will remain without being uncovered." The Gospel of Thomas |
07-13-2009, 11:39 AM | #204 (permalink) |
Crazy
Location: Tampa Bay, Florida
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Powerclown, I finished that book a few months ago and I loved it. The imagery combined with the completely unique writing style did it for me. I really hate that they are making a movie out of it; they will ruin the intrigue by explaining how the world ended. That was one of the things that made the book so great: you don't know what happened, it just did, now deal with it! Grrrrrrrr, I hate modern Hollywood.
AAAAAANYWHO, I just finished Pygmy by Chuck Palahniuk. I'm really sorry to say I was horribly disappointed. The writing style was definitely different, and made for real entertainment while reading it, but that isn't enough for how it ended up. I saw the ending coming by page four. I was really hoping he'd pull a Chuck P twist and not make it so sappy and predictable, but he did not. It really felt like he was rushed to finish it, or he just wrote himself into a corner. Either way, I appreciate the Chuck P formula, but this latest one really hurt. If you're curious for spoilers, message me.
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"It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." |
07-13-2009, 12:01 PM | #205 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Some place windy
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Last week, I finished God's Middle Finger: Into the Lawless Heart of the Sierra Madre by Richard Grant. It was an entertaining travelogue. The Sierra Madre is definitely a place to avoid. By the end of the book, I was a bit tired of the author's repetitive "and then I ignored all advice and did this unbelievably stupid thing" stories.
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07-13-2009, 04:10 PM | #206 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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I liked the writing style as well, how he kept you on edge throughout the story. Every time they had to go into one of those damn houses... Theyre publishing the book with actor Viggo Mortensen on the cover, and there is a website for the movie now as well. I hope the movie stays faithful to the book...if it can convey half of the dread and suspense from the book it will be a decent movie I think. I enjoyed The Road so much I picked up Blood Meridian today.
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07-14-2009, 04:16 PM | #208 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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The Border Trilogy sounds good based on what little I read on amazon.com. Blood Meridian is solid so far. Good to know there is more quaility stuff from this author for future reading. Travelougues sound interesting, Ive never read one...scratch that I did read one about a guy kayaking solo somewhere but I forgot the name of the book and the author.
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07-31-2009, 08:27 AM | #209 (permalink) | ||
has all her shots.
Location: Florida
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I'm reading The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver right now and I am completely enamored of her writing. I've read her essays previously, but not her fiction. This book she narrates in the voice of five different characters and it is brilliant.
Just read a moment ago...in the voice of a distraught mother and missionary's wife: Quote:
Quote:
It's an epic-ly successful novel. I'm so glad I picked it up during this break.
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Most people go through life dreading they'll have a traumatic experience. Freaks were born with their trauma. They've already passed their test in life. They're aristocrats. - Diane Arbus PESSIMISM, n. A philosophy forced upon the convictions of the observer by the disheartening prevalence of the optimist with his scarecrow hope and his unsightly smile. - Ambrose Bierce |
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08-09-2009, 04:50 PM | #211 (permalink) | |
Still Crazy
Location: In my own time
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Now reading the Captain Alatriste series by Arturo Perez-Reverte. Swords, men of honor, history of Old Spain, an eye-opening look at the 17th century.
Here is an excerpt from the 2nd novel in the series, Purity of Blood: Quote:
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it's gritty Last edited by Ananas; 08-09-2009 at 04:52 PM.. |
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08-09-2009, 06:49 PM | #212 (permalink) |
Minion of the scaléd ones
Location: Northeast Jesusland
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You just made my facebook status with the last two lines of that quote. Good stuff. May have to track it down.
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Light a man a fire, and he will be warm while it burns. Set a man on fire, and he will be warm for the rest of his life. |
08-09-2009, 08:14 PM | #213 (permalink) |
Insane
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I just finished reading "Columbine" by Dave Cullen. He was given unbeliveable access to records, journals, court documents and spent over ten years researching the Columbine tragedy. It was very in depth and informative.
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"Mommy, the presidents are squishing me!" "Using the pull out method of contraceptive is like saying I won't use a seat belt, I'll just jump out of the car before it hits that tree." Sara |
08-16-2009, 09:38 AM | #214 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Some place windy
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Last week, I read Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri. It's a collection of short stories mostly about Indian/Indian-American marriages. It was excellent.
This week I read World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War by Max Brooks. I enjoyed it as well. It was structured around interviews with survivors of a global zombie pandemic. |
08-18-2009, 03:20 PM | #215 (permalink) |
Minion of Joss
Location: The Windy City
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Over the past couple of weeks, I read the entire 12-novel Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind.
I had heard people absolutely swear by this series, so I was quite curious to read it; I ordered the books for myself as a birthday present, and went through them one by one, without reading anything else at the same time, which is unusual for me. I enjoyed them. Quite a lot. I was kept spellbound, and I will surely re-read them through the years. I thought they were excellently crafted in terms of story arc, scope, breadth, and everything fitting together. Goodkind is not one to leave loose ends: what doesn't get wrapped up in one novel will surely come round again in the next. He is also one of the best I have ever seen for constructing elaborate and unpredictable catastrophic chains of consequences for his characters. In the sheer scope and detail of his work, he reminds me something of George RR Martin. He also reminds me of Martin in his utter willingness to make his antagonists unrelentingly, bestially cruel, and to describe their depravity with sickeningly unflinching meticulousness. He might take the prize for most stomach-turning antagonists, ever. His main character, Richard, is comparatively well-developed, but other than that, Goodkind's main flaw is his heavy-handed lack of character development. He has a propensity for telling rather than showing, and most seriously, his characters tend to do most of their expository development in long monologues or socratic dialogues wherein they explain to another character the revelations they have had about the meaning of life or love. Goodkind is very driven by his desire to convey to the reader his philosophy of life, which seems to be a somewhat Lockean, deeply and passionately Libertarian embrasure of life as an inherent positive, individual rights, and free choice, with a pronounced anti-communitarianist streak. Which is dandy, and certainly no worse than some of the odd philosophies sci-fi and fantasy writers have attempted to convey with their writings, but Goodkind unfortunately suffers from periodic preachiness of a slow-down-the-plot variety. It manifests most frustratingly when, at crucial moments in plot development-- such as battles and duels-- the action pauses for a character to elaborate on the philosophical meanings of their motivations. These sections can sometimes meander on for a couple of pages, which after a while I found myself tending to just scan, looking for where the action picked back up again. I didn't feel like I missed anything. So, I guess the short version is that the books are eminently worth reading, and are worth appreciating for their superb crafting and their vivid breadth of detail and imagination. One just has to know going in that unless one happens to be deeply fond of libertarian/individualist rhetoric, there are places in every book one will need to skim through. Goodkind is very, very talented. He is, as I mentioned, worth comparing with George RR Martin. But he's no Tolkein or Herbert. I say...7/10. Maybe even 8/10. BTW, the TV series they claim to have "based on" these books does not resemble them in any way. The unremitting suckage of the series is a deep, deep disservice to the books, which are epic and dark and cunningly executed. If you saw the series and were dismayed or contemptuous, don't let that put you off reading the books.
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Dull sublunary lovers love, Whose soul is sense, cannot admit Absence, because it doth remove That thing which elemented it. (From "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" by John Donne) |
08-19-2009, 06:14 PM | #216 (permalink) | |
Still Crazy
Location: In my own time
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Quote:
Here is the list of books in the Captain Alatriste series (all are still in print & can be found most anywhere): 1. Captain Alatriste 2. Purity of Blood 3. The Sun Over Breda 4. The King's Gold Perez-Reverte is also the author of: 1. The Flanders Panel 2. The Club Dumas 3. The Seville Communion 4. The Fencing Master (one of my favorites) 5. The Nautical Chart 6. The Queen of the South 7. The Painter of Battles Happy reading!
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it's gritty |
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08-22-2009, 12:45 PM | #217 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Ohio
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Currently reading Knife of Dreams by Robert Jordan. I haven't enjoyed the last 3 or 4 books as much as the first 6. He is just so long winded with these books, and the unneccesary side plost are excruciating, but at this point i'm invested in the series and the first book of the ending trilogy comes out soon. After this book I will be reading Law of Nines by Terry Goodkind. He is probably my favorite author, and this book is a change in direction for him since he's only ever written fantasy before.
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"Your life is Yours alone...Rise up and live it" |
08-22-2009, 02:32 PM | #218 (permalink) |
I have eaten the slaw
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Just finished reading Gulliver's Travels after taking a multi-year break from it. Worth reading, but not all that great.
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And you believe Bush and the liberals and divorced parents and gays and blacks and the Christian right and fossil fuels and Xbox are all to blame, meanwhile you yourselves create an ad where your kid hits you in the head with a baseball and you don't understand the message that the problem is you. |
08-23-2009, 03:51 PM | #220 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Some place windy
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Yesterday I finished Generation Kill: Devil Dogs, Iceman, Captain America and The New Face of American War by Evan Wright. It's a non-fiction marine platoon level account of the invasion of Iraq. Very little analysis of the war as a whole. It was both sad and funny. I enjoyed it. At times, it reminded me of The Naked and the Dead by Norman Mailer, especially in regard to how officers and enlisted experience war differently.
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08-25-2009, 01:06 AM | #221 (permalink) |
Comment or else!!
Location: Home sweet home
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The Good, Live Hard, Sell Hard: 8/10.
Over the top humor. Loved the Will Ferrell scene. Inglourious Basterds: 10/10. Some oddly dark humor. Brad Pitt was funny and yummy. I've never seen or heard of Christoph Waltz until now but I am impressed by him, especially with his multilingual fluency.
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Him: Ok, I have to ask, what do you believe? Me: Shit happens. Last edited by KellyC; 08-25-2009 at 01:10 AM.. |
08-25-2009, 08:17 AM | #223 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Some place windy
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Finished The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
The story of a young girl in WWII Germany. Death is the narrator. The book may qualify as "Young Adult", but it was a very enjoyable read. Quote:
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08-26-2009, 09:40 AM | #225 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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I thought I'd finally participate in this thread.
I just finished reading Jeffrey Gitomer's Sales Bible. I'd go as far as to say it's a must-read for anyone who does any kind of selling. Though I will say that the layout was annoying, and I'd edit the shit out of it if I could. Don't read it for the writing; read it for the information and tips.
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Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot |
08-31-2009, 12:24 AM | #226 (permalink) |
Insane
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I just finished "Supreme Courtship" by Christopher Buckley. Basic rundown is about a supreme court nomination of a Judge Judy-type judge who is selected out of desperation when two other nominees fail to be sworn in. It is politically quick and funny.
__________________
"Mommy, the presidents are squishing me!" "Using the pull out method of contraceptive is like saying I won't use a seat belt, I'll just jump out of the car before it hits that tree." Sara |
08-31-2009, 03:07 AM | #227 (permalink) |
has all her shots.
Location: Florida
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I've been reading Breath, Eyes, Memory by Edwidge Danticat. It started out very delicate and subtle, but is starting to become a little heavy-handed. I enjoyed the stories in Krik? Krak! more. At her best she is a very evocative and poetic writer.
__________________
Most people go through life dreading they'll have a traumatic experience. Freaks were born with their trauma. They've already passed their test in life. They're aristocrats. - Diane Arbus PESSIMISM, n. A philosophy forced upon the convictions of the observer by the disheartening prevalence of the optimist with his scarecrow hope and his unsightly smile. - Ambrose Bierce |
08-31-2009, 05:56 AM | #228 (permalink) |
Minion of the scaléd ones
Location: Northeast Jesusland
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Just picked up Boomsday the other day. Chris is definitely my favorite Conservative. He's a laugh riot is a quick and sneaky way.
__________________
Light a man a fire, and he will be warm while it burns. Set a man on fire, and he will be warm for the rest of his life. |
10-08-2009, 09:40 AM | #230 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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Child of God - Cormac McCarthy. 6/10. A sick, perveted and demented little book. Just not overly so...like Blood Meridian for example. One of his early, first works. While the prose was well written, the richness of story found in his later works isn't there yet.
All The Pretty Horses - Cormac McCarthy. 8/10. Very impressive read. A story of forbidden love between a chica from a prosperous Mexican family and a young, headstrong cowboy from Tennessee who fights everyone and everything to be with her. |
10-11-2009, 03:55 PM | #231 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Some place windy
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I just finished The House Sitter by Peter Lovesey. It's a "Peter Diamond" mystery. Dull. None of the characters were particularly interesting.
Before that I read the following books by Ursula K. Le Guin: A wizard of Earthsea The tombs of Atuan The farthest shore People compare her to Tolkien (who I have enjoyed) and C.S. Lewis (who I don't particularly like). All three were quick easy reads. All related to a wizard named Ged. She (the author) has an interesting voice, but I wasn't blown away by any of the three. Not enough character development. I began A game of thrones by George R.R. Martin. I couldn't get past the first 60 pages. The little book by Selden Edwards. Heavy handed Freudian time travel. Meh. Double meh. The girl with the dragon tattoo by Stieg Larsson. A swedish financial/murder mystery. Well-written, but dry with some very dark sexual scenes. Storm front by Jim Butcher. A modern day wizard detective. I believe that they made it into a series on SyFy. A good, quick read. Gravity's rainbow by Thomas Pynchon. I have only read the first 75 pages ... twice. I really like it, but I rarely find the energy required to read it. (At least in the time allotted to me by the library). |
10-15-2009, 03:03 PM | #232 (permalink) |
Insane
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I am almost finished with "God is Not Great" by Christopher Hitchens. I prefer his writing to that of Richard Dawkins.
My light reading is "Dyer Consequences" by Maggie Sefton. It is about the comings and goings of a yarn shop in Fort Conner (standing in for Fort Collins) Colorado. When I say light, I mean fluff!
__________________
"Mommy, the presidents are squishing me!" "Using the pull out method of contraceptive is like saying I won't use a seat belt, I'll just jump out of the car before it hits that tree." Sara |
11-27-2009, 11:27 AM | #237 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad. 5/10. The book that inspired Apocalypse Now. The movie was much better. An exploration of hypocrisy, ambiguity, imperialism, moral confusion and absolute power corrupting absolutely, or something. The longest 100 page book I've ever read.
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11-27-2009, 06:32 PM | #238 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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Quote:
Right now I've somehow found myself in the middle of loads of books: Moby Dick by Herman Melville, The Getaway by Jim Thompson, Chickenhawk by Robert Mason, The Winter of Our Discontent by John Steinbeck and Swann's Way by Marcel Proust. That last one is really REALLY hard so I'm going to leave it until I get a little older and wiser before continuing. The rest should be done in a couple of weeks though. |
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11-29-2009, 10:09 AM | #239 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: In the woods. With a shotgun.
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Friday night, I picked up Stephen King's latest, Under the Dome.
Wow. Massive book, utterly engrossing. Read 200 pages Friday night, and another 450 last night. I expect I'll be up till 3 a.m. again tonight finishing the last 400 pages. For other King fans out there, I highly recommend his last book - a collection of short stories - Just After Sunset. There's so much energy and creativity in it that some of his more recent works pale in comparison. Intense, fast-paced, horrible, thought-provoking, darkly humorous... a nice sampler of King's short-story writing genius. |
12-29-2009, 01:11 PM | #240 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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Jackie Stewart: Winning is Not Enough - The Autobiography. 9/10. A great sports bio from the wee Scot. This guy gets life and people in general. It helped that he had a solid family life as a kid. Besides being a champion race car driver, target-shooter, successful international businessman and iconic television commentator...his humility, wit and sense of humor tranlsate excellently into writing. Over 500 pages - never a dull moment.
The Talented Mr. Ripley - Patricia Highsmith. 8/10. Infuriating to see Matt Damon's face on the cover of such an excellent book. I would have saw through the ruse real early, but this is a well-written and enjoyable crime novel. Enter into the mind of a perfectly well-mannered maniac. |
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