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Read any good books lately?
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....this probably wasn't one of them....xoxoxoo |
playboy..for the articles..honest
oh and by the way, that bed post looks like a knob |
I just finished Hemingway's "Sun Also Rises". I didn't really like it. It was ok. Not sure why this book is so popular. Has anyone else read it? I would love to discuss it.
I also wrapped up "The Devil's Horsemen". Freakin' fantastic account of the Mongol's frious domination of the known world. It was shocking to read how close Europe came to coming under Mongol conquest if it wasn't for a lucky stroke. I highly recommend this book. I have started "Clash of Civilizations" and I already love it. Samuel Huntington is a very thoughtful guy. What about you guys? Anyone read any of these? |
I just finished the last book of The Dresden Files. I love the series and can't wait for the next book to be released.
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Excavation by James Rollins
I guess I bought the book for my Sony Reader a while back, but I just read it a couple of weeks ago. It was really entertaining. I doubt I could handle it if it was in movie form, but the book was good. I recommend it if you're into sci-fi. |
I really need to pick up a good book soon. There has been a lack of reading lately on my part!
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Finished The Twilight Saga. A decent series, but book four was the best because it had a lot more action than the previous three.
Currently reading The Lunatic Cafe: Anita Blake-Vampire Slayer; This series has a lot more action and gore. If anyone is a fan of vampire books, definitely pick this up. |
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This may sound odd, but give it another shot in a few years, when you've been in the military for a while. I'm not in the military, of course, but I suspect that it may gain new meaning for you. Just a thought. Recently a friend of mine has been reading Tolstoy's War and Peace in Russian, and he said that a lot was lost in the more common translation (which I read a few years ago). I'm trying to find a better translation, but it seems there really isn't one that meets with my friend's interpretation. Tolstoy was always a favorite of mine, mostly because his writing challenged me in ways that I still am tenaciously fighting to comprehend, but it troubles me that something may have been lost in the translation. War and Peace is a singular experience, and something I'll remember all my life. I may have to try and learn Russian to really get it and that's unfortunate. So I've been rereading parts that my friend pointed out as possibly having a different meaning. I'm also rereading Hamlet. I know it's not a book, but it's just so damned good. |
I recently finished "Atlas Shrugged" by Ayn Rand. Best. Book. EVER.
I don't think I'll ever read another book to top that one, lifechanging. I have just started "The Fountainhead" again for the second time. I had started in two years ago however after my rejection from architecture I stopped out of bitterness. It's much more enjoyable this time around. Next will be "The Anthem" |
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Good lord will! Reading War and Peace in Russian! Wow, that is awesome dude. Good for you. Keep it up. I also want to read some Shakespeare. Maybe I will reread "Taming of the Shrew", one of my favorite Shakespeare. Quote:
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A good family friend had his right leg blown off by an IED in Baghdad. When he was recovering, he had to ask himself questions that I can't even fathom. The fundamental and visceral change in his life was something that would completely excuse what may appear as him feeling sorry for himself. Adding to his injury the fact that he had to take lives and saw terrible things... it creates a singular state of mind that you really can't find elsewhere. As for redeeming... you'll have to figure that out for yourself. And yes, Old Man is probably one of the best pieces of literature ever written. Quote:
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Gracias, senorita. http://forums.roempire.com/images/sm...s/sombrero.gif |
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I just re-read Songs of Distant Earth, by Arthur C. Clarke (better known for his 2001 Space Odyssey). Beautiful, evocative, hopeful yet mournful, it is one of my absolute favorites. |
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RANT by Chuck Palahniuk.
Entire story is told in the form of an oral history gathered from the people related to the protagonist. As far as subversive mind-fuck reads go, I'll rate this as one of my favourite! It's only the second of Palahniuk's books that I've read, but it betters Fight Club in some respects, simply because it attempts much more... |
I haven't ready any good books lately.... I've unfortunately read the whole Dark Tower series by Stephen King. I used to be a fan, but he's accomplished a feat I never thought possible. He's crapped on every story I've ever read by him, and now I no longer enjoy his old stuff. I would have never tired of The Stand, It, Salem's Lot, or The Talisman, but now those universes have collapsed in on themselves and are no longer open to me. Waahhhh, heh
Does anyone know of any good new horror authors? There doesn't seem to be a lot out there lately, and the quality is pretty thin. On a side note I've read some Hemingway, and all I got from the stories was a feeling of impotence and entitlement. Maybe I need to reread, it has been a few years. A certain amount of ageing is required sometimes..... It is probably about time to read something challenging again, anyway. I've been reading mostly fluff. |
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Just reread Hey Nostradamus! by Douglas Coupland. It tells the story of four people affected by a school tragedy. It is excellent. I'm in the middle of my favorite novel ever written ever, as well as my second favorite collection of short storys: High Fidelity by Nick Hornby and The Informers by Brett Easton Ellis respectively. High Fidelity is to 20 something men who are the 90's breed of introspective that Catcher In The Rye was to 16-20 somethings who were of the same ilk. It is the story of twenty something Rob's backlash in response to his break up with Laura. He rediscovers his life by re-examining the break ups that changed his life. |
"Confederacy of Dunces" I picked up after hearing that it was a good beach book. It's simply amazing. John Kennedy Toole's gift for dialect writing is wonderful. The story about the book is even amazing. Toole committed suicide and his mother spent the next ten years trying to get his book published.
I think I'm a little bit odd in my reaction to Ayn Rand. I like her books, but I think her philosophies about government are a bit odd. Little known trivia: Allen Greenspan was madly in love with her when he was a young man. Hard to imagine either of those two being emotional about anything. |
I'm on a Chuck Palahniuk tear. Fight Club, Choke, Stranger Than Fiction (Essays), and now Snuff. Next, after this, will be Haunted. I like his style. He wrote alot about how he puts together a book in Stranger Than Fiction, and I recognize a lot of his methods in Snuff and Choke. As an aspiring writer, this is more research than entertainment.
I tried to get into Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, but it is just TOO deliberate for me. Everyone keeps saying how amazing it is, but if I pick up that book again and something doesn't happen in the next 10 pages, I'm going to burn it. |
I'm not trying to tell the mods how to do their jobs, but why do we have a Book Club thread stickied in this forum if we're then going to have other "what are you reading" threads?
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Just finished The Dance of Time by Eric Flint & David Drake. Much better than the last book but not the best in the series.
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For those into Chuck Palahniuk I recommend Invisible Monsters and Survivor (a personal favorite).
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The Raw Shark Texts, by Steven Hall. It was a great book. Starts out with dude waking up, not knowing who his or where he is, but he finds a note from the "First Eric Sanderson."
If you read "Neverwhere" the ride is somewhat similar, meaning, you're in world part of you knows to be almost believable. The website is pretty cool, too: raw shark texts |
Currently I'm working on Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh. I love it.
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I just finished Snuff. I've got mixed feelings. I enjoyed the piece, but felt that it could have been a little more engaging. I found myself laughing at the absurdity, but rarely caring about the drama. There are twists and revelations and overtures, but it still manages to feel methodical.
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Oh, just remembered something else...
Small Favor, by Jim Butcher. Latest in the Dresden Files series of books; for those of you who haven't heard of the books (or haven't seen the awful TV series adaptation), imagine Harry Potter grown up, living in a dingy apartment, struggling to make ends meet as a supernatural private eye. 2 of the best things in the world: Hard-boiled detective fiction, and dudes throwing fireballs ;) |
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Think Oceans 11 meets fantasy. I enjoyed both it, and its sequel. Fun reads to be sure. |
I just finished "Calculating God" by Robert J Sawyer, best known for the Neanderthal Parallax and The Terminal Experiment. Normally I absolutely adore his writing. Common themes are atheism, rationalism and logic, and social change. If I ever was able to hone my writing skills in science fiction, I hope my works would read like his.
Calculating God, however, was painful to read. It starts out as a brilliant science fiction, but suddenly takes a turn for the fantasy with the introduction of theistic alien species and even a special guest star: god. Check out this quote: Quote:
That sounds like.... intelligent design!? My hope was that this theme was intended as satire, but really his timing couldn't have been worse. That point is central to the plot and ruined the whole work for me. |
Sawyer lives pretty near to me in Toronto. I started to rad the Neanderthal series... Maybe I'll checkout this one.
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Snuff was the first Chuck book where I guessed the "twist" way before it happened. Usually he uses extreme/absurd situations to reveal an underlying moral "truth", but I didn't feel it was very strong in this book.
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such a great mind fuck as well as a truly exhilarating story |
house of leaves is awesome! very unique!
I am currently reading "The End of America: A Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot" by Naomi Wolfe. I just read "The Good Earth" by Pearl S. Buck. |
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I've read the first 3 Harry Potter books. My impression so far is this: Good stories, ham-fisted storytelling. I'm really hoping the next few break out of the mold a little bit here.
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I'm about halfway through Herman Wouk's War And Remembrance. I wonder just how many people actually read the entire book.
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