#171
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
All, I am reading Transitions now. I only know of it because of recommendations on 2p2. It came up a few times in threads about books and I'm getting around to reading it. About a quarter of the way through, I am enjoying it, but realizing a lot of the point material is for people with more life experience than me.
Anyone here read it? By William Bridges. |
#172
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
Cannibals & Kings by Marvin Harris.
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#173
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
I am reading The Naming Of The Dead by Ian Rankin
but Conan just started and Jerry Seinfeld is on tonight so it will have to wait. I have read all the "Rebus" books by Ian Rankin and have enjoyed them all. The latest and apparantly last Rebus book was recently issued and I will be reading it shortly. I am going to miss Rebus but I think it is neat how Rankin had the books develop in real time thus making it time for Rebus to retire. |
#174
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
Starting Wicked this weekend for class.
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#175
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
Finished Queen's Gambit by Walter Tevis a few days ago. First read Tevis because I'd liked The Hustler, and found he wrote the book it was based on. Surprised to find that despite it being one of my favourite films, the book was better. Proceeded to read The Man Who Fell To Earth (basis of a bizarre Nicolas Roeg film), didn't enjoy it nearly as much, and concluded he was good, but perhaps a bit of a one-hit-wonder. [censored] was I wrong.
Queen Gambit is probably one of the ten best books I've ever read. It blows The Hustler away. It blows me away. The central character, a female chess prodigy with issues, is a work of art. The tone used suits the character and the story perfectly. The tension created, purely because you care so much whether she wins or loses (and not just at chess) is incredible. Far greater than most thrillers that rely purely on tension. At one point I put it down, because I thought I knew what was coming and wasn't in the mood for that sort of scene - turns out I guessed wrong, and I just couldn't see that the way he wrote it was inevitable given the characters. The reversals and outcomes are credible, no deus ex machina. The ending is spot on. It shares certain similarities with The Hustler, but whereas The Hustler was a really good book, Queen's Gambit is a great book. In another 25 years it will be on its 40th reprinting, someone will pick it up, and they'll be just as blown away by it as I was. |
#176
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
That review really makes me want to get the book. Good thing it is in the university library. I'll check it out for some winter reading.
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#177
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
I am finishing up the last hundred pages of Haruki Murakami's "The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle". I really enjoy it but very strange. Sort of like reading a David Lynch movie.
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#178
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
Well I finished Dune the other night and I feel a little disappointed.
It started well but towards the end there was a definite drop in quality it almost seemed as if Herbert was trying to finish the book within an arbitrary word limit. I felt it needed to take its time a little more and come to a more natural end rather then confronting the Guild the Emperor and the Harkonnen in the last chapter. I was also left wondering whether this would be a hit if it was released for the first time today. It’s clearly heavily influenced by the life of Mohamed. The hero is a mystical leader who leads his people in bloody rebellion against an empire that enslaves the planet because it is reliant on a substance only found under the sands of Dune. I'm not sure how that would play with middle America or whether Muslims would be happy to see a thinly veiled analogy of Mohamed with no strong religious sense using his followers religious beliefs to make them wage war against his enemies and bring him to power. |
#179
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
I found it very pretentious and turgid. I was disappointed earlier than you.
I liked that it was often pretty imaginative though. But it struck me as too full of posturing to finish. |
#180
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Re: Books: What are you reading tonight?
I read both "The Master and Margarita" and "The Catcher in the Rye" on this thread's recommendation and I found both to be great. Good calls on both. "The Catcher in the Rye" had me depressed for a few days after finishing it though.
I just recently finished "As I Lay Dying" by William Faulkner and I loved it. I don't want to spoil the story too much, because figuring out what the hell is going on is half the fun, but it's about a rural southern family and a dying wish. Much like all of Faulkner's work, the language is pretty complicated but it's not too bad if you stick with it and realize early on that some passages aren't going to make sense until later. I didn't manage to "get" all the imagery and symbolism used but I enjoyed what I did. Overall I would recommend it to someone with too much time who is looking for something different. I am currently reading "Ulysses" by Joyce but am very likely in over my head. |
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