Author Topic: What book(s) are you reading?  (Read 845102 times)

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Crash Dummy

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2940 on: October 31, 2018, 04:17:19 AM »
started the pale king by dfw. finding it a little slow going, not because of the writing but every time he throws in an accounting term i either start thinking about irl work or googling since i don't know much about us-specific accounting and the irs

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2941 on: October 31, 2018, 08:45:15 AM »
A book about the Romans conquering the Greeks.  Man, the Greeks are a bunch of catty bitches. 

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2942 on: November 02, 2018, 12:50:45 PM »
Finished re-reading Foucault's Pendulum again. It was less mystic and more literary than I'd recalled.

Joe Molotov

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2943 on: November 05, 2018, 09:39:51 PM »
I read Foucault's Pendulum and The Illuminatus Trilogy back-to-back about ten years ago. Probably due for a re-read of both.
©@©™

TVC15

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2944 on: November 05, 2018, 10:22:25 PM »
ps buy this. I was an editor on it.

http://a.co/d/i9XdujC

There’s a non-special edition too, but yr all spcial
serge

Cerveza mas fina

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2945 on: November 06, 2018, 01:43:31 AM »
Assi died for this book plug

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2946 on: November 06, 2018, 03:58:41 AM »
Reading Underground Railroad.

The writing itself seems kinda bad so far. Did the dude just get props for writing about slavery? I imagine reading about the actual underground railroad is more entertaining than this.

TVC15

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2947 on: November 06, 2018, 07:15:29 AM »
Assi died for this book plug

I’m working on something Arvie would like now :(
serge

Joe Molotov

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2948 on: November 06, 2018, 03:35:04 PM »
Assi died for this book plug

I’m working on something Arvie would like now :(

I'm sure he's already read My Friend Dahmer.
©@©™

Bebpo

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2949 on: November 08, 2018, 04:33:19 PM »
Finished this book I picked up for my flights last month:



Meddling Kids after reading some good reviews. The first half was pretty fun with entertaining main characters and some witty interactions. The second half was ehhhh. Got way too cartoony PG-13 teen scooby-doo (which is what it was supposed to be satiring) when the first half set it up as a dark comedy realistic satire on kid detective scooby-doo tropes.

Had some good humor but wasn't consistent enough in that. Also waaaay too many nerdy videogame references like RACCOON CITY.

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2950 on: November 18, 2018, 03:43:11 PM »
Reading the collected works of Ida Gerhardt. (A dutch poet)

Got to her translations now, which consist of De Rerum Natura by Lucretius, Georgica by Virgil and the book of Psalms from the bible.

Bebpo

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2951 on: November 28, 2018, 06:02:12 PM »
A cute gal that's into Sanderson recommended me a novella he did in 2012 called The Emperor's Soul. Read it over a couple nights and was pretty fun, which was my experience with his Mistborn trilogy as well. From just having read those Sanderson stories feels his writing feels sorta like western sci-fi/fantasy anime, it's fun popcorn entertainment that reads quick, but nothing particularly deep or memorable.

I'm working through Dark Tower Book 7 (the final one) but it's going a bit slow. I was really with the series until book 7 and was fine with the opening showdown

spoiler (click to show/hide)
Callahan vs the Vampires
[close]

But the subsequent chapters of

spoiler (click to show/hide)
Susanah Spider-Baby and Jake
[close]
have been a bit zzz. Hoping once I get past this beginning stuff it'll pick up.

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2952 on: November 29, 2018, 04:04:17 AM »
Reading the hell out of some Joe Abercrombie lately. I think my favorite is still BEST SERVED COLD, but I'm enjoying THE BLADE ITSELF on the heels of HALF A KING. If you guys like gritty (nonTolkien) fantasy, Abercrombie is the man, and the audible reader is:
 :delicious

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2953 on: December 05, 2018, 06:39:26 AM »
In Europe by Geert Mak

History book that chronicles Europe in the 20th century. World War 1 has just ended and now reading about the build-up to WW2.

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2954 on: January 16, 2019, 09:20:41 PM »
First off, boo on CyndiMayweather for starting multiple new threads for which there are existing threads. I applaud enthusiasm, but c'mon.

Case in point: Yay, we all like books.

I'm reading Yes, Please by Amy Poehler, read by her and some of her friends. Hearing Patrick Stewart read catty, birth-related haiku was a joy. Much like Tina Fey's Bossypants, it's almost disappointing to find out how human and normal and neurotic these super-achieving heroes of mine actually are. But at the same time, it's a reality check to see how they deal with their own failure and neuroses.

This is my first non-Audible audiobook in decades. I have an Audible account, but I felt like an idiot paying US$15 a month for the right to buy a single new audiobook. Netflix costs US$12 on my plan, and it gives me as much media as I can watch during the month. It just didn't make sense.

:old_man_shouts_at_cloud.gif

After my most recent trip to the USA, I've got a library card tied into the whole digital borrowing system now, and am using Libby, Overdrive, and thanks to someone else's recommendation here, Hoopla. The latter allows movie and TV lending as well, so I'm interested to see what happens there.


HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2955 on: January 23, 2019, 12:12:29 PM »
Finished Shusaku Endo's Silence.

Liked it a lot. It's about the struggles of the Portuguese missionaries trying to convert the Japanese to the catholic belief. It takes place in the time that christians were heavily prosecuted in Japan and had to practice their faith in secret.

Reading La Superba by Ilja Leonard Pfeijffer now. It's a book about the author's love for Genoa and a love story in one.

Snoopycat_

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2956 on: January 23, 2019, 01:52:45 PM »
Halfway through Stephen King's The Outsider. It's either a spooky ghost or his wife

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2957 on: January 24, 2019, 10:37:15 AM »
Reading Neil Gaiman's Norse Mythology. It is clear that his take on the norse gods has not really changed from when he was writing Sandman. Not a bad thing, just… the same.

Snoopycat_

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2958 on: January 29, 2019, 08:41:10 PM »
Well, it looks like The Outsider is about a spooky ghost after all. Halfway through King actually takes a moment to throw shit at Stanley Kubrick again. He's now spent almost 40 years bitching and buttflapping about Kubrick to anyone who will listen. The way he's going he'll reach Evilore levels of pettiness.

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2959 on: February 01, 2019, 07:19:34 AM »
Started on The Shining myself. Can't wait to see which version I like more. (It'll be Kubrick's.)

Cindi, how's the reading challenge thing going? I'm still on pace with my 52 books a year thing.

kingv

  • Senior Member
Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2960 on: February 01, 2019, 10:04:42 PM »
First off, boo on CyndiMayweather for starting multiple new threads for which there are existing threads. I applaud enthusiasm, but c'mon.

Case in point: Yay, we all like books.

I'm reading Yes, Please by Amy Poehler, read by her and some of her friends. Hearing Patrick Stewart read catty, birth-related haiku was a joy. Much like Tina Fey's Bossypants, it's almost disappointing to find out how human and normal and neurotic these super-achieving heroes of mine actually are. But at the same time, it's a reality check to see how they deal with their own failure and neuroses.

This is my first non-Audible audiobook in decades. I have an Audible account, but I felt like an idiot paying US$15 a month for the right to buy a single new audiobook. Netflix costs US$12 on my plan, and it gives me as much media as I can watch during the month. It just didn't make sense.

:old_man_shouts_at_cloud.gif

After my most recent trip to the USA, I've got a library card tied into the whole digital borrowing system now, and am using Libby, Overdrive, and thanks to someone else's recommendation here, Hoopla. The latter allows movie and TV lending as well, so I'm interested to see what happens there.

I use audible and really like it. Reading is one of those things I theoretically like to do, but find it hard to find the time. But pop an audiobook on the headphones and I can absorb a book while doing all sorts of mundane shot like dishes or cleaning or whatever. It really passes the shit out of the time for me.

I mostly listen to sci-fi and fantasy popcorn fiction, and most of the free services I just can’t really find what I want to listen to.

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2961 on: February 04, 2019, 11:50:36 PM »
Kinda got into Dresden Files over the past few years, started enjoying it quite a bit. Learned that the author has a more traditional fantasy series, FURIES of CALDERON or something like that, which he writes at the between Dresden books...

...and I got about 20% into the first book and just couldn't stay engaged. :-/

Library also has audiobooks for some of the Jack Reacher and Alex Cross airport novels. I'm pleased with how quickly they put me to sleep.

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2962 on: February 15, 2019, 07:27:19 PM »


Basically, the myth of battle has ruined war planning for centuries. Battles don't decide post-medieval wars and never have (not even then really), it's similar to the "cult of the offensive" in that generals are predisposed to it because of the glory. Also the Germans and French are genetically predisposed to believing in the myth of battle.

Coward backs off by saying that some battles can be decisive in the larger picture, but could have just as easily said the battles are factors of the larger picture. Stalingrad was the faults of the Nazi offensive brought to a single point. The First Marne was an expression of the flaws of the German belief in fast war versus modern defensive weapons. Actually he makes this point with some of Napoleon's battles that ultimately failed but then seems to forget it to prop up the Allies in the two world wars.

Has he himself fallen for the allure of battle? :thinking

BlueTsunami

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2963 on: February 20, 2019, 09:41:32 PM »
I'm reading Crime and Punishment. Man, Raskolnikov's horse dream is one doozy of an existential nightmare.
:9

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2964 on: February 21, 2019, 04:29:48 AM »
Reading Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children. I can see why Tim Burton wanted to direct the film, but it could have just as easily been Fincher. This dark is not whimsical.

Bebpo

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2965 on: February 22, 2019, 06:53:23 PM »
Finished The Dark Tower series last night. Took me about 3 months to get through the final book.

It was an entertaining series. Unlike what I'd read where people really hate the last 3 books, I felt like all the books had their pros/cons and the series was pretty consistent. I read all 8 books including the latter Wind through the Keyhole (reading between book 4-5 where it fits timeline-wise) and the 9th book was reading Salem's Lot before Wolves of the Calla with Callahan.

My biggest complaint in the last book was just that it was really slow. Like there's a part near the end where so much has happened and so many people are dead and it's the final last bit of journey and King spends 100 pages describing walking through the winter cold hunting deer and sewing clothes and snow shoes. Stuff like that just draaaagged between bits where things were happening. But then again when you got to the end, it really felt like you were there for every step of the journey. You felt the length and tiredness of the long journey in your bones like the characters, and so eh, it's acceptable.

I actually really liked the ending
spoiler (click to show/hide)
When it ends with Patrick Danville watching Roland walk through the rose field and into the tower as the tower doors shut closed behind him forever. THE END.

Like it definitely was about the journey and not what's in the tower. And I like that the series kept it's own wacky continuity with Stephen King being in the story, so he probably wouldn't know what was in the tower, because no one besides Roland ever would, so that was fitting to end it.
[close]

But the Coda was

spoiler (click to show/hide)
Definitely less satisfying. King even prefaces it that the story was about the journey and what's in the tower isn't going to satisfy you. And yeah, time loop but maybe he'll get it right next time (with total vague what right even means) kinda sucks but eh, I'll live with it. I'd like to think that Roland's journey is to die satisfied with the choices he made with his life and so he's in a purgatory loop of repeating the journey over and over again until he makes choices he can live with and then the final door he walks into the clearing and dies. Since when he's seeing his life play out along the tower he can't even watch it in this journey because it's just full of bloodshed and death and that's his story this time around. Anyhow, that's just my take since the ending is so open.
[close]

On the goofiness of the latter half, I didn't mind. I also enjoy Kingdom Heart's story for the silliness but serious lore it is. My main thing with built up crazy lores are just to stay logically and universally consistent and I felt like Dark Tower did that and didn't break its own logic rules. Even when

spoiler (click to show/hide)
King provides the Deus Ex Machina note in Dandelo's hut (which btw was a cool bit, having an IT-related creature in the story they have to escape from), the deus ex machina bit works since King is telling the story and creating the narrative that Gan/God wants.

I also have no problem with Stephen King being a character in the story. I thought it was fun.
[close]


I can see why people would be pissed with how some of the main antagonists went out, but I felt all of them were tonally and logically consistent with the series and actually liked their endings even if at the moment they felt anti-climatic.

spoiler (click to show/hide)
Walter/Man in Black - Goofy Magician going across worlds for centuries doing evil shit like Kefka the Jester, but when it comes to the real final deal of trying to cheat his boss The Crimson King and take the tower he rolls a gambit of making Mordred the Spider Baby thinking he'd control him and it blows up in his face and literally eats his eyeballs. Feels right in retrospect for his character.

Mordred - It was a little weird following him the whole time and he's an interesting weird character as an angsty kid/spider-demon. And while it's a little anti-climatic to have his final battle play out as it did with him waiting for the right moment and then pouncing, ignoring Oy thinking who cares about some dumb critter, and then having it blow up in his face literally as his face is shot off. He's weakened from eating the poison IT-monster horse but it goes into his character logic that he's been hungry and eating everything he sees and whoops, that fucked him. He was powerful but he was also a dumb kid who thought he knew it all and the pride kills him. Also the final fight was important in the line of things Roland sacrifices since he sees his own child's face in the spider-demon and shoots it without hesitation in the end.

Crimson King - I see a lot of people made a fuss about how this battle played out at the end, but I loved this bit. I loved the idea that the Crimson King was just some charismatic Hitler-ish leader with some psychic powers that created a cult, destroyed most of the world and then grew old and went crazy and made himself an undead vampire and then whoops locked himself out on the tower's balcony and now he's just this crazy old Santa Claus guy with no cult left and just a frail old man with a stash of weapons and some psychic power and deeply afraid of Roland since it'd been prophecized Roland would kill him. His EEEEEEEEEEEEE! lunatic screaming and stuff was greaaaaaaaaaaaaaat.

I also liked how Patrick took him out. Once they revealed Patrick's abilities to erase it made sense, because there was no way Roland was gonna be able to beat this undead psychic power guy and painting and erasing him made sense within the series logic. I was at first annoyed I thought of this way before Roland did, but then Roland even says he'd been holding off going in that direction simply because of Pride, because he wanted to be the one to kill the Crimson King. I like how self-aware it was.

So yeah, I satisfied with how everyone went out. Eddie's & Oy's deaths were sad and Jake was kinda a bummer but someone was gonna die. The book did a good job making me think it might kill Roland off and have Jake finish the journey for him. I never was 100% sure how it would be go.
[close]

Overall the world and journey of the Dark Tower series with the beams and todash creatures and Blaine the Mono's and Dandelo's was a really epic journey across a fascinating world that had passed. I think yeah, Wizard and Glass book 4 was the best, but then I actually liked Book 3 The Wastelands and Book 5 Wolves of the Calla on equal grounds after. The first was a good Fallout book, the second was a good Seven Samurai/Magnificent Seven book. After that I really liked Book 8 The Wind Through the Keyhole for its stories and what it added to the world. I felt it added a good deal about Walter. Book 2 Drawing of the Three had good bits and kinda boring bits, Book 6/7 was a really long and slow final journey with good bits and some boring bits, and my least favorite is The Gunslinger just because it's literally just an intro episode for the series.

Not perfect, not great art, but I enjoyed the ride and glad I read it. Now I kinda want to hunt down and read some of the tangibly related King stories featuring Can-toi, The Crimson King, Walter, etc... like The Regulators, Insomnia, Eye of the Dragon.

Also now I can finally watch the Dark Tower movie! Excited for Idris Roland, I started the series around when the movie was coming out so during my read Roland was always Idris Elba and Walter always MM. I know the movie is gonna suck but just seeing Idris be Roland is something I'm looking forward to.

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2966 on: February 23, 2019, 04:23:38 AM »
How was the writing itself.

The Shining reads like it was made for kids. Such simple writing.

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2967 on: February 23, 2019, 06:44:14 AM »
Finished Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children. I expected to like it more than I did. I know it's YA and theoretically I should chalk up stuff I don't like to that, but it felt like the worldbuilding was uneven: great in some areas, and given very short shrift in others.
spoiler (click to show/hide)
Also weirded out by canonically 80-year-old children.
[close]

Also starting Glen Cook's The Black Company, which I'd been meaning to read forever.

Still in the middle of the first Mistborn book; I'll return to it shortly.

Bebpo

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2968 on: February 23, 2019, 03:25:11 PM »
How was the writing itself.

The Shining reads like it was made for kids. Such simple writing.

Probably about the same? All King's writing seems about the same to me. It's straight-forward and reads easy and quick. I mean, I started reading Stephen King books when I was like 10 years old, so yeah it's kid-level writing. I'm fine with it, but if you're looking for great prose you're not gonna find it in the Dark Tower series.

Crash Dummy

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2969 on: February 25, 2019, 05:32:50 AM »

started this last month and only 200 pages in but so far so good, it's making me want to read up on pre-socratics, especially the pythagorians

kingv

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2970 on: February 25, 2019, 10:43:13 PM »
Listening to more popcorn audio books lately and have some good ones. They probably all carry the Young Adult label, which always kind of annoys me, but that’s where all the moderately popcorn sci-fi is these days :-/

1) Arc of the Scythe series by Neil Schusterman: takes place in a future earth where a computer has solved all of our problems, including death. The last human institution is basically the one that controls who lives or dies. People that make those decisions are called scythes. A couple of young bucks become scythe apprentices and kill for a job. Shit goes down. First two books are out, but the last in the trilogy is yet to be released. The audiobook performance is really good.

2) superpowereds series by drew Hayes:  basically it’s superhero college in a world where there are superheroes. Each book is one year of school and there is a fifth book that is basically a side story. I’m on the last book now and the series is really good, as a ton of stuff happens each year. Each book is really long (30+ hours on audio book) so you really get to know each character well, and it’s fun to see how the characters develop. Their powers develop, people die, and there are a number of sub plots that go multiple books.

Only thing weird is that the books were published pretty recently but they are kind of anachronistic. I feel like he may have written them like 10 years ago and then found a publisher. It’s nothing too crazy but just feels odd that the characters are going to video stores and stuff knowing the first book was published in like 2014.

I’ve noticed this series is cheap as shit on kindle, if you prefer to read your books, like $4 each.

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2971 on: February 25, 2019, 11:57:59 PM »
Listening to more popcorn audio books lately and have some good ones. They probably all carry the Young Adult label, which always kind of annoys me, but that’s where all the moderately popcorn sci-fi is these days :-/

1) Arc of the Scythe series by Neil Schusterman: takes place in a future earth where a computer has solved all of our problems, including death. The last human institution is basically the one that controls who lives or dies. People that make those decisions are called scythes. A couple of young bucks become scythe apprentices and kill for a job. Shit goes down. First two books are out, but the last in the trilogy is yet to be released. The audiobook performance is really good.

2) superpowereds series by drew Hayes:  basically it’s superhero college in a world where there are superheroes. Each book is one year of school and there is a fifth book that is basically a side story. I’m on the last book now and the series is really good, as a ton of stuff happens each year. Each book is really long (30+ hours on audio book) so you really get to know each character well, and it’s fun to see how the characters develop. Their powers develop, people die, and there are a number of sub plots that go multiple books.

Only thing weird is that the books were published pretty recently but they are kind of anachronistic. I feel like he may have written them like 10 years ago and then found a publisher. It’s nothing too crazy but just feels odd that the characters are going to video stores and stuff knowing the first book was published in like 2014.

I’ve noticed this series is cheap as shit on kindle, if you prefer to read your books, like $4 each.

If you like cheap Kindle/Kobo books, Nightshade Press' mailing list has weekly stuff at US$1.99; it's where I picked up my first Laird Barron books.

Crash Dummy

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2972 on: February 26, 2019, 12:55:34 AM »
Right now I'm trying to slog through White Noise and it's a challenge. 40 pages in, and I think this book is giving me cancer.
never read any delilo but i thought he was meant to be pretty amazing? is the book horribly dated now?

kingv

  • Senior Member
Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2973 on: February 26, 2019, 02:17:11 AM »
Listening to more popcorn audio books lately and have some good ones. They probably all carry the Young Adult label, which always kind of annoys me, but that’s where all the moderately popcorn sci-fi is these days :-/

1) Arc of the Scythe series by Neil Schusterman: takes place in a future earth where a computer has solved all of our problems, including death. The last human institution is basically the one that controls who lives or dies. People that make those decisions are called scythes. A couple of young bucks become scythe apprentices and kill for a job. Shit goes down. First two books are out, but the last in the trilogy is yet to be released. The audiobook performance is really good.

2) superpowereds series by drew Hayes:  basically it’s superhero college in a world where there are superheroes. Each book is one year of school and there is a fifth book that is basically a side story. I’m on the last book now and the series is really good, as a ton of stuff happens each year. Each book is really long (30+ hours on audio book) so you really get to know each character well, and it’s fun to see how the characters develop. Their powers develop, people die, and there are a number of sub plots that go multiple books.

Only thing weird is that the books were published pretty recently but they are kind of anachronistic. I feel like he may have written them like 10 years ago and then found a publisher. It’s nothing too crazy but just feels odd that the characters are going to video stores and stuff knowing the first book was published in like 2014.

I’ve noticed this series is cheap as shit on kindle, if you prefer to read your books, like $4 each.

If you like cheap Kindle/Kobo books, Nightshade Press' mailing list has weekly stuff at US$1.99; it's where I picked up my first Laird Barron books.

I’m almost entirely audible now. It just really fits my lifestyle.

Cooking dinner: put on a book
Doing dishes: put on a book
Shoveling this god awful amount of snow we have had this year: more books

It’s been a huge quality of life improvement for me while doing mundane shit.

It’s probably why I listen to so many books that are really easy to listen to, because I’m doing it while doing other stuff.

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2974 on: February 26, 2019, 02:40:58 AM »
Listening to more popcorn audio books lately and have some good ones. They probably all carry the Young Adult label, which always kind of annoys me, but that’s where all the moderately popcorn sci-fi is these days :-/

1) Arc of the Scythe series by Neil Schusterman: takes place in a future earth where a computer has solved all of our problems, including death. The last human institution is basically the one that controls who lives or dies. People that make those decisions are called scythes. A couple of young bucks become scythe apprentices and kill for a job. Shit goes down. First two books are out, but the last in the trilogy is yet to be released. The audiobook performance is really good.

2) superpowereds series by drew Hayes:  basically it’s superhero college in a world where there are superheroes. Each book is one year of school and there is a fifth book that is basically a side story. I’m on the last book now and the series is really good, as a ton of stuff happens each year. Each book is really long (30+ hours on audio book) so you really get to know each character well, and it’s fun to see how the characters develop. Their powers develop, people die, and there are a number of sub plots that go multiple books.

Only thing weird is that the books were published pretty recently but they are kind of anachronistic. I feel like he may have written them like 10 years ago and then found a publisher. It’s nothing too crazy but just feels odd that the characters are going to video stores and stuff knowing the first book was published in like 2014.

I’ve noticed this series is cheap as shit on kindle, if you prefer to read your books, like $4 each.

If you like cheap Kindle/Kobo books, Nightshade Press' mailing list has weekly stuff at US$1.99; it's where I picked up my first Laird Barron books.

I’m almost entirely audible now. It just really fits my lifestyle.

Cooking dinner: put on a book
Doing dishes: put on a book
Shoveling this god awful amount of snow we have had this year: more books

It’s been a huge quality of life improvement for me while doing mundane shit.

It’s probably why I listen to so many books that are really easy to listen to, because I’m doing it while doing other stuff.

I was happy to find that public libraries now "lend" digital audiobooks in the USA. I have one now, and am borrowing audiobooks from California while living in Tokyo. It's esp. nice because I've limited my Audible account to a credit every other month, and now I just put a hold on any library books they have, which are automatically borrowed when they become available.

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2975 on: February 26, 2019, 04:17:59 AM »
I think this book is giving me cancer.

Keep on reading, I'd say.

Crash Dummy

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2976 on: February 26, 2019, 07:46:51 AM »
I wouldn't say it's outdated; we still suffocate slowly in a postmodern hell. It's just a plodding read. There's still a chance I end up liking this. I know this is his breakthrough novel and he has his fans, so I'm sticking with it.
ah ok, i look forward to hearing your final thoughts as dfw once called him the most important living writer in america or something to that effect

kingv

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2977 on: February 26, 2019, 01:49:10 PM »
Listening to more popcorn audio books lately and have some good ones. They probably all carry the Young Adult label, which always kind of annoys me, but that’s where all the moderately popcorn sci-fi is these days :-/

1) Arc of the Scythe series by Neil Schusterman: takes place in a future earth where a computer has solved all of our problems, including death. The last human institution is basically the one that controls who lives or dies. People that make those decisions are called scythes. A couple of young bucks become scythe apprentices and kill for a job. Shit goes down. First two books are out, but the last in the trilogy is yet to be released. The audiobook performance is really good.

2) superpowereds series by drew Hayes:  basically it’s superhero college in a world where there are superheroes. Each book is one year of school and there is a fifth book that is basically a side story. I’m on the last book now and the series is really good, as a ton of stuff happens each year. Each book is really long (30+ hours on audio book) so you really get to know each character well, and it’s fun to see how the characters develop. Their powers develop, people die, and there are a number of sub plots that go multiple books.

Only thing weird is that the books were published pretty recently but they are kind of anachronistic. I feel like he may have written them like 10 years ago and then found a publisher. It’s nothing too crazy but just feels odd that the characters are going to video stores and stuff knowing the first book was published in like 2014.

I’ve noticed this series is cheap as shit on kindle, if you prefer to read your books, like $4 each.

If you like cheap Kindle/Kobo books, Nightshade Press' mailing list has weekly stuff at US$1.99; it's where I picked up my first Laird Barron books.

I’m almost entirely audible now. It just really fits my lifestyle.

Cooking dinner: put on a book
Doing dishes: put on a book
Shoveling this god awful amount of snow we have had this year: more books

It’s been a huge quality of life improvement for me while doing mundane shit.

It’s probably why I listen to so many books that are really easy to listen to, because I’m doing it while doing other stuff.

I was happy to find that public libraries now "lend" digital audiobooks in the USA. I have one now, and am borrowing audiobooks from California while living in Tokyo. It's esp. nice because I've limited my Audible account to a credit every other month, and now I just put a hold on any library books they have, which are automatically borrowed when they become available.

My library has that too, but I haven’t 100% figured out how it works yet. Their selection looks kind of weird though, so I haven’t looked too deeply into it.

Joe Molotov

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Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2979 on: March 07, 2019, 02:58:20 PM »
Are those books complete in some way or will I need to buy a bunch more to read in order?

Joe Molotov

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2980 on: March 07, 2019, 05:40:43 PM »
Are those books complete in some way or will I need to buy a bunch more to read in order?

I think there's roughly a thousand Horus Heresy books that are only loosely connected. Kara would know more.
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Snoopycat_

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2981 on: March 07, 2019, 07:52:44 PM »
I'm nearly at the end of The Shining. King has been buttflapping about Kubrick for 40 years now, but his version isn't better than Kubrick's, it's just slightly different. In the book Jack takes longer to go mental and the hotel is the source of evil. In the film Jack starts off on the edge and he's the source of evil. Kubrick's biographer claimed that King wrote an entire screenplay for Kubrick, but Kubrick dismissed King and didn't bother to read it. That would probably explain why King has been bitching about it since 1980

Joe Molotov

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2982 on: March 07, 2019, 09:21:15 PM »
King is a little bitch. Has his ass seen The Tommyknockers or The freaking Langoliers?
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Potato

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2983 on: March 08, 2019, 12:32:49 AM »
https://www.humblebundle.com/books/horus-heresy-2019-warhammer-book-bundle

(Image removed from quote.)

I picked up the last bundle they did. Only read the first two books so far, but both are legitimately good sci-fi.
Spud

Dickie Dee

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2984 on: March 08, 2019, 01:12:24 AM »
Are those books complete in some way or will I need to buy a bunch more to read in order?

I think there's roughly a thousand Horus Heresy books that are only loosely connected. Kara would know more.

They've just finished up this month with book 54 - they aren't really sequential though. Better to think of it as a setting - it's basically Warhammer 30k.

They're now doing the Siege of Terra series which is basically the endgame of the Horus Heresy.
___

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2985 on: March 08, 2019, 04:38:05 AM »
Jij zegt het - Connie Palmen

Seems to be another one of those writers that gets literary genius stamped on her just because she knows the history of her own craft. Honestly feels like the writer is rubbing her own clitoris over the ammount of classical writers she knows.

Guess I should tell what it actually is. A fictional biography of Ted Hughes and his relationship with Sylvia Plath.

team filler

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2986 on: March 10, 2019, 12:05:03 AM »
*****

EightBitNate

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2987 on: March 10, 2019, 12:06:28 AM »
Pleasantly surprised that you read, filler. Good for you.

Bebpo

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2988 on: March 10, 2019, 02:40:58 PM »
I'm nearly at the end of The Shining. King has been buttflapping about Kubrick for 40 years now, but his version isn't better than Kubrick's, it's just slightly different. In the book Jack takes longer to go mental and the hotel is the source of evil. In the film Jack starts off on the edge and he's the source of evil. Kubrick's biographer claimed that King wrote an entire screenplay for Kubrick, but Kubrick dismissed King and didn't bother to read it. That would probably explain why King has been bitching about it since 1980

Yeah, I prefer Kubrick's version and I like most pre-2000s King books.

Bebpo

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2989 on: March 10, 2019, 02:45:49 PM »
https://www.humblebundle.com/books/horus-heresy-2019-warhammer-book-bundle

(Image removed from quote.)

I've never read any Warhammer or played any of the games besides a few missions in DoWII. But for $1 I'll try reading one and see if it's fun.

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2990 on: March 11, 2019, 02:15:08 AM »
Finishing Uprooted now. It's great. Eastern Yuurope fairy tale, except the faerie woods are scarier than hell, and there are very few nice people except the protagonist and a few friends. It's wholesome but deviant and insightful and wonderful. She's the same author who did His Majesty's Dragon, which I'll be reading next.

Great Rumbler

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2991 on: March 19, 2019, 01:18:38 AM »
Been rereading some fantasy from my childhood. Finished up David Eddings' Belgariad/Mallorean series, now I'm moving on to some RA Salvatore, baybee!  :success

Crimson Shadow Trilogy and Dark Elf Trilogy, to be specific. :success :success
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HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2992 on: April 04, 2019, 05:32:03 AM »
Read Kokoro by Soseki Natsume.

Best book I read this year so far. A calm rumination on human relationships and the changing of time from classical to the modern era.

jakefromstatefarm

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2993 on: April 04, 2019, 03:11:12 PM »
[snip]
I was about to bring up Abu-Lughod’s Before European Hegemony but then it dawned on me that ‘wst’ stands for world systems theory. I’m generally for longue duree accounts that try to either provincialize Europe or are anti-realist about those received ‘common sense’ descriptors we use like nation, country, and culture when we try to explain stupidly huge developments like capitalism, how does it work? So at face this strikes me as good, though the blurb describes an uneven narrative, which, idk, might be merited with a topic this broad.

Similar accounts you could look at are Pomeranz’s Great Divergence and Morris’ Why the West Rules - for Now. And there’s that Acemoglu book (that I’m pretty sure someone in here’s read, can’t remember, please forgive me) for a more conventional (neo?-) liberal take/justification.

Quote
I took a detour,  lazily attempting Fourier and Saint-Simon. :zzz nope.
cant blame you

Joe Molotov

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2994 on: April 04, 2019, 04:21:53 PM »
Picked up a couple of Chaosium's Cthulhu Mythos collections at a used book store a couple of months back. Started reading The Hastur Cycle. It covers some early pre-Lovecraft weird fiction from Ambrose Bierce, Robert Chambers, and Arthur Manchen, and then stories from Lovecraft and his acolytes that were inspired by them.

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chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2995 on: April 04, 2019, 07:45:02 PM »
That is probably a great collection, but that cover design is a Thing Man Was Not Meant to Know.

Joe Molotov

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2996 on: April 04, 2019, 08:35:50 PM »
They all have really "special" coverart like that. :lol
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Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2997 on: April 07, 2019, 12:03:43 AM »
Started Dancer's Lament today - halfway through.  God I missed Malazan.  This is easily Esslemont's first actually good book.  He also stopped trying to ape Erikson's structure and style with this one and I think that helps a lot. 

Potato

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2998 on: April 07, 2019, 12:19:24 AM »
I'm still working my way through 1787 by Nick Brodie.

Quote
Nick Brodie’s 1787 traces the history of Australia before the First Fleet. Usually treated as a preface to the main story – a brief interlude that starts 50,000 years before the present and ends as sails are seen on an eastern horizon – the time before European settlement is so much more. In 1787 the peoples of Australia were not simply living in a timeless ‘Dreamtime’, following the seasons, and waiting for colonisation by Britain in 1788.

Nick Brodie uses the sailors, writers, scientists, and other visitors to our shores to reassess neglected chapters of Australia’s early history. Brodie turns the narratives of ‘exploration’ and ‘discovery’ around to take a closer look at the indigenous peoples, the broader regional scene, and what these encounters collectively tell. This is the sweeping story of Greater Australasia and its peoples, a long-overdue challenge to the myth that Australia’s story started in 1788.
Really interesting book that presents the information in a dispassionate way, avoiding the majority of the emotion and hyperbole that often surrounds books and articles that take on this topic.

All Australians should read this book, just because it is a history that we very rarely hear or learn.
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benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #2999 on: April 21, 2019, 09:18:22 PM »


The history part of this, especially the inside Congress stuff is pretty great. (He was a senior aide on the Church Committee and sometime there after.) But some of the analysis is kinda odd, first it seems really like it's articles taped together, which is common for academic books but normally they're better edited because this is really looked out for, second he really puts too much faith in Congress, okay, the Senate, okay, Democrats to do proper oversight of the intelligence agencies. (The other two branches might as well not exist in his model's terms of exercising their own powers of restraint on the agencies. Which, fine, but it doesn't stop him from saying their interests should always be considered independently valid from said agencies by Congress...which what?) Lastly, whole parts of the book seem like it's just him reminiscing about the time he worked for Congress and got to talk to all kinds of important CIA type people and have literally nothing to do with the rest of the chapter.

Also, I think he's pretty much saying he thinks Snowden is a Russian agent because "it's well known there are protections for legitimate whistleblowers." Which is, kinda, way to miss the point buddy.

Here's the CIA's review of the book: https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol-62-no-3/spy-watching.html
Quote from: The CIA
This discourse gives Spy Watching, in its eye-straining nine point font, a dense, meandering feel. The overview of the IC adds little to what is already known, while other parts of Spy Watching read like a memoir or a collection of lecture notes.
Quote from: The CIA
For example, the book includes a chart supposedly depicting the ebb and flow in covert actions from 1947 to 2015 (335) While it suggests ups and downs, the chart provides no insight on the number of CA programs—the Y axis ranges from “low” to “high” with no values in between—their cost, the number of people involved, or how many violated US law or were inappropriate missions.
Quote from: The CIA
At the same time, the approach would be likely to signal a sharp increase in partisanship on intelligence activities, which I think could have chilling effects on IC cooperation with Congress.
Quote from: The CIA
Johnson also seems to have ignored that we already have the President Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board and its advisory committee on IC oversight that serves to advise the president.
I did not write this review for the CIA. The text does not strain my eyes at all. :doge