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Whatcha readin now? (book, books, reading, read) (2 Viewers)

Just started The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North - I'm in love with this book - much more detail and depth than Replay and I loved Replay. Granted I'm only about a 1/4 of the way trough the book but so far it is great.
I'm bumping this because the book has gotten that much better. I had to put it on hold because my nook wouldn't charge and now that I've fixed it I can't put this book down.

I have about 80 pages to go and it is so good.

 
If any of you don't know, I highly recommend doing two things:

1. Download Overdrive

2. Go get an account at your local library.

You can check out probably 60% of books that you want to read...for free.

There is only one downside (and it can be significant). The check-out period is only one week. If you are the type to just knock out books in 1-2 days, this is no big deal, but it can be annoying if you have a busy schedule.

 
What is also annoying about Overdrive/my local libraries is the wait list for popular titles. In the DC area too many people like to read!

 
What is also annoying about Overdrive/my local libraries is the wait list for popular titles. In the DC area too many people like to read!
It is annoying, but just find you 5-10 books you like and go on the waiting list. When it comes available, they will email you and the book will be checked out.

I just got the new Greg Iles book a few days ago, but it's frustrating because I don't have a prayer of finishing it inside of a week.

 
At The Mountains of Madness and Other Tales of Terror by HP Lovecraft

This was my first brush with Lovecraft and it was a bit of a letdown. I'm not sure that At the Mountains of Madness was the best place to start. His writing seems to take some getting used to. The story dragged in places and I had to force my way through it. There were 3 other shorter stories in this collection that were decent: The Shunned House, Dreams in the Witch-House and The Statement of Randolph Carter. I liked Randolph Carter the most.

I like how his stories share common themes and build off one another. I plan on revisiting him at some point to read from the Cthulhu Mythos but it will probably be some time before I do so.
I read almost all of his work when I was younger, At the Mountains of Madness is probably my least favourite of his longer works.

The shorter stuff is better IMO, take a look at The Shadow over Innsmouth. It's about 50 or 60 pages from memory, and I think it's close to the best thing he wrote. If you don't like that, you can probably just call it done and move on.

If you do like that one, The Case of Charles Dexter Ward is around 100 pages I think but mostly a self contained story without a lot of the "mythos" references and my favorite of his novella type stories.

 
I'm so disappointed with how Wool was after reading all the great reviews on Amazon and from well read fbgs.

It took everything I had to finish all 5 of the first books.

Great premise.,,very cool. But slow, plodding, way too descriptive, and I've heard enough about the stairs. It took 425 pages just to get to anything remotely exciting. Also, it's the furthest thing from science fiction...the most science fictiony it got was "IT" and "servers".

I wish I got it. :kicksrock:

I'd give it 2 stars...and 3 stars if it was 250 pages as opposed to 500.

 
I'm so disappointed with how Wool was after reading all the great reviews on Amazon and from well read fbgs.

It took everything I had to finish all 5 of the first books.

Great premise.,,very cool. But slow, plodding, way too descriptive, and I've heard enough about the stairs. It took 425 pages just to get to anything remotely exciting. Also, it's the furthest thing from science fiction...the most science fictiony it got was "IT" and "servers".

I wish I got it. :kicksrock:

I'd give it 2 stars...and 3 stars if it was 250 pages as opposed to 500.
Wow - I thought it was great. :shrug:

 
I'm so disappointed with how Wool was after reading all the great reviews on Amazon and from well read fbgs.

It took everything I had to finish all 5 of the first books.

Great premise.,,very cool. But slow, plodding, way too descriptive, and I've heard enough about the stairs. It took 425 pages just to get to anything remotely exciting. Also, it's the furthest thing from science fiction...the most science fictiony it got was "IT" and "servers".

I wish I got it. :kicksrock:

I'd give it 2 stars...and 3 stars if it was 250 pages as opposed to 500.
Wow - I thought it was great. :shrug:
Me too. Sorry it didn't work for you JB. I loved it - and the sequels.

 
No problem! I realize it is my taste since it's panned pretty universally as being great. Especially from fellow FBGs, who I love to get recommendations from.

At least it's over :)

Looking for my next read now...never read Lolita or Ulysses and they are on my list.

Also debating Don Quixote. The problem is, I know all the plot lines. In preparation for a popular, now defunct quiz show many years ago, I read the cliff notes for almost every major famous work of literature

I know the plots and basic stories for all three, is there 1 of of the 3 anyone could recommend that is an awesome book even with knowing the whole story? Don Quixote sounds pretty cool. (East of Eden is my fav book if it helps w the reco)

 
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No problem! I realize it my taste since its panned pretty universally as being great. Especially from fellow FBGs, who I love to get recommendations from.

At least it's over :)

Looking for my next read now...never read Lolita or Ulysses and they are on my list.

Also debating Don Quixote. The problem is, I know all the plot lines. In preparation for a popular, now defunct quiz show many years ago, I read the cliff notes for almost every major famous work of literature

I know the plots and basic stories for all three, is there 1 of of the 3 anyone could recommend that is an awesome book even with knowing the whole story? Don Quixote sounds pretty cool.
Weakest Link?

 
Just started The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North - I'm in love with this book - much more detail and depth than Replay and I loved Replay. Granted I'm only about a 1/4 of the way trough the book but so far it is great.
I'm bumping this because the book has gotten that much better. I had to put it on hold because my nook wouldn't charge and now that I've fixed it I can't put this book down.

I have about 80 pages to go and it is so good.
Indeed. Great book.

 
Just Finished: "The Origin of Consciousness and the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind" by Julian Jaynes.

Mind Blown.

Why does ancient man (3000+ years ago) appear so different than modern man?

When we read the literature of ancient peoples (Greek Mythology, Ancient Near East (ANE) literature (Gilgamesh, Old Testament, etc...) they indicate they were talking directly to God. And this was a normal, daily occurrence. Moses is a great example. Prophets in general are great examples. Yet, to us in modern society we look at that as completely foreign. Anyone today claiming he speaks directly to God is usually considered insane.
What if ancient peoples actually heard voices in their own heads - much like schizophrenics today (or even more commonly: children with imaginary friends) - but since they didn't know what those voices were they attributed them to Gods. And hence, there was no free will or introspection (consciousness). God told you to do something and you did it. No questions asked. No thinking about it.

Its one of the most interesting books I have ever read. It explains God, Religions, Idols, Influence of language, deep effect of metaphor, writing, schizophrenia, reconstructed memory, changing focus of the bible over time, old vs new testament, development of poetry and music, and much much more.
Its either the most brilliant theory since Darwin or the craziest. Nevertheless, you will never think about these things in the same way again.

I'm not 100% sure he's right - but I think there is definitely something behind his viewpoint. It just makes so much sense as to why we are seemingly so different than Mankind 3000+ years earlier...

Daniel Dennett puts it best in his review of this work:

"Jaynes' idea is that for us to be the way we are now, there has to have been a revolution -- almost certainly not an organic revolution, but a software revolution -- in the organization of our information processing system, and that has to come after language. That, I think, is an absolutely wonderful idea, and if Jaynes is completely wrong in the details, that is a darn shame, but something like what he proposes has to be right; and we can start looking around for better modules to put in the place of the modules that he has already given us."

This is not a book you are going to fly through. It took me a few months digesting and thinking about it. But it is worth it. Keep an open mind and join me on the other side...

 
No problem! I realize it is my taste since it's panned pretty universally as being great. Especially from fellow FBGs, who I love to get recommendations from.

At least it's over :)

Looking for my next read now...never read Lolita or Ulysses and they are on my list.

Also debating Don Quixote. The problem is, I know all the plot lines. In preparation for a popular, now defunct quiz show many years ago, I read the cliff notes for almost every major famous work of literature

I know the plots and basic stories for all three, is there 1 of of the 3 anyone could recommend that is an awesome book even with knowing the whole story? Don Quixote sounds pretty cool. (East of Eden is my fav book if it helps w the reco)
Despite my username, if you know the entire plot, Ulysses is probably the best to read, since the reading experience is only tangentially connected to the plot. Joyce's writing is what carries Ulysses. Quixote is a fun read though.

I started, but didn't finish, Lolita. I guess I can't be the best judge, but that might give an impression of my take on it.

 
I'm so disappointed with how Wool was after reading all the great reviews on Amazon and from well read fbgs.

It took everything I had to finish all 5 of the first books.

Great premise.,,very cool. But slow, plodding, way too descriptive, and I've heard enough about the stairs. It took 425 pages just to get to anything remotely exciting. Also, it's the furthest thing from science fiction...the most science fictiony it got was "IT" and "servers".

I wish I got it. :kicksrock:

I'd give it 2 stars...and 3 stars if it was 250 pages as opposed to 500.
Wow - I thought it was great. :shrug:
Me too. Sorry it didn't work for you JB. I loved it - and the sequels.
I thought Wool plodded at times and I didn't like the storyline of the guy that ended up being the bad guy, but I thought it was a decent read.
 
Mary Doria Russell has a new book out called Epitaph, about the gunfight at the O.K Corral. In 2011 Russell wrote Doc, which presented a side of Doc Holliday that doesn't get much focus in books I've read or movies I've seen (dentistry, not much violence, Doc's realationship with Wyatt).

Doc was really good and I'll be scooping up Epitaph at some point.
Starting Epitaph tonight. Really looking forward to it since I loved Doc.

 
Haven't been in this thread for a while, read a few pages back and I have to dig in a bit, some great suggestions in here.

Finishing up Hyperion right now, so far it's really great. Interested to see how it's all wrapped up.

Also just finished Neuromancer, really liked that. My son and I play Android NetRunner (boardgame) and that lead me to read the book. It was pretty good.

More important than any of that, Neal Stephenson's new books is OUT!!! One of my absolute favorites, have read all of this books. New book, Seveneves, came out yesterday. I haven't bothered reading anything about it, just know that it's pretty big. I'm pretty excisted.

http://www.amazon.com/Seveneves-Novel-Neal-Stephenson-ebook/dp/B00LZWV8JO/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&sr=8-1&qid=1432128370

 
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Natural born heroes, Christopher McDougal

I'm enjoying it but would completely understand if others didn't.

 
Least favorite thing I've read of his. Prose was incredible as usual, but just a story of this wandering brother and sister. I must have missed something.
I just started The Road. Seems alright so far but I'm surprised it won awards.
I was suprised too; didn't think it was all that great, not bad tho. I'm also not a parent so that could have contributed to my opinion.

 
Least favorite thing I've read of his. Prose was incredible as usual, but just a story of this wandering brother and sister. I must have missed something.
I just started The Road. Seems alright so far but I'm surprised it won awards.
I was suprised too; didn't think it was all that great, not bad tho. I'm also not a parent so that could have contributed to my opinion.
I read it before my son was born and before i was prepared for the writing style. Didn't enjoy it much. Read it a couple years ago again and loved it. I am sure for me it was a combo of the father/son thing and being more comfortable with the writing. Read it a couple times since too.

 
More important than any of that, Neal Stephenson's new books is OUT!!! One of my absolute favorites, have read all of this books. New book, Seveneves, came out yesterday. I haven't bothered reading anything about it, just know that it's pretty big. I'm pretty excisted.

http://www.amazon.com/Seveneves-Novel-Neal-Stephenson-ebook/dp/B00LZWV8JO/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&sr=8-1&qid=1432128370
Whoa... Consider me very intrigued by this.
Just plowed through this monster.

Bottom line: The moon explodes and chaos ensues. (That's not a spoiler, the moon explodes in the first paragraph of the book)

Just under 900 pages of awesomeness. A disaster book, which I love, combined with Neal Stephenson? Um, yeah it was good.

I've been on a reading kick lately, and I have a set amount of time I've been reading each day. This is the first book in awhile that has made it difficult for me to put the book down.

 
Least favorite thing I've read of his. Prose was incredible as usual, but just a story of this wandering brother and sister. I must have missed something.
I just started The Road. Seems alright so far but I'm surprised it won awards.
I agree, it's realky overtated and I don't think it gets better as you go on. Everything is grey. Blood Meridian is much better.
Yes, Blood Meridian is much better. The Road is just highly rated because it's a lot more accessible. I still think it's great, but I think as someone has said, maybe that is because I'm a father.

 
Least favorite thing I've read of his. Prose was incredible as usual, but just a story of this wandering brother and sister. I must have missed something.
I just started The Road. Seems alright so far but I'm surprised it won awards.
I agree, it's realky overtated and I don't think it gets better as you go on. Everything is grey. Blood Meridian is much better.
Yes, Blood Meridian is much better. The Road is just highly rated because it's a lot more accessible. I still think it's great, but I think as someone has said, maybe that is because I'm a father.
Maybe. I'm not a father so I lack that perspective. Also, no doubt it is much more accessible than Blood. It just bored me. Walk, sleep, go into a house, repeat. Grey, grey, grey. It was pretty good, but the acclaim for it was disproportionate. If that was my first Cormac book, I'm not sure I would have sought out more.
 
BUtterfield 8 was just great. O'Hara truely captures prohibition era New York better than anyone. He is every bit the writer Fitzgerald or Heningway were. Also, it sounds like the Elizabeth Taylor movie is one of the most massive debacles of adaptation in movie history. If you have any interest in the 20s/30s, New York, jazz, cocktails and speakeasies, it's a must read.

 
Has anyone read The Martian by Andy Weir? I'm about 100 pages in and it's pretty good so far.
I loved this book. It was like McGyver went to MIT and was shot into space. Really cool, really different. The voice it was written in was really enjoyable. One of my favorite reads this year.

 
Least favorite thing I've read of his. Prose was incredible as usual, but just a story of this wandering brother and sister. I must have missed something.
I just started The Road. Seems alright so far but I'm surprised it won awards.
I was suprised too; didn't think it was all that great, not bad tho. I'm also not a parent so that could have contributed to my opinion.
I read it before my son was born and before i was prepared for the writing style. Didn't enjoy it much. Read it a couple years ago again and loved it. I am sure for me it was a combo of the father/son thing and being more comfortable with the writing. Read it a couple times since too.
The Road is one of my favorite books of all time. I love Cormac and have read most of his books but this is my favorite. I know some people think it's Cormac McCarthy light, kind of like the Metallica Black album, created to appeal to the masses. That's not why I like it though. This was one of the most beautiful love stories between a father and his son I've ever read or watched. Maybe you have to have children or sons, but this book was a giant, beautiful heartache that really plumbs the essence of a father's love and his aspirations for his children NO MATTER WHAT. The dichotomy between that bright beautiful love and the harshest, darkest of worlds as its setting was absolutely amazing. I don't know how people could not love this book.

I also love economy of writing, saying as much as possible with as few words as possible and this book was a master class in economy. We don't need names, we don't need to know what caused this particular apocalypse, we don't need to know who anyone we meet on the road is, where they're going, or even what is really happening at the end. The stores shines through that dust and decay.

If you don't like this book then you're definitely not carrying the fire :)

 
More important than any of that, Neal Stephenson's new books is OUT!!! One of my absolute favorites, have read all of this books. New book, Seveneves, came out yesterday. I haven't bothered reading anything about it, just know that it's pretty big. I'm pretty excisted.

http://www.amazon.com/Seveneves-Novel-Neal-Stephenson-ebook/dp/B00LZWV8JO/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&sr=8-1&qid=1432128370
Whoa... Consider me very intrigued by this.
Just plowed through this monster.

Bottom line: The moon explodes and chaos ensues. (That's not a spoiler, the moon explodes in the first paragraph of the book)

Just under 900 pages of awesomeness. A disaster book, which I love, combined with Neal Stephenson? Um, yeah it was good.

I've been on a reading kick lately, and I have a set amount of time I've been reading each day. This is the first book in awhile that has made it difficult for me to put the book down.
Can't wait to read this. I'm next in line on my overdrive account. Been waiting so long for new Neal Stephenson.

 
Least favorite thing I've read of his. Prose was incredible as usual, but just a story of this wandering brother and sister. I must have missed something.
I just started The Road. Seems alright so far but I'm surprised it won awards.
I agree, it's realky overtated and I don't think it gets better as you go on. Everything is grey. Blood Meridian is much better.
Yes, Blood Meridian is much better. The Road is just highly rated because it's a lot more accessible. I still think it's great, but I think as someone has said, maybe that is because I'm a father.
Maybe. I'm not a father so I lack that perspective. Also, no doubt it is much more accessible than Blood. It just bored me. Walk, sleep, go into a house, repeat. Grey, grey, grey. It was pretty good, but the acclaim for it was disproportionate. If that was my first Cormac book, I'm not sure I would have sought out more.
That's my thought right now. There are books I'll prefer to read, so might put this one on hold. But it's a quick read, so maybe I'll plow through it.

 
More important than any of that, Neal Stephenson's new books is OUT!!! One of my absolute favorites, have read all of this books. New book, Seveneves, came out yesterday. I haven't bothered reading anything about it, just know that it's pretty big. I'm pretty excisted.

http://www.amazon.com/Seveneves-Novel-Neal-Stephenson-ebook/dp/B00LZWV8JO/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&sr=8-1&qid=1432128370
Whoa... Consider me very intrigued by this.
Just plowed through this monster.

Bottom line: The moon explodes and chaos ensues. (That's not a spoiler, the moon explodes in the first paragraph of the book)

Just under 900 pages of awesomeness. A disaster book, which I love, combined with Neal Stephenson? Um, yeah it was good.

I've been on a reading kick lately, and I have a set amount of time I've been reading each day. This is the first book in awhile that has made it difficult for me to put the book down.
Can't wait to read this. I'm next in line on my overdrive account. Been waiting so long for new Neal Stephenson.
My problem is I can't finish 900 pages in 3 weeks, so I can't do the library. Won't pay the $ for hardcover. So I have to wait a year for paperback. Of course saying that, Reamde was worth the wait.

 
I finished "The Picture of Dorian Gray" last week. Now I have started "The Crying of Lot 49" by Thomas Pynchon and "The Summer Game" by Roger Angell.

 
Least favorite thing I've read of his. Prose was incredible as usual, but just a story of this wandering brother and sister. I must have missed something.
I just started The Road. Seems alright so far but I'm surprised it won awards.
I agree, it's realky overtated and I don't think it gets better as you go on. Everything is grey. Blood Meridian is much better.
Yes, Blood Meridian is much better. The Road is just highly rated because it's a lot more accessible. I still think it's great, but I think as someone has said, maybe that is because I'm a father.
Maybe. I'm not a father so I lack that perspective. Also, no doubt it is much more accessible than Blood. It just bored me. Walk, sleep, go into a house, repeat. Grey, grey, grey. It was pretty good, but the acclaim for it was disproportionate. If that was my first Cormac book, I'm not sure I would have sought out more.
That's my thought right now. There are books I'll prefer to read, so might put this one on hold. But it's a quick read, so maybe I'll plow through it.
It's quick and easy, just plow through it.
 
I finished "The Picture of Dorian Gray" last week. Now I have started "The Crying of Lot 49" by Thomas Pynchon and "The Summer Game" by Roger Angell.
Dorian Gray is one of my all time favorites. What did you think? I was a little y see whelmed with Crying Lot though. There's a Pynchon theead here somewhere. Good luck finding it though.
 
I finished "The Picture of Dorian Gray" last week. Now I have started "The Crying of Lot 49" by Thomas Pynchon and "The Summer Game" by Roger Angell.
Dorian Gray is one of my all time favorites. What did you think? I was a little y see whelmed with Crying Lot though. There's a Pynchon theead here somewhere. Good luck finding it though.
I liked it especially the last few chapters when James Vane was coming for him.
 
I finished "The Picture of Dorian Gray" last week. Now I have started "The Crying of Lot 49" by Thomas Pynchon and "The Summer Game" by Roger Angell.
Dorian Gray is one of my all time favorites. What did you think? I was a little y see whelmed with Crying Lot though. There's a Pynchon theead here somewhere. Good luck finding it though.
I liked it especially the last few chapters when James Vane was coming for him.
Yeah, it takes a crazy turn. When I had read it, I didnt know much about it so the whole second half of the book was shocking and awesome.
 
After 30 years, I finally got around to re-reading Dune. I'll admit that my perceptions on the re-read were based on the David Lynch movie in 1984. It was an enjoyable read once I put aside what I remembered about the movie.

There is one question I've always had:

If you've finally convinced the emperor to marry his daughter Princess Irulan, how do you not try and hit this at least once? I get that Chani is your woman. But if you've got the Bene Geserit training to where you can control yourself and other people, you're telling me you can't control your baby batter to where you're shooting blanks? ;)
 
After 30 years, I finally got around to re-reading Dune. I'll admit that my perceptions on the re-read were based on the David Lynch movie in 1984. It was an enjoyable read once I put aside what I remembered about the movie.

There is one question I've always had:

If you've finally convinced the emperor to marry his daughter Princess Irulan, how do you not try and hit this at least once? I get that Chani is your woman. But if you've got the Bene Geserit training to where you can control yourself and other people, you're telling me you can't control your baby batter to where you're shooting blanks? ;)
Yes I think you have to crush it but all the higher ethereal plane stuff caused by the spice addictions might have warped Paul's ability or desire to pound sand if you know what I mean.

Separate question, have you or anyone read the follow on books after Dune. I read them when I was going through my Dune phase in HS I think. Fascinating read

 
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After 30 years, I finally got around to re-reading Dune. I'll admit that my perceptions on the re-read were based on the David Lynch movie in 1984. It was an enjoyable read once I put aside what I remembered about the movie.

There is one question I've always had:

If you've finally convinced the emperor to marry his daughter Princess Irulan, how do you not try and hit this at least once? I get that Chani is your woman. But if you've got the Bene Geserit training to where you can control yourself and other people, you're telling me you can't control your baby batter to where you're shooting blanks? ;)
Yes I think you have to crush it but all the higher ethereal plane stuff caused by the spice addictions might have warped Paul's ability or desire to pound sand if you know what I mean.

Seep rate question, have you or anyone read the follow on books after Dune. I read them when I was going through my Dune phase in HS I think. Fascinating read
I know I read at least the next one, and perhaps the one after that. It's been 30 years... :lol:

 
Finished Hyperion last night, really great book. I had started and stopped it but was really glad I got back to it. Going to read the next one but not until after Seveneves.

I hope this series has a good payoff. Talk about character development, you really get invested and then.... The End.

 

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