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What are you reading? (November 2011)

omgkitty

Member
Hey guys, bit of a random request. I sort of went on an spontaneous Indiana Jones binge this weekend (yes, including that fourth movie that shall not be named), and I'm kind of yearning for a book that has a similar tone and concept; adventurous treasure/historical artifact hunting or something relatively similar. This can actually be fiction or non-fiction, since I also enjoy history quite a bit. That said I do enjoy the fantastical liberties that the Indiana Jones movies take with history.

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aidan

Hugo Award Winning Author and Editor
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I recently finished Theft of Swords by Michael J. Sullivan, which was a lot of fun, if traditional.

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Now into Throne of the Crescent Moon by Saladin Ahmed. Also fun, the arabic twist on the setting, myths and magic is a very nice change of pace for a fairly recognizable S&S style plot.
 
I am going to read Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire and Neil Gaiman's Black Orchid next. I am particularly interested in Pale Fire, though I haven't decided how I'm going to read it.

The best advice I was given about Pale Fire (one of my favorite Nabokov books) was to skip the poem in the beginning and dive straight to the prose. I did exactly that and loved the book. He goes back to the poem so thoroughly in the prose that you really don't need to read it beforehand.

And now, to destroy my literary cred (if I had any), I finished another JD Robb book:


Vengeance in Death by J.D. Robb

Enjoyed it as usual. These are such fun, quick reads. The mystery isn't usually something spectacular, but I'm really starting to love most of the regular characters. Especially Peabody.
 

Doopliss

Member
Hey guys, bit of a random request. I sort of went on an spontaneous Indiana Jones binge this weekend (yes, including that fourth movie that shall not be named), and I'm kind of yearning for a book that has a similar tone and concept; adventurous treasure/historical artifact hunting or something relatively similar. This can actually be fiction or non-fiction, since I also enjoy history quite a bit. That said I do enjoy the fantastical liberties that the Indiana Jones movies take with history.
King Solomon's Mines, but be warned, it's pretty unpleasant in its treatment of black people, women and elephants. If you have a device to read it on you can download it for free from Project Gutenberg.
 

MrOogieBoogie

BioShock Infinite is like playing some homeless guy's vivid imagination
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Pretty interesting read. A good mix of funny and sorrowful, but mostly heartbreaking.
 
Hey guys, bit of a random request. I sort of went on an spontaneous Indiana Jones binge this weekend (yes, including that fourth movie that shall not be named), and I'm kind of yearning for a book that has a similar tone and concept; adventurous treasure/historical artifact hunting or something relatively similar. This can actually be fiction or non-fiction, since I also enjoy history quite a bit. That said I do enjoy the fantastical liberties that the Indiana Jones movies take with history.

If you don't mind light breezy reading a lot of Clive Cussler's books are like that. The movie Sahara is based on one on of his books where McConnaughey plays an Indiana Jones type character. And Spartan Gold is kinda like that too.
 

Keen

Aliens ate my babysitter
Hey guys, bit of a random request. I sort of went on an spontaneous Indiana Jones binge this weekend (yes, including that fourth movie that shall not be named), and I'm kind of yearning for a book that has a similar tone and concept; adventurous treasure/historical artifact hunting or something relatively similar. This can actually be fiction or non-fiction, since I also enjoy history quite a bit. That said I do enjoy the fantastical liberties that the Indiana Jones movies take with history.

Try Matthew Reilly, especially the series starting with Seven Ancient Wonders

http://www.amazon.com/dp/0330525581/?tag=neogaf0e-20
 

RoH

Member
I want to pick up a new book, I'm thinking about The Forever War or Do Andriods Dream of Electric Sheep. I'll most likely read both, but what would GAF recommend I read first?
 
I want to pick up a new book, I'm thinking about The Forever War or Do Andriods Dream of Electric Sheep. I'll most likely read both, but what would GAF recommend I read first?

They're both good. You can't go wrong with either one. But I personally liked Androids a bit more and its shorter so I'd recommend that one first.
 
So glad to have a Kindle or I'd seriously probably not have read The Stand, Duma Key, Under the Dome, and the Song of Ice and Fire books. My bag is heavy enough (not a euphemism) without lugging around 10 pound door stops.
 

aidan

Hugo Award Winning Author and Editor
was just at the bookstore, several new books i want to buy.. but i refuse to buy hardbacks. blahhhh

Not to be that guy, but hardcovers are the bread and butter of the publishing industry and buying them is the best possible way to support your favourite authors. I know they're expensive and heavy, but at least consider buying them now and then to support mid-list authors who you'd like to see more books from.
 

eznark

Banned
Reamde is still dragging, the biography is making me despise Jobs (and saps any desire I have to read more about the guy) and the Prague Cemetery still feels impenetrable.

Not a good month for reading. Zero books finished. I feel shame.

Not to be that guy, but hardcovers are the bread and butter of the publishing industry and buying them is the best possible way to support your favourite authors. I know they're expensive and heavy, but at least consider buying them now and then to support mid-list authors who you'd like to see more books from.

Unfortunately for impoverished authors, I read for my enjoyment not to enrich them.
 

bengraven

Member
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As a huge HUGE fan of the first novel (and the second two were really good) I had NO FUCKING IDEA this book was not only coming out this month, but is ALREADY HERE.

Started downloading the second I posted this.

Thank you Kindle!
 
I finally got a handle on my workload and finished up A Cook's Tour. Probably my favorite Bourdain book. I like world-traveler Tony best, even though Chef Tony and Food Politic Tony are good too. Plus there are like four chapters on Vietnam. Forget about it.

I'm debating starting 1Q84. I think I might have already missed the bandwagon though.

In the meantime I'm starting these two:
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Monroeski

Unconfirmed Member
Just finished reading Anne of Green Gables. Pretty fun novel. Every chapter was isolated and was about a random adventure of Anne, but it was still very entertaining read. I'm thinking of reading the sequel, but I have a feeling I won't like it. Anne is already grown up and I don't know if I will like her as much as young Anne.

Anyway I'm moving on to Ready Player One. I heard it has great gaming references from the 80s.

If by "great gaming references" you mean "piles of lists used in unclever ways" then you are correct.
 

survivor

Banned
.

Stop reading after the first dungeon, you'll like the book more.

I'm 51% in the book so far. The dungeon stuff and the random ramblings he goes on for games and movies are alright, but this geeky romance thing going on is pretty terrible. Also the villains or IOI seem very comically cliched so far.
 

mike23

Member
Finished the book by gaffer 1stStrike

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Gave it 4/5 stars on Goodreads.


Starting the advanced reader edition of Switched that I won on Goodreads.

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Didn't realize that the book actually came out a year ago though. First physical book I'll have read in years.
 
Finished reading "At the mountains of Madness" and I was disappointed. H.P. Lovecraft is hailed as the best horror writer of the 20th century and this book was supposed to be among his best, but I just didn't see it. Even Poe's short stories surpass ATMOM in creepiness and tension.

Then there were other flaws as he kept repeating the same thing over and over. I feel the tale would have been served better as a short story than a novella. With this done, I proceeded to start with "The Call of Cthulhu" but I'm already loosing interest. Since the story is not that long, I'll just slug through it but I'm just not seeing why Lovecraft is the master of terror. What am I doing wrong GAF?

Nevertheless, the next book in my list is:

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It was only $3 for the kindle version and it seems to be the most balanced biography of Richard Feynman. Already read the first few chapters and this is looking like its going to be my read of the year.
 

Fjordson

Member
I want to pick up a new book, I'm thinking about The Forever War or Do Andriods Dream of Electric Sheep. I'll most likely read both, but what would GAF recommend I read first?
Androids Dream of Electric Sheep. Not too long, has a neat premise and a super interesting setting, the inspiration for Blade Runner, etc. etc.

I don't think I enjoyed the Forever War as much as most people. Thought it was just okay.

So glad to have a Kindle or I'd seriously probably not have read The Stand, Duma Key, Under the Dome, and the Song of Ice and Fire books. My bag is heavy enough (not a euphemism) without lugging around 10 pound door stops.
Kindle is the greatest shit ever. I read so much these days because of it.
 

aerts1js

Member
Just finished:

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AMAZING, AMAZING BOOK. Still a little too early to say *but* it may be in my top 3 books of all time.

and

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Good story, finished it in a couple days. I wouldn't say it was AMAZING but certainly worth a read.

Now starting:

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The first 15-20 pages were dreadful... very confusing to me but things have finally began to get interesting (I'm at around the 60 pg mark)
 

coldvein

Banned
Not to be that guy, but hardcovers are the bread and butter of the publishing industry and buying them is the best possible way to support your favourite authors. I know they're expensive and heavy, but at least consider buying them now and then to support mid-list authors who you'd like to see more books from.

i understand that. i'm just not prepared to spend $40 on a book that's not even comfortable for me to hold. at least i'm still buying books at all, y'know?

and like eznark said.. ultimately i'm buying books for me, not to put food on some dudes table.
 

Milchjon

Member
I just finished Infinite Jest. A few years ago I might've been pretty pissed off by the ending. Now I'm just confused and curious. Does anybody have some good interpretations and theories on hand?

But it was still a great read. A bit show-offy at times, but an incredibly rich and dense experience.
 

Kuraudo

Banned
I just finished Infinite Jest. A few years ago I might've been pretty pissed off by the ending. Now I'm just confused and curious. Does anybody have some good interpretations and theories on hand?

But it was still a great read. A bit show-offy at times, but an incredibly rich and dense experience.

I thought this was a pretty good theory about what happens after the book ends. I don't agree with it all, but it cites a few things I missed when I read the book.

You should definitely read the first chapter again, just to put it in context.
 

AAequal

Banned
Cave up on Murakami's 1Q84 after the first book, it was just so boring and pretty much same old Murakami. I have now started reading Infinite Jest by DFW and so far it's good but I do have to pace myself with this. Some chapters are rather easy to digest and some I have to read over and over again to figure out what went on.

It does bother me a bit that the footnotes are stuffed in back of the book and not on the same page like in his short stories / articles, the extra flipping is annoying since I can't make up mind if I should check out the notes after I finished the chapeter or right away :b
 
I thought this was a pretty good theory about what happens after the book ends. I don't agree with it all, but it cites a few things I missed when I read the book.

You should definitely read the first chapter again, just to put it in context.

Plus, how can a book titled 'Infinite Jest' actually HAVE an ending? But seriously, Wallace is on the record as deliberately keeping things obtuse, hence the host of books that have since been published to pick the book apart while trying to tie it together. I really think that the genius of the book doesn't begin to reveal itself until you read about some of the connections and then re-read the book. There are little things all over the place that you simply don't notice on the first read. One small example (if memory serves) out of hundreds: in the chapter where the Mid-Eastern liason watches The Entertainment, it's strongly hinted that he has had an affair with Hal's mother. Huh? Right, the book is full of that kind of stuff.

Now go watch that Decemberists video...
 

thomaser

Member
It does bother me a bit that the footnotes are stuffed in back of the book and not on the same page like in his short stories / articles, the extra flipping is annoying since I can't make up mind if I should check out the notes after I finished the chapeter or right away :b

You'll understand why they had to do it this way when you get to the 30 page footnotes...
 

ultron87

Member
I finished Strange in a Strange Land.

It was enjoyable, but it seemed a little hollow at the end.
Smith's philosophy was only proven correct/accepted by the group because it literally offered no disadvantages.
 

FnordChan

Member
It does bother me a bit that the footnotes are stuffed in back of the book and not on the same page like in his short stories / articles, the extra flipping is annoying since I can't make up mind if I should check out the notes after I finished the chapeter or right away :b

I'd strongly recommend reading the footnotes as you go, if only so you can experience the hysterical pleasure of reading upwards of 30 pages of single footnotes at a time. If you've got a physical copy, go ahead and grab a second bookmark. If you're reading it digitally, I dunno exactly how you handle that, but either way you want to read 'em as you go.

By the way, for folks who have finished Infinite Jest, here's the aforementioned Descemberists video for "Calamity Song". If you're still reading Infinite Jest and haven't read the Eschaton chapter yet, don't watch the video.

FnordChan
 

Mumei

Member
The best advice I was given about Pale Fire (one of my favorite Nabokov books) was to skip the poem in the beginning and dive straight to the prose. I did exactly that and loved the book. He goes back to the poem so thoroughly in the prose that you really don't need to read it beforehand.

Heh.

Unfortunately, I started reading it before I saw this post, and I read the poem first. I read the Foreword after that and now I am reading the Commentary.

Oh, well. I am still loving it.
 

survivor

Banned
Ready Player One

This is a much better cover than the standard red coloured one I have.
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Finished the book today. It was an enjoyable read. I liked some of the moments in the book especially with that Pac Man game and the final fight.
All out robots war was pretty cool. And I smiled a little with the Mazinger Z mention at the end with Minerva X. One of my favourite childhood mech anime.
. The book does have its problems though. A lot of the dialogues felt very awkward, the villains were portrayed very terribly, and some of the stuff Wade pulled near the end of the book were pretty bad. I definitely enjoyed the ride, but it could have been done better.

Now I'm debating what book to read next. I have got The Long Ships, The Brothers Sisters and The Sense of an Ending. I realize they are pretty different books, but you guys know which one is an easy read?
 

Gilgamesh

Member
I'm almost finished with the Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells.

more like the Island of Dr. Silly Ass cause they say that like 8 times a chapter
 
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