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What are you reading? (December 2011)

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Hmm. Well, painfully aware that I've lived far too many years without reading this classic, I dove in. Keep in mind I'm only about 100 pages in.

Amusing? Yeah, kinda. Clever? Yeah, but not as much as it wants to think it is. I was surprised at how disjointed (purposefully) the writing is. If you've posted in these threads about liking this book while also railing against pomo in general, you're a hypocrite. :)

Am I supposed to be appreciating this for the book it IS or the book it WAS when it was published? There's no denying its longevity, sales, impact on the culture, etc. I totally get that it was subversive/blasphemous 'back in the day'. Now? No, not so much.
 

coldvein

Banned
finally finished Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem. book of the year for me, hands down.

then ripped thru a little gem called Red Shift by a guy named Alan Garner. it's a nyrb classic ( i love these books, sometimes buy them just for the covers. and the fact that they've all been amazing books, and look great on a shelf next to eachother ). from da back blurb:

"in second century britain, macey and a gang of fellow deserters from the Roman army hunt and are hunted by deadly local tribes. fifteen centuries later, during the english civil war, thomas rowley hides from the ruthless troops who have encircled his village. and in contemporary britain, tom, a precocious, love-struck, mentally unstable teenager, struggles to cope with the imminent departure for london of his girlfriend, Jan."

highly recommend RED SHIFT. the three main characters/time periods are all linked geographically and in other more interesting ways that i won't spoil. it's only ~`200 pages and a very fast read, partially because it's so damn compelling. i read the first ten pages one day, then the other 190 in a single sitting the next night. loved it. must read.
 

Minimaul

Member
Hmm. Well, painfully aware that I've lived far too many years without reading this classic, I dove in. Keep in mind I'm only about 100 pages in..

Keep reading. When I read it, I was lost and confused and thought "none of this fits together..." and didn't really have a feel for the book till about where you're at now. I stopped at around page 80 and put it down for a few months, then came back and started again. Once you get a little bit further everything starts to fall into place. It also helps to know that it switches between 3 different time frames, of which you can get a feel for by how many missions they have to fly.
 

ymmv

Banned
I finished Jack Finney's time travel novel Time and Again a couple of days ago. Liked it a lot. The first hundred pages were relatively slow going, a big part of the book read like a travel guide for New York in 1882 but that was also a big part of the book's charm. Finney did a terrific job of making the reader feel what it must have been like to live in that era. The books is a very nostalgic look back, but at the same time Finney made it clear that below the surface there was incredible poverty. The book picked up speed in the last stretch and had a great ending. Recommended.

Now reading:

sanderson-elantris_lg.jpg


I bought the hardcover when it was just released (I'm a sucker for good cover art), never got around to reading it yet. I did read and enjoy Sanderson's Mistborn trilogy, so it's about time I read his debut novel. 50 pages in and I'm starting to get hooked.
 
Keep reading. When I read it, I was lost and confused and thought "none of this fits together..." and didn't really have a feel for the book till about where you're at now. I stopped at around page 80 and put it down for a few months, then came back and started again. Once you get a little bit further everything starts to fall into place. It also helps to know that it switches between 3 different time frames, of which you can get a feel for by how many missions they have to fly.

You know, and right after I post about my puzzlement with the novel, I read the Major Major Major Major chapter, which was not only long but damn near perfect. Doh!
 

Dresden

Member
Well, Embassytown is still on hold for now; I've just moved on to other books. Will come back to it later.

Finished The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, and I loved it . . . it's time to read the man's other novels, I guess. It felt old-school, for some reason, not just for the setting but for the writing and how the narrative was structured, as it traced not only a man's life but the pace of change within the small artificial island of Dejima. Loved the ending as well. It just felt right.
 

Doopliss

Member
Well, Embassytown is still on hold for now; I've just moved on to other books. Will come back to it later.

Finished The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, and I loved it . . . it's time to read the man's other novels, I guess. It felt old-school, for some reason, not just for the setting but for the writing and how the narrative was structured, as it traced not only a man's life but the pace of change within the small artificial island of Dejima. Loved the ending as well. It just felt right.
I really liked it too, the parts set around Dejima especially have some great characters and moments of humour.

Recently finished Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. A nostalgic and melancholy story of childhood and growing up, its subdued nature felt right in an English setting which was intimately familiar to me. While one of her friends will thrash about and scream in great outpourings of emotion, the main character greets discoveries about her life and fate with a weary and contemplative acceptance. Bittersweet.

Currently reading In a Strange Room by Damon Galgut, about a third through. I think it's meant to be autobiographical but the narrator speaks of his past self in the third person which makes it feel separate from reality. While it's about times he spent travelling the places themselves have been incidental. The first section has been about the development of a relationship with a person he meets, the struggles between them and his own internal struggles. I'm liking it so far.
 

Shanadeus

Banned
So I just finished Camouflage

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It was a surprisingly sweet love story, with a healthy dose of standard (but fun) sci-fi cliches. I also hope this trend of happy endings for the protagonist continues.

Gonna read Forever Peace next:

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Mgoblue201

Won't stop picking the right nation
Just started:

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Chernow's recent biography of Washington has inspired me to read Alexander Hamilton, though I haven't resolved when I'll ever get to it. All of the interesting things I learn about Hamilton in other books portend a potentially great read.
 

Ceebs

Member
I just finished this one:

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The first Murakami I have read more than 50 pages of. I am not sure what to think about it yet. I do know that I started it on Friday and finished it late Sunday, so I could not put it down.

This caught my eye from Amazon's top 100 of the year list so I am about to give it a spin.

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Arment

Member
The_Hero_of_Ages_-_Book_Three_of_Mistborn.png


I just finished the last book of the Mistborn Trilogy.

I...don't think I've read a better ending in years. Or a better series.

I can't wait for this guy to get deeper into The Stormlight Archive. I may just have to pick up where I left off in The Wheel of Time so I can read the last three written by Sanderson.

Unfortunately finishing has hyped me up several levels and it's 4:25 AM. I need to sleep.
 
Anyone have any suggestions for books like One Day? Feel like reading something similar.

Quite tempted to get 11/22/63 after all the talk in here about it mind you!
 

Skel1ingt0n

I can't *believe* these lazy developers keep making file sizes so damn large. Btw, how does technology work?
I finished Jack Finney's time travel novel Time and Again a couple of days ago. Liked it a lot. The first hundred pages were relatively slow going, a big part of the book read like a travel guide for New York in 1882 but that was also a big part of the book's charm. Finney did a terrific job of making the reader feel what it must have been like to live in that era. The books is a very nostalgic look back, but at the same time Finney made it clear that below the surface there was incredible poverty. The book picked up speed in the last stretch and had a great ending. Recommended.

Now reading:

sanderson-elantris_lg.jpg


I bought the hardcover when it was just released (I'm a sucker for good cover art), never got around to reading it yet. I did read and enjoy Sanderson's Mistborn trilogy, so it's about time I read his debut novel. 50 pages in and I'm starting to get hooked.


I haven't finished a book in a good four or five years. I still browse this thread every once in a while to see if anything just happens to catch my eye. Unfortunately, nothing has until now. That cover art alone is really pulling me in. If you're any further, I'd love to know if you'd recommend it.
 

Monroeski

Unconfirmed Member
I haven't finished a book in a good four or five years. I still browse this thread every once in a while to see if anything just happens to catch my eye. Unfortunately, nothing has until now. That cover art alone is really pulling me in. If you're any further, I'd love to know if you'd recommend it.

I thought it was a pretty good read, though it's pretty obvious in places that it was a first novel (the last line of the book was groan inducingly stereotypical, for instance). A lot of Sanderson's hallmarks as far as storytelling and particularly world building are there.

Overall definitely worth a read.
 

ultron87

Member
Started The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson last night.

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I got it as a Secret Santa gift. (Though I actually bought it on Kindle after reading the first few chapters because dealing with a 1200 page paperback isn't fun at all.) It made me quite happy since I've wanted to read this since I finished the Mistborn trilogy and loved approximately 4/5 of it. (The middle of book 2 wasn't that great.)

The prologue chapters in Way of Kings instantly got me hooked. Cool magic and ancient artifact swords are my fantasy drug.
 

Kraftwerk

Member
So, I just finished The Culture series. Going to start A Song of Ice and Fire. Saw the TV show and loved it.

andherewego.gif
 

Kraftwerk

Member
Which book did you start with in The Culture series?
Will probably do that next.


I started with Consider Phlebas. You can start anywhere you want, since none are connected, but there are some inside jokes, references and terminologies that do appear throughout.

If you dont mind a good hard character study then start with CoP or UoW.

The easiest one to start with is Player of Games. If gives a very good overview of The Culture, brief history and aout its people and how it operates.

For more info head over to he Culture OT :D

http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=448420
 
Anyone have any suggestions for books like One Day? Feel like reading something similar.

Quite tempted to get 11/22/63 after all the talk in here about it mind you!

I just finished 11/22/63. I've read most of what Stephen King has written. Some is great, some not so much. This is among his best. The plot about Kennedy is only half the story, and not really even the important half.

I recommend it to anyone, especially those who think they know what Stephen King is about.
 

Monroeski

Unconfirmed Member
Apparently I read South of the Border, West of the Sun about two years ago but don't remember anything about it or even having read it. Weird.

I read a synopsis, but it doesn't sound familiar. Was that the book where the main character
has a friend that's a big celebrity who ends up killing himself by driving his expensive car into the ocean?
 

Cfh123

Member
A Kindle Single for $1.99:



It's a moving novella - and with a unique and quite effective writing structure that I have not come across before.
 

Lafiel

と呼ぶがよい
Apparently I read South of the Border, West of the Sun about two years ago but don't remember anything about it or even having read it. Weird.

I read a synopsis, but it doesn't sound familiar. Was that the book where the main character
has a friend that's a big celebrity who ends up killing himself by driving his expensive car into the ocean?

My memory isn't completely clear on this - but that sounds closer to dance dance dance by haruki murakami, then south of the border, west of the sun.
 
Finally finished Demian. Wonderful book; can't wait to read Siddhartha.

Siddhartha's great. It's super, super short, but I recommend reading it slowly nonetheless; Hesse's prose is very straightforward, but there's a complexity to it that can get missed if you don't take the time to appreciate the man's craft. I say this because that happened to me when I read it, and there are certain things that only hit me upon reflection/reading some of the criticism of it.
 

Kraftwerk

Member
Both the stores I went to didn't have A Song of Ice and Fire Hardcover, so I had to order them. I decided to pick this fairly short book up until they arrive:

SSiDS.jpg


Always meant to read this one. 50 pages in and great stuff. I love Arthur C. Clarke. The "unknown" atmosphere he creates in his books does so much for me.
 
Finished a bunch of books these past few weeks.


Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent
A tome of information about Prohibition and the political machines that led to and from it. Interesting in some parts, but it was a difficult read because of how dry it was and just the number of people involved. I couldn't keep their names straight.


Perfume: The Story of a Murderer by Patrick Süskind
Nicely written and disturbing. I wouldn't have read this if not for GAF. Very enjoyable.


Head Rush by Carolyn Crane
A good close to the series. The second book was such a cliffhanger that it was nice to read this and not have any crazy surprises in the end.


Daytripper by Gabriel Bá
The artwork was beautiful, but the writing fell short. I guess I don't get the praise for this book. I thought the writing was stilted in some places and overly cliched in others. The story had me interested, but some of the dialogue had me cringing.
 

Kuraudo

Banned
Finished reading Brief Interviews with Hideous Men by David Foster Wallace.

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I have a huge lit-crush on Wallace.

Really coherent for a collection of short stories, with the theme of loneliness and disconnect even at the height of social interaction prevelant throughout. It feels like it should be a depressing book, but it just feels honest and is at times incredibly hilarious.

Octet was my favourite of the bunch. Such a layered story for something so short and I love how Wallace uses it to sort of lay the rules to his own form of short story.

It feels like the kind of book Lynch would have produced if he had gone a different route and become a prose writer instead of a filmmaker.

Now reading Habibi by Craig Thompson.

Craig%20Thompson.jpg


Picked this up with some Christmas money. Book is absolutely gorgeous, both in art and from a presentation standpoint. It's really heavy though - made the mistake of putting it in my messenger bag and now reaping the rewards of a sore back lol

Also going to start Kavalier and Clay in the next couple of days.

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Expecting great things.
 

TCRS

Banned
elantris.jpg


My first Sanderson book. Not bad. Feels sometimes very amateurish and rushed (especially the beginning) and the characters are sometimes quite dorky, but overall the story is quite interesting.
 

Ceebs

Member
I finished up Daughter of Smoke & Bone. Was an an enjoyable read for what it was (which I had no idea what it was when I started it)


Have moved onto:

NightCircus.final_.2.jpg


About halfway done with this one and it is great so far. You have 2 magicians (actual magic) who make some sort of bet that will be decided by their apprentices. They train them from a young age and place them into positions with a traveling circus so that they can compete. They are then using magic to alter the circus trying to one-up each other.
 

Arment

Member
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My first Sanderson book. Not bad. Feels sometimes very amateurish and rushed (especially the beginning) and the characters are sometimes quite dorky, but overall the story is quite interesting.

He's my favorite new author and that's his debut novel. He gets 100000% better. Read the Mistborn Trilogy next or if you don't mind starting a unfinished series read The Way of Kings. The guy knows how to end a series that's for sure.
 

Ether_Snake

安安安安安安安安安安安安安安安
Guys I'll be on a solo vacation for a month. I need a book so I can read while waiting for food at the restaurant or when waiting for flights and what not.

I don't know what to read. Any good books that feel like a Sergio Leone or Kurosawa movie story?:p

Something long ideally.
 

aidan

Hugo Award Winning Author and Editor
Guys I'll be on a solo vacation for a month. I need a book so I can read while waiting for food at the restaurant or when waiting for flights and what not.

I don't know what to read. Any good books that feel like a Sergio Leone or Kurosawa movie story?:p

Something long ideally.

bsc-front-733591.jpg


Best Served Cold by Joe Abercrombie fits the bill perfectly.
 

TCRS

Banned
But that's the sequel to the First Law trilogy, no? Maybe he should start with that.

@Arment
I'll definitively read the Mistborn Trilogy. After epic series like ASOIAF, First Law and Darth Bane I just felt like reading a simple standalone book.
 

aidan

Hugo Award Winning Author and Editor
But that's the sequel to the First Law trilogy, no? Maybe he should start with that.

Technically it's a stand-alone novel set in the same world as The First Law. Some knowledge of the first trilogy might increase your enjoyment a bit as you find the easter eggs, but Abercrombie does a good enough job not to spoil the trilogy and makes Best Served Cold a good place to start with his work if you're not willing to commit to a trilogy. Plus, it's more Kurosawa-influenced than The First Law.
 

Cfh123

Member
A few chapters in. Very good - the story moves at a nice clip - apparently it is a classic. It's an adventure story set in Africa, written in the 1890's.

An eKindle version is available for free but I purchased the $1.99 version which has better formatting.

ZZdiq.jpg
 

Ceebs

Member
amongothers.jpg


Started this one up today. It's written as a journal of a 15 year old girl at an English boarding school, but it has a very Pan's Labyrinth feel to it. It transitions from boarding school to fairies and magic all the time. The main character is an avid reader and is constantly giving her take on all sorts of fantasy and sci-fi books she is reading.
 

BorkBork

The Legend of BorkBork: BorkBorkity Borking
Review of The Golden Spruce: A True Story of Myth, Madness, and Greed by George Vaillant:

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Publisher's Weekly Description said:
The felling of a celebrated giant golden spruce tree in British Columbia's Queen Charlotte Islands takes on a potent symbolism in this probing study of an unprecedented act of eco-vandalism. First-time author Vaillant, who originally wrote about the death of the spruce for the New Yorker, profiles the culprit, an ex-logger turned messianic environmentalist who toppled the famous tree—the only one of its kind—to protest the destruction of British Columbia's old-growth forest, then soon vanished mysteriously. Vaillant also explores the culture and history of the Haida Indians who revered the tree, and of the logging industry that often expresses an elegiac awe for the ancient trees it is busily clear-cutting. Writing in a vigorous, evocative style, Vaillant portrays the Pacific Northwest as a region of conflict and violence, from the battles between Europeans and Indians over the 18th-century sea otter trade to the hard-bitten, macho milieu of the logging camps, where grisly death is an occupational hazard. It is also, in his telling, a land of virtually infinite natural resources overmatched by an even greater human rapaciousness. Through this archetypal story of "people fail[ing] to see the forest for the tree," Vaillant paints a haunting portrait of man's vexed relationship with nature.

Short Version: This is an absorbing story that weaves together the history of Western Canada and the culture of First Nations, European explorers, and loggers on one of the most remote and pristine locations on Earth.

Long Version: The story is centered about the singular Grant Hadwin, an outdoorsman that puts other outdoorsmen to shame, and who was more at home in the untamed west coast rainforest than he is in normal society. It speaks of his transformation from a logger/ timber scout into an environmental activist through a spiritual awakening. It culminates in his publicly condemned act of cutting down one of the rarest trees in existence, the three-hundred year old Golden Spruce of the title, as a shocking form of protest to get people to think about what we are doing to the environment. Hadwin’s justification: By destroying the unique, the special, he hoped that people would turn their attention to the systematic pillaging of the old-growth forests as a whole. He wanted us to focus on the forest instead of the tree.

The book provides a great and thick description of the Haida Gwaii (formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands) and the history of the Haida, along with their fascinating myths around the Golden Spruce itself. I’ve always wanted to travel to the Haida Gwaii. In my opinion, it’s one of the gems of the world, so the fact that this book explores it in detail definitely made it an even more absorbing read.

Some of the most thought provoking sections of the book explore the theme of relentless exploitation. People, when exposed to the temptations of making a quick buck and of getting ahead, are fully capable of overexploiting their environment, no matter their origins. After realizing how valuable sea-otter pelts are, the Haida proceeded to hunt them down to near extinction. After realizing how useful Sitka Spruce is in plane construction during World War II, loggers equipped with a game-changer, the chainsaw, leveled thousand-year old forests within the span of a few decades. In a lot of ways, the book puts forth some interesting parallels between the Haida people and the loggers on the West coast: it looks at both of their height of power and their subsequent collapse. The unrelenting drive for efficiency is doubly devastating: it overwhelms the capacity for an essential resource to regenerate, obliterating any hope for sustainability. At the same time, productivity increases force people out of their livelihoods, and economic collapse and unrest becomes inevitable.

But what they did was not done out of malice, but as Vaillant puts it, of “unsentimental pragmatism”. The mentality of if “you don’t do it, someone else will” is extremely prevalent. The remorse that is felt after the fact, after the destruction, is intense and tragic. On more than one occasion in the book, loggers look back in hindsight at the barren landscape of their clearcut and and lament, “My god, what have I done?” It’s a classic case of the Tragedy of the Commons, and of good people doing bad things. The same market forces and the same logic leads the inexorable path of extinction, of overexploitation, of a scorched earth.

The other theme I really enjoyed reading about in the book was about the value and ideas we place on trees. Vaillant writes that trees are by definition, a defiant and subversive act against the fundamental laws of physics: gravity and entropy. It is the ultimate expression of order and of life. Trees are also the only living things that visibly operate on a vaster timescale than us, stretching back centuries into the past and enduring centuries into the future. It was interesting to read about the explanation about the existence of the Golden Spruce from the Haida perspective and the scientific perspective. Both explanations are nothing short of miraculous, but in completely different ways.

On the negative side, I personally don’t dig the structure of the book. The main story veers off into pretty significant side tangents. Sometimes I just want to get back to the main story! I get why it was done, but I just found it a little distracting. The main story ends up being a little anticlimactic, especially when the back of the book spoils a large portion of the story. Such a shame.

Overall, it’s a good book and an entertaining read. If you have any interest in the history of the West Coast, of the First Nations, or in the familiar stories of resource exploitation, check it out. The prose is also very good, vivid and memorable; Vaillant’s a good writer and an excellent researcher.
 

Railer

Member
Currently reading:
scar-tissue-book-cover.jpg

I do enjoy it, but so far it's been like a love story dedicated to doing drugs.

When I'm finished with it I'm probably gonna start on Ready Player One or 11/22/63.
 
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