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What are you reading? (March 2012)

B.K.

Member
Dracula. I got a Kindle a few months and I'm reading some older public domain books that I would probably never buy. I plan to read Frankenstein next.
 
Aside from a couple of technical books on C# and Python, I'm still trying to finish The House of Leaves. It's going to take a while to finish that one.
 

RatskyWatsky

Hunky Nostradamus
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bgbball31

Member
Now that I have time (in Methods, so my time to do anything besides school and work is nil), I am going to try and read A Game of Thrones before the Blu-Ray comes out next Tuesday. Even if I don't buy the set then, I am getting Mass Effect 3, so my time will be sunk anyways. I'm determined to do it though!
 
Dracula. I got a Kindle a few months and I'm reading some older public domain books that I would probably never buy. I plan to read Frankenstein next.

Im doing exactly what you are doing. Only on my phone, with Readu. I downloaded all sorts of free classics last week.
 

Quote

Member
I'm still reading Hyperon and enjoying it.

I thought I would give audiobooks a try and listen to Asimov's Foundation in other places where I can't read. Man, I don't know why but I can't retain any of the information. I don't know if it's an issue with my imagination or attention span or what. Haha.
 
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Rec from a friend, she really loved it and thought I might since I enjoyed Hunger Games. This is quite a bit different but it's not bad. I'm enjoying it so far.
 

ultron87

Member
A little more than halfway through Revelation Space.

Revelation_Space_cover_%28Amazon%29.jpg


I like it, but it feels like this entire first half was a bit too much set up and not enough actual plot. I'm glad the main story threads have all converged now.
 

Dan

No longer boycotting the Wolfenstein franchise
I've resumed reading Supergods by Grant Morrison after a break for a few novels.
 

suzu

Member
OlyjD.jpg

The Night Circus, by Erin Morgenstern

Finished this recently. It was just... okay. It was very predictable and ended a bit awkwardly. I liked the setting (victorian London) though.

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The Heroes, by Joe Abercrombie

And now something totally different. Had it sitting around for awhile. Only read a few pages before putting it down for another time.
 
Gave up on The Luck of Relian Kru by Paula Volsky after making it about 1/3 of the way through.

Have moved on to Peter Hamilton's Pandora's Star. Not making a lot of progress, but interesting so far. It'll probably take me 1/2 a year to read it.
 

Heel

Member
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I've been trying to do the 50 Movies / 50 Books in 2012 thing, but I think attempting to keep pace is detracting from my enjoyment. Going to take my time with this one!
 

Fjordson

Member
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Post-apocalyptic fans need to check these books out. They're more like novellas I guess, five of them at about 100 pages each, but they're amazing so far. The world is sort of like a harsher version of Fallout's wasteland, due to some event that I have yet to discover through reading, where going outside basically means death within a few minutes due to the perpetual toxic winds that roam the planet. What's left of mankind survives in massive underground silos (again like Fallout, silos = vaults). Pretty much all of their knowledge of the outside world comes from a handful of cameras positioned above ground that feed them video of the ruined landscape.

The claustrophobic and highly structured atmosphere of life in the silo and the bleak world outside (the first time he described a crumbling city in the distance I was hooked) combine to create a fascinating setting. And I love how he ever-so-slowly sheds light on all of the mysteries surrounding this universe. Who built the silos and why? What happened to the Earth hundreds of years ago? Are there other silos like this one?

It's really good. And in the first 250 pages or so there have already been a few substantial twists that I didn't see coming, but I won't spoil any of that good stuff. Highly recommend picking up the $5 collection of all five stories on Kindle. Hell, the free sample lets you go through the entire first story so you can get a feel for whether or not you'd like it.

And thankfully he's already working on another Wool series, a prequel series! Can't wait.
 
I'm shocked at the lost world hate. I don't like it as much as JP but I think it is a worthy sequel and a good story in its own right. Certainly lighters better than the movie. What did you guys want from a Jurassic park sequel?
 

Bazza

Member
Just got an email from Amazon, next game of thrones book is released on March 15th which happens to be my birthday, is it a bit weird im more excited for the book release than i am my birthday?
 

Salazar

Member
Just got an email from Amazon, next game of thrones book is released on March 15th which happens to be my birthday, is it a bit weird im more excited for the book release than i am my birthday?

l'année prochaine, oui ?

Like, not in two weeks. Even that seems like billowing optimism.
 

Bazza

Member
should probably clarify its 'A Dance with Dragons: Part 2 After The Feast' not book six 'The Winds of Winter' that's apparently on the way.
 

Protome

Member
I started reading Stardust by Neil Gaiman

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I've also been reading some papers in AI Game Programming Wisdom Volume 1 for University.
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LiQuid!

I proudly and openly admit to wishing death upon the mothers of people I don't like
I don't read enough. When I do I read the worst shit. I just read the first Hunger Games book, which was the first book I've read since Harry Potter ended. It was dumb, and it made me feel stupid for reading it. The writing itself was wretched. It felt unedited in parts and was full of sentence fragments which I find deplorable for a book aimed at developing minds. Is writing "young adult" fiction just an excuse for not being held to any standards?

I guess I can see why little girls like it cause just like Twilight it takes an emotionless, uninteresting girl and puts her in a power fantasy where boys like her for some reason. I ended up kind of enjoying it against my better judgment in parts, mostly on an ironic level. I'll probably finish the series but I really need to try and branch out into something a little more intellectually stimulating.
 

AcridMeat

Banned
I only just got back into leisure reading this year, something I had planned to do for too long to admit. With that said I finished this today for the first time.
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Enjoyed it quite a bit but thought it ended a bit abruptly, though perhaps that's what he was going for.
 

jtb

Banned
in order to make myself feel cultured, I'm reading this:

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I don't know a whole lot about Cervantes so I'm excited to go in blind-ish. I've been using this year to catch up on some the relatively modern "literary canon" after having neglected so much of it since high school... figured La Mancha would be a good a place to start as any.
 

T1tan

Neo Member
Reading Down Under by Bill Bryson,Its Very funny. I recommend everyone to read it/Short History of Nearly Everything.

Down Under is a fantastic read. Read it soon after I moved to Australia. Loved it. Passed it along to my Aussie friends who were equally charmed by it. Bryson has this knack of simultaneously being about to love and laugh at a country, much like a local would.
 

Monroeski

Unconfirmed Member
Finished:

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It was really, really good.

Just over halfway through:

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and thus far even better.

Ishiguro has a new fan. I also own The Unconsoled, which I had planned on leaving until later but which I now plan to move on to immediately after Never Let Me Go.
 

Ceebs

Member
The wait for the next Susanna Clarke novel is driving me insane. What I wouldn't give...maybe I should re-read JS&MN.

No kidding. I picked up JS&MN when it first came out in hardback on a whim and have been waiting ever since.

Has there been any info on the followup? All I heard would be that it would focus on middle or lower class magicians this time.
 

Hurmun

Neo Member
My girlfriend actually got me a nice collection of Roald Dahl books. I love his stories....now I feel inferior looking at all the book above me hahaha.

Last book a read a while ago was Neuromancer though.
 

Piecake

Member
Right now, only a few lectures about the English language, and some shorter essays and speeches about minorities in the UK and USA.

My next non-study book will be one of these:

Don DeLillo: Underworld
Günther Grass: The Tin Drum
Hussain Haddawy: Sindbad and other stories from the Arabian Nights
Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Love in the Time of Cholera
Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works

Leaning towards The Tin Drum. Can't remember seeing it mentioned here on GAF. Has anyone here read it?

Ive read it. I thought i was good, though I dont remember it wowing me. I thought Love in the timeof Cholera was better, though The Tin Drum is more unique? (not the right word, but cant think how to describe it right now) Basically, more weird quirky shiit happens in The Tin Drum
 
After I finished Crime and Punishment last month, I told myself I was going to hammer my hard copy backlog, starting with Elie Wiesel's Night. I stuck it in my kid's diaper bag as we headed out on family errands to pull out in the downtime, got through the forward, then promptly forgot to take it out when I was on my own. Desperate for something to read at my next down time, I downloaded 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and haven't looked back.

How the fuck did people read before PDAs/smartphones/ereaders? It's so primitive.

On a related note, I just realized that I've been seriously e-reading for decade as of last month. Started with a Palm m125 I got with birthday money, moved up to a Palm Treo 755p, and am now splitting time in the Kindle app for Apple iPhone 4S and HP TouchPad. And yet I'm still debating which ebook platform to commit to.
 

Dresden

Member
After I finished Crime and Punishment last month, I told myself I was going to hammer my hard copy backlog, starting with Elie Wiesel's Night. I stuck it in my kid's diaper bag as we headed out on family errands to pull out in the downtime, got through the forward, then promptly forgot to take it out when I was on my own. Desperate for something to read at my next down time, I downloaded 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and haven't looked back.

How the fuck did people read before PDAs/smartphones/ereaders? It's so primitive.

On a related note, I just realized that I've been seriously e-reading for decade as of last month. Started with a Palm m125 I got with birthday money, moved up to a Palm Treo 755p, and am now splitting time in the Kindle app for Apple iPhone 4S and HP TouchPad. And yet I'm still debating which ebook platform to commit to.

I feel like a caveman, still happily lugging along all those hardcovers. When they reach biblical sizes, though, I do start regretting a little.

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Slowly working through 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami, and it's very . . . Murakami. Dunno what to say other than that. I can almost see the non-ending coming. Every time I hit a new chapter I'm reminded of that line in his memoir about running, where he notes that he really can't write endings. Is the journey, then, worth the time invested? The thing's the size of a fantasy novel. And I can never come to an answer regarding that question, because I'm not even a big fan of Murakami. It almost feels like a duty. But I'm enjoying it, what little of it that I've read, so eh.
 

Monroeski

Unconfirmed Member
How the fuck did people read before PDAs/smartphones/ereaders? It's so primitive.

Lack of a ctrl+f equivalent function annoys me with physical books, like when I see a reference to something that came before and have to search through 300 pages to find it, I'll admit.

But I just love having a full ass bookshelf full of things to look over and page through. It's just not the same with ebooks.
 
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