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What are you reading? (August 2012)

Lamel

Banned
Has anyone read The Brothers Karamazov? It'll probably be the book I read after Hitchhiker's Guide To the Galaxy.

I bought this edition but I haven't gotten around to it yet.
The_Brothers_Karamazov.jpg


Any thoughts on it?

I am reading that same edition right now. The Pevear/Volokhonsky translation is the best you can find.

I am around 40% into the story and let me tell you, it is really something. Dense and packed with details so you will have to pay attention...but somehow Doestoevsky's prose makes it easy to visualize all the little details. Seriously enjoying it so far. And what can I even say about the characters, just captivating.


Halfway through this edition, and well what is there left to say. It's considered one of the greatest novels of all time for a very good reason. The characters are vividly drawn, and their many interactions feel incredibly alive, despite the fact that most of the conversations are long discussions about faith or the nature of existence. Can't say too much about the storytelling so far, except that some of my favorite bits are the short tangents that have little to do with the overall narrative. It's a sprawling, rambling, epic tale that seems to tackle just about every one of Dostoevsky's pet themes.

Anyway, it's long and looks imposing, but I think you'll find that once you get into it it's as engrossing as anything else out there. I do recommend that you attack the reading in big chunks, so that you can really immerse yourself in the language.

Agree with everything this guy says.
 

Yen

Member
This week I read Catch-22 (fantastic, not only is it hilarious but extremely well written, the paradoxical nature of the book, and war, was brilliant. Probably one of my favourite books ever!), Never Let Me Go (enjoyable enough, wished more of the universe the novel was within was shown, but then that would've taken away from the fact the kids were in the dark over nearly everything), Slaughterhouse-5 (alright, I like metafiction, but coming off the back of Catch-22 meant I was comparing the two, which is unfair on S-5) and The Outsider. Disappointed by the Outsider, obviously Meursault was stoic, but it felt like absurdism 101 and nothing more.
 

thespot84

Member
This week I read Catch-22 (fantastic, not only is it hilarious but extremely well written, the paradoxical nature of the book, and war, was brilliant. Probably one of my favourite books ever!), Never Let Me Go (enjoyable enough, wished more of the universe the novel was within was shown, but then that would've taken away from the fact the kids were in the dark over nearly everything), Slaughterhouse-5 (alright, I like metafiction, but coming off the back of Catch-22 meant I was comparing the two, which is unfair on S-5) and The Outsider. Disappointed by the Outsider, obviously Meursault was stoic, but it felt like absurdism 101 and nothing more.

If you dug S-5 I highly recommend the Sirens of Titan
 
Yesterday I finished:

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So I picked up this and read it today (A fast but really satisfying read):

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And staying on target with Scalzi, just started this:

Sa9OS.jpg
 

Dan

No longer boycotting the Wolfenstein franchise
diamond age
when gravity fails
river of gods

altered carbon
looking for the mahdi
black man
etc

I heartily approve of those two recommendations.

Also, everything else by William Gibson.
 

Dresden

Member
You're cyberpunk.

no u

It's more of a thematic consideration as opposed to an aesthetic one.

---

Finished Gentlemen of the Road by Michael Chabon--he began writing with the title Jews With Swords, or so he notes, and I guess it was largely that.

There's certainly a lot of adventuring and the time period it is set in should have been interesting, but in the end it just felt underwhelming. Not a waste of time, and the short length + Chabon's style means it was a brisk read, but it was decent at best.

Also went through Jerusalem by Guy Delisle, which is a comic depicting the time he spent in and around that area, replete with racial tensions, settler drama, Gaza bombings, and the thrill of babysitting children. Entertaining stuff, and Delisle's art has a nice charm to it.

Kinda want to hit up Dostoevsky again, or maybe revisit Bless Me Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya, which I read and loved like ten years ago.
 

Mumei

Member
I finished reading Pride and Prejudice yesterday, and I really enjoyed it a lot more towards the second half. I'm not sure why this is, but I am looking forward to rereading it someday because of it.

I am going to read the second volume of Wandering Son tomorrow, and then continue reading Three Kingdoms.
 

Fjordson

Member
In for a fiver, the covers for the bonus books scared me off of getting them. Probably gonna start with Undersea.


Undersea by Geoffrey Morrison

Edit: kinda cool that you can have them sent straight to your kindle as well.
Wow. The premise for that sounds incredibly interesting. Toss another onto the ol' backlog.

I am nearing the last 20 percent or so of Tigana. I've been going pretty slowly through it, but I like it.
 

Lamel

Banned
I finished reading Pride and Prejudice yesterday, and I really enjoyed it a lot more towards the second half. I'm not sure why this is, but I am looking forward to rereading it someday because of it.

I've tried to read this. One day I will finish it.
 
I'm a great fan of The Big U. As a first novel it's kinda a mess, but I thought it was a really fun mess, and considering how much time I've spent refusing to leave college one way or another I appreciated the broadly satirical look at campus life. I hope you dig it!

FnordChan

I just finished it this evening. Thought it was ok, was enjoying it more before the last 100 pages or so where everything just kinda goes really nuts. You can already tell Stephenson has some interesting ideas which I'm looking forward to reading more of in his other books.

Tonight I will be starting


Underground: The Tokyo Gas Attack and the Japanese Psyche by Haruki Murakami

Which I'm pumped about. Love Murakami's fiction so I'm excited to read a different side of his writing.
 
Finished Reading

200px-The_Giver_Cover.gif
Nice short YA sci-fi book.

and

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Fun read about food and to see how Tony got his start in the buisness.

Starting

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and

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I have high expectations for both.
 

Proxy

Member
Recently decided to read through all the books in the L.A. Quartet series and just finished up reading The Black Dahlia. Not a bad book, although the sex scenes in it are pretty stilted.
 
Just finished this sensational book:


Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein

It's about two women who are best friends during World War II. One gets caught by the gestapo. It's told in epistolary format. I highly recommend it if you want a suspenseful thriller that might leave you weepy in the end. It took me a while to get really into the book but once the First Reveal came, I couldn't put it down.
 

Mumei

Member
Just finished this sensational book:


Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein

It's about two women who are best friends during World War II. One gets caught by the gestapo. It's told in epistolary format. I highly recommend it if you want a suspenseful thriller that might leave you weepy in the end. It took me a while to get really into the book but once the First Reveal came, I couldn't put it down.

Sounds fascinating, and I love epistolary novels.
 
Sounds fascinating, and I love epistolary novels.

You should give this one a shot. I'd love to hear what you think of it.

I find the shortcoming of a lot of epistolary novels I've read is that the "writer" is too omniscient. It's hard to let go of my sense of disbelief when too much is revealed in the letter.
 

Zerokku

WHAT HAVE YOU DONE?
For every reader here, do you prefer books in the 1st or 3rd person point of view?

3rd.

Maybe its just the fact that its so common in YA books, but with a handful of exceptions, 1st person tends to come off somewhat... juvenile.

I probably need to read better books in 1st person :p
 

Mumei

Member
You should give this one a shot. I'd love to hear what you think of it.

I find the shortcoming of a lot of epistolary novels I've read is that the "writer" is too omniscient. It's hard to let go of my sense of disbelief when too much is revealed in the letter.

The last one I read was Augustine. Have you read it?
 

Lamel

Banned
For every reader here, do you prefer books in the 1st or 3rd person point of view?

Hm, honestly it really depends.

But I think third person is preferred by me slightly simply because it is more of a traditional "story telling." (if that even makes sense)
 
Finished reading this:
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Found it really interesting. I picked it up last year after i read the steve jobs bio, wanting to know more about what went down with eisner and the pixar merger


Im making my way through all the tom clancy books, currently halfway through this after reading The cardinal and the kremlin in a few days.

854238.jpg



as a side note, does anyone know of any decent non fiction books about the dot-com bubble burst?
 

bengraven

Member
Finished a lot since last checking in.

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5 stars.

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4.5.

books


Reading this now and not getting as into it as I did Lonesome Dove and Boone's Lick. I love his tough female protagonists, but I'm not sure about having one as the narrator. Larry writes certain character archetypes and reuses them quite a bit and I like the mystery and authority his strong female archetype gives off that shock and twist his classic male protagonists, so having that trope as narrator kind of turns that on the head. Worse, she's the only good character so far in the book, so she's playing in a sandbox of less interesting civilians than in previous McMurtry books. This isn't about gender issues: I think Mc writes fantastic characters, but his protagonists work best as neutral, fairly uninteresting voices narrating the OTHER characters' stories - my issue is that the strongest, most interesting character IS the main character this time and she outshines everyone else.
 

Kuraudo

Banned
For every reader here, do you prefer books in the 1st or 3rd person point of view?

Depends on the book and the author.

I think third person is generally easier to pull off, but in the hands of a good enough writer first is sublime.


Took nakedsushi's advice and dropped House of Leaves. Replaced it with Gravity's Rainbow.

gravitys-rainbow.jpg


Not particularly far in (just read the "you never did the kenosha kid" bit last night), but it's pretty great.
 
Just finished Number One, next up is The Grand Design, the last in John Dos Passos' Districts of Columbia trilogy

If you like fitzgerald / vidal / hemingway, Dos Passos is very much worth a read, start with USA trilogy
 

Manik

Member
It's slightly morbid, but can anyone recommend any good books (non-ficton) on the subject of air crashes and their subsequent investigations? I always loved watching Air Crash Investigations on National Geographic so something along similar lines would be ideal.
 

Combichristoffersen

Combovers don't work when there is no hair
I'm going to move onto American Gods by Neil Gaiman before reading the next Malazan book, Midnight Tides.

God, no. If you're gonna read Gaiman, I'd advice you to read pretty much any other of his novels or short story collections. Just skip American Gods. I generally dig Gaiman, but American Gods is just a great idea suffering from poor execution, as the book is, IMO, pretty damn boring.

Anyway, currently working my way through The Last of the Vikings by Johan Bojer.
 

Cactus

Banned
Just started reading: The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym...

aLmhH.jpg


...and I'm loving it. Poe's distinctive style coupled with my irrational love for nautical tales despite knowing little about ships or sea travel in general = a lot of enjoyment.
 

Lamel

Banned
My fiancee told me to read The Hunger Games. So I've started it. It's actually a fun read so far...

This is something I want to do just to keep up with the movies. They are really fast reads.

I've heard that in this case movies are better.
 
confessions_of_a_mask.large_.jpg

Yukio Mishima's 'Confessions of a Mask'
I'm about halfway through this, very interesting reading and a very intimate insight into sexuality.

Earlier today I also read Yoko Ogawa's 'The Diving Pool', her writing always invokes feelings of a sweltering summer with foreboding darkness seeping through the landscapes, it's very consistent - I liked some of the humour in 'Pregnancy Diary' and I welcomed some of the more perverse elements that make up 'The Diving Pool', the main story itself, they're reminiscent of her other novel I read not long ago, 'Hotel Iris'.

I also read Taichi Yamada's 'Strangers' today, it was a very easy read but I felt like it didn't particularly excel at anything, aside from presenting a different approach to spirits and ghosts and whatnot.

I finished 'Confessions of a Mask' it was very compelling!

I'm now halfway through Murasaki Shikibu's 'The Tale of Genji'

The-Tale-of-Genji-28c3ost.jpg


It's the unabridged version, quite a large tome full of footnotes and whatnot, obviously timeless and surprisingly easy to read considering it's age (considered by some to be the oldest novel of it's kind) It's charming and very poetic!
 

Fjordson

Member
Finishd Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay. It was great. Loved the characters and Kay's prose was a pleasure to read. Now starting:

underseacover300.jpg


Interesting since like the second paragraph. The premise is great. Set on post-apocalyptic Earth, but instead of people living in the usual crumbled buildings in the middle of a scorched desert or something, they've all settled in a pair of giant, rundown, and damp submarines ("citysubs" as they call them).
 
Finishd Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay. It was great. Loved the characters and Kay's prose was a pleasure to read. Now starting:

underseacover300.jpg


Interesting since like the second paragraph. The premise is great. Set on post-apocalyptic Earth, but instead of people living in the usual crumbled buildings in the middle of a scorched desert or something, they've all settled in a pair of giant, rundown, and damp submarines ("citysubs" as they call them).



About halfway done with this, been enjoying it for the most part. Has some really cool scenes and I like the characters and their dialogue comes off natural. I'm just now getting into the meat of the main plot.
 

Haly

One day I realized that sadness is just another word for not enough coffee.
Do you like Urban Fantasy and its ilk?

Do you like Lovecraftian horrors Not Of This World?

Do you have $0.99?

If you answered "Yes" to all of the above then do I have the book for you (ignore the shitty cover art):
Child of Fire is about a man named Ray Lilly and his boss, Annalise Powliss. Annalise is a mage, and a high ranking member of the mysterious Twenty Palace Society. Ray, on the other hand, is a "wooden man", and his job is to act as a decoy while Annalise does her fire and brimstone thing. Together, they hunt down rogue mages who summon extradimensional horrors for their own selfish ends. Horrors which, if left unchecked, can easily devour all sentient life on earth.

Annalise also wants to kill Ray for something he once did, which does not make their job any easier.

Child of Fire is, even by urban fantasy standards, pretty dark. People die, they don't get better later on. It's about sacrifices, what people are willing to do for power and what the heroes have to do to stop them. And it's about trust, with all the various emotional trappings that come with that kind of plotline. This book is also niche, so niche that it doesn't even have a tropes page despite being 3 years old.

Alternatively, you can think of this as Harry Dresden in the Lakeside setting from American Gods. You can buy the ebook from Amazon for a measily $0.99, provided you have/are willing to use their Kindle for PC app.
 
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