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What are you reading? (July 2013)

Quake1028

Member
I never did start Cyber Storm back when I said I would. Finally picked it up yesterday and am already 40% through in just a bit of reading. Hoping to finish late tonight/tomorrow. Damn good so far, especially for 99 cents.
 

Empty

Member
9780099530275.jpg.300x1200_q85.jpg


finished this today. it's about the descent into madness of a woman called etsuko from the death of her philandering husband to her total infatuation with a young man called sanburo. took me a little to get into, especially as it seemed like it was being set up as a generic melodrama in a backdrop of rural japan's sexual repression and strict social scriptures. however it quickly emerged instead as a vividly described, complex and believable portrayal of a twisted but sympathetic woman in a great deal of psychological difficulty; focusing primarily on her contradictory thought processes, messy rationalizations and all-consuming passions, as well as her genuine attempts to find happiness and the all to clear pain the toxic relationships had caused her. i wasn't that convinced of her affection for sanburo till a mesmerizing scene of great intensity at a village festival that really ties the whole book together.
 
Finished The Sun Also Rises, I love the writing style but I don't really see how Jake and Brett change in the story. Their relationship seems exactly the same from beginning to end and only the stuff around them changes. It's weird to read a book with characters that seem so static (except for Coen I guess)
 

Ratrat

Member
Around 50 pages into The Scar. I like what I'm reading, but there are so many names of random places, languages, religions, races and other random shit. Did Mieville really need to rename the days of the week? Skullday? Chainday? Just call it Monday and get it over with.
Did you read Perdido Street Station first? The Scar is one of his better, most readable book.
 
Finished:
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Had a lot of fun reading this book. It feels like in the last couple of years King has been in top form. There's not a whole lot of classic King horror here, but the characters and the world are both on point. Plus, I am a sucker for the way King writes dialogue. If you're looking for a breezy summer novel, you can't go wrong here.

Starting:
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This is my first LeCarre novel, looking forward to it.

Well I'll be damned. I just finished Joyland and am about 3/4 of the way through the Spy Who Came In From the Cold, which I'm really enjoying. It almost seems the antithesis of the glitzy James Bond kind of spy, which I'm much preferring. You have excellent taste if I do say so myself.
 

Jintor

Member
I am like 30% of the way through a short history of nearly everything and my mind is being blown on a 24/7 basis.
 

Blitzzz

Member
Finished Asimov's Foundation over the weekend. If I have to be honest, I didn't enjoy it very much. Coming up with the concept 60 years ago is worth applauding but the plot/characters/prose was mediocre. I don't think I will continue with the rest of the books.

Also about 60% into Zafon's Angel's Game. It's got a lot better once Act 2 started. Becoming quite the page turner like Shadow of the Wind was.

Starting this next since it popped off the queue from the library. Might be a good time for a break from sci-fi/fantasy anyhow. I think I added it when I was looking for Scandinavian crime books. Never read any of this series so we'll see how it goes.

The Bat by Jo Nesbø
 

berg ark

Member
Finished The Sun Also Rises, I love the writing style but I don't really see how Jake and Brett change in the story. Their relationship seems exactly the same from beginning to end and only the stuff around them changes. It's weird to read a book with characters that seem so static (except for Coen I guess)

Do you recommend it for someone who is pretty new to Hemingway? I've read a few short, Old Man and Green Hills of Africa.
 

ShaneB

Member
That sounds pretty good. Purchased.

Just passed 27% done. Really think I'll blast through this pretty quick, really like it so far and it's a fast read. Seems there are a few books in the series, so I'm wondering if they're continuations or other self contained stories maybe. edit: Yeah.. this is a lightning fast read. I might finish this tonight since I know it's got its hooks in me.

When I first started to read more earlier this year, I thought I'd be spending all my time reading so much science fiction that I missed out on because I didn't read a whole lot, but here I am finding myself much more drawn to these smaller scale, very personal stories.
 

Kisaya

Member
Dan Brown - Angels & Demons. I have jury duty and a friend recommended it to me. Enjoying it a lot, have maybe 150 pages left to read!
 

Pau

Member
Finished Birthday of the World and Other Stories. Now I'm going through a short story collection: The Year's Best in Fantasy and Horror 10th Edition. Reading a story every night before going to sleep. :3

512RPGS0ZFL._SY300_.jpg


Of her collections, I've read A Fisherman of the Inland Sea, Four Ways to Forgiveness, The Wind's Twelve Quarters and The Unreal and the Real (volume 2). (and Tales of Earthsea, but you already read that one).
They're all very good, but my favorite is probably Four Ways to Forgiveness. It's a collection of 4 loosely connected novellas focused on two planets in the Ekumen setting. Also, I'd probably skip The Unreal and The Real vol. 2 since it's really a selection of stories from her other collections, and some of the best you already know from The Birthday of the World.

I agree that her non-fiction must be lovely :) I'll give it a try one day!
Thank you! This was very helpful since she just has so many!
 

jacobs34

Member
Do you recommend it for someone who is pretty new to Hemingway? I've read a few short, Old Man and Green Hills of Africa.

Sorry for jumping in here, but I highly recommend The Sun Also Rises for a Hemingway neophyte. It does a great job of capturing what I love most about Hemingway's novels, which is the feel of a place and moment. The fishing scene with Jake and Bill comes to mind, as well as all the scenes where characters are sitting around a bar talking to each other. I couldn't think of a better book of Hemingway's to read during the summer.
 

survivor

Banned
Did you read Perdido Street Station first? The Scar is one of his better, most readable book.

No, I didn't read the first book since I was told The Scar wasn't a sequel.

I went through the Wiki to look up the different races and other stuff and it's making the reading go much smoother now.
 

Haly

One day I realized that sadness is just another word for not enough coffee.
Around 50 pages into The Scar. I like what I'm reading, but there are so many names of random places, languages, religions, races and other random shit. Did Mieville really need to rename the days of the week? Skullday? Chainday? Just call it Monday and get it over with.

Think of it as diving headfirst into:

dnd_products_dndacc_217367200_pic3_en.jpg


and

Monster_Manual_540x706.jpg
 
Now at 49%.

JUst...

I can't even.

I.
Can't.
Even.
Man, is it really this good? My uncle, a big reader (mostly of the pop-lit variety) and recommended it to me because he knows I like Stephen King. I'm certainly up for something like The Stand but didn't get further than downloading a sample for it because I was balls deep in ASOIAF at the time.
 

berg ark

Member
Sorry for jumping in here, but I highly recommend The Sun Also Rises for a Hemingway neophyte. It does a great job of capturing what I love most about Hemingway's novels, which is the feel of a place and moment. The fishing scene with Jake and Bill comes to mind, as well as all the scenes where characters are sitting around a bar talking to each other. I couldn't think of a better book of Hemingway's to read during the summer.

Thanks, I will read it when I finish my current book!
 
Man, is it really this good? My uncle, a big reader (mostly of the pop-lit variety) and recommended it to me because he knows I like Stephen King. I'm certainly up for something like The Stand but didn't get further than downloading a sample for it because I was balls deep in ASOIAF at the time.

If you like King and you clearly have an eye for good prose with a DFW handle, I can assure you you'll love his book.

At 58% now.

Ohhh dear.
 
Put The Terror on hold to read 600 Hours of Edward based on a strong recommendation from ShaneB. Just started it on my bus ride to work this morning and already 25% in. Pretty interesting so far - its a unique perspective of the world from the mind of someone with Aspergers.


600 Hours of Edward by Craig Lancaster

When I finish this I'll probably continue to put The Terror on hold as a co-worker just gave me NOS4A2.
 

ShaneB

Member
Mak, glad to see you reading my favourite book so far this year. I hope you like it as much as I did. I finished The Walk last night, finishing a book in one day is something I've never done, but it's definitely a very quick read with some decieving page counts :p I think I'm gonna read the rest of the series.
 

Shiv47

Member
Just finished:

511wZvfJ1LL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA300_SH20_OU01_.jpg


I enjoyed it, but a couple of the plot elements didn't seem to add up to me. It was so short that it isn't that big a deal though.

Moving on to:

41BMuyRw6jL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA300_SH20_OU01_.jpg


One of my wife's favorite books. She's been on me for years to read it, so I'm finally doing so.
 
Mak, glad to see you reading my favourite book so far this year. I hope you like it as much as I did. I finished The Walk last night, finishing a book in one day is something I've never done, but it's definitely a very quick read with some decieving page counts :p I think I'm gonna read the rest of the series.



Better than Replay? Might have to check it out.
 

amrod

Member
Finished

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Now to start

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Is it worth reading the Gods of Risk (Expanse #2.5) book that goes in between it? I heard its mostly more of a side story
 

ShaneB

Member
I'm 50% in and enjoying it very much. Definitely a nice change of pace from sci-fi and fantasy and what not.

Better than Replay? Might have to check it out.

Yeah, Replay was great, but it was fairly standard in how much I liked it, great story from start to finish, and "The Curious Incident..." was my favourite book until I read '600 Hours of Edward', just because I found myself relating a lot to what Edward was going through, and I got very emotional reading it.

I'm now 30% through "Miles to Go" book 2 of The Walk series, and it's great so far. The first book and it's fairly short length now feels like an extended prologue to this.
 

TTG

Member
I've been reading Altered Carbon for the last couple of days, finished yesterday. Really liked the premise, the first hundred or so pages are the strongest, you can nitpick it apart after that if you're so inclined. Anyway, I thought it was entertaining and I apparently have a real soft spot for that type of sci fi world and all that it implies. I'm not well enough versed in sci fi dialect to define it accurately, wikipedia says "hardboiled cyber punk sci fi". It's definitely doesn't go far down the cyber punk alley, it's not Nueromancer. More than anything, it's the hardboiled detective stuff that rang true to me. There are also some classic sci fi overtones with interstellar colonies and even Martians... and there's a lot of body swapping/consciousness stored on disk stuff, but it doesn't delve deep enough into the philosophical problems that poses. Descartes am sad, I suppose.

So that was fun! But, now I'm lost. Maybe go back to what I was reading before this, or pick something new up.
 

Narag

Member
To be fair, 40+ years later it feels like several of the Bond books were phoned in. But at the time they were revolutionary.

Really enjoyed the first three, Casino Royale in particular. Just didn't seem like anything to really distinguish this one like say the tension present in Live and Let Die due to Bond being terribly outmatched by Mr. Big or how Bond's mortality seems to be in his thoughts so often in Moonraker. Seemed like he just shot his way up the ladder in this one although I did like having Leiter return in the capacity he did.
 
Really enjoyed the first three, Casino Royale in particular. Just didn't seem like anything to really distinguish this one like say the tension present in Live and Let Die due to Bond being terribly outmatched by Mr. Big or how Bond's mortality seems to be in his thoughts so often in Moonraker. Seemed like he just shot his way up the ladder in this one although I did like having Leiter return in the capacity he did.

Agreed and once this really sets into a popular series I think a lot of the edginess from the first few titles get washed out in favor of the staples that make Bond the icon he is.
 

kinn

Member
I've been reading Altered Carbon for the last couple of days, finished yesterday. Really liked the premise, the first hundred or so pages are the strongest, you can nitpick it apart after that if you're so inclined. Anyway, I thought it was entertaining and I apparently have a real soft spot for that type of sci fi world and all that it implies. I'm not well enough versed in sci fi dialect to define it accurately, wikipedia says "hardboiled cyber punk sci fi". It's definitely doesn't go far down the cyber punk alley, it's not Nueromancer. More than anything, it's the hardboiled detective stuff that rang true to me. There are also some classic sci fi overtones with interstellar colonies and even Martians... and there's a lot of body swapping/consciousness stored on disk stuff, but it doesn't delve deep enough into the philosophical problems that poses. Descartes am sad, I suppose.

So that was fun! But, now I'm lost. Maybe go back to what I was reading before this, or pick something new up.

Read the sequels. Not as good but still enjoyable.
 

Blitzzz

Member
Finished Angel's Game yesterday. Shadow of the Wind was definitely better. Threw up a short review on goodreads:

An up and down book. Act 1 was very long and slow and almost entirely focused on the development of the main character. There was barely a hint of the mystery described in the synopsis. Act 2 finally picks up the plot and becomes quite an enjoyable read all the way to the last bits of the book in Act 3. The ending itself was a bit flat as Zafon leaves many of the the events open to the reader's interpretation.

It would probably be a decent "book club" book due to the open ended questions.
 

ShaneB

Member
Finished "Miles To Go", and posted my review to goodreads, now onto book 3 of "The Walk" series.. I'm praying book 4 is the end, becase I don't want to wait for the next one :(
 
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