What are you reading? (January 2016)

The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell
Thank you, but already read and I enjoyed it. :) Did you read any of the sequels?

Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.
I do pretty much the same thing. Bookmarks just get in the way I find.
 
I used to remember page numbers. I would shoot for just a bit lower than what I remembered and then scan my way to where I was.

I'd also repeat the number to myself after closing the book in the back of my head to "lock it in". The more "rhythmic" or "chunkable" the number was, like "717" or "111", the easier it was to recall.
 
Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.

Bookmarks. Always. Especially since I tend to have multiple books going at once, remembering page numbers seems nuts. I've got a lot of Toastmasters ribbons lying around so I just use those; they're basically perfect.
 
Picked up Stephen King's 11/22/63 this past weekend.



About 100 pages in. Never read any of King's work prior to this. Don't know why I've waited so long, because this has sucked me in pretty good.

That is a good place to start with King. Another good one is Pet Sematary (Spelled wrong on purpose). Or if you are the adventuring sort The Stand is probably my favorite, but it is super long.
 
Bookmarks. When I was a kid I'd fold the corner of the page down to mark my place. As I got older I realized that was barbaric. Ever since I've used bookmarks - notecards, dollar bills, ticket stubs. Stuff like that.
 
Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.

Bookmarks. Always. Usually just a scrap of paper or similar.
 
Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.

Sometimes I keep a mental note, other times I just leave the book open flipped downwards. I rarely use a bookmark. On more than one occasion, I have had to spend a bunch of my 'reading time' trying to find my spot in the book, especially if it's been a few days since my last session.
 
Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.

Bookmarks. I've got a couple of free ones from different specialty publishers, so might as well use them.
 
Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.
This blows my mind. I've always had a hard time remembering numbers.
 
absolutely cannot remember page numbers. Booksmarks or I'll dogear the page (I don't like to but sometimes you just don't have a suitable bookmark on hand). With familiar books I can also just pick up where I left off, but that's not so common.
 
I almost snagged this on audible but I'm scared it's going to be too YA for my taste. What did you think of that aspect of the novel?
The writing isn't super sophisticated, but I found the plot kept me hooked. It takes place during new hope, empire strikes back, and return of the jedi, so even though the star wars' universe was foreshadowing, the characters' reactions to the world they live in kept me reading it. For a YA, I think it's okay but I shall warn you there is a love story.
 
Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.

The Gf and I luv bookmarks, the more original the better. It's fun to have a bookmark that matches the theme of the book your reading. We even made some from old fotos I've taken by editing them, printing and then giving them a good laminating. My girl is pretty amazing that way.
 
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Read through my January freebie. Wasn't horrible, but read like a typical soap opera. Not super interesting and the characters were fairly unlikeable. Easy to get through, at least.


Starting to read through this, since it's about living with mental illness and the sample was pretty damn funny.
 
Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.

I either remember the page number or the page layout and usually know that I was 1/3 or so into the book. That's why it only takes some seconds to continue reading.
 
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Mumei, I don't quite get the hype you put out for this book. It was ok, but nothing mindblowing.


Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.

Dog ears in paperbacks, bookmarks for hardcovers.
 
Currently reading the Dune series. Half way through Children of Dune, which I like better than Dune Messiah, but both are not as good as Dune.
 
Feel like I've been reading The Count of Monte Cristo since forever and I'm only 23% in (this isn't a knock on the book, I've just had little time recently). Really enjoying it now although the amount of time left in the book leaves me in a constant state of panic as to what new horror is going to befall him next.

Unless
all the bad shit is done and it's all about vengeance from here on in. Just finished the chapter in which he saves Morrell. Mean fucker making him wait so long
! (I don't actually want to know, obviously)

This is going to make a mockery of my 50 book challenge.
 
Bookmarks. Always. Especially since I tend to have multiple books going at once, remembering page numbers seems nuts. I've got a lot of Toastmasters ribbons lying around so I just use those; they're basically perfect.

When I was younger, I would be reading 3-4 books at a time (one for car, one for table, one for couch, you get the idea). Just a habit i got into, I guess, and never really realized that it seems odd for other people.

This blows my mind. I've always had a hard time remembering numbers.

Practice, I guess.

Dog ears in paperbacks, bookmarks for hardcovers.

You MONSTER.
 
I have one of those thick lenticular bookmarks with two stomping T-Rexes on it...why wouldn't I use that? Back-up book mark is from that feminist bookstore in Portlandia.

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Does anyone have suggestions for other books in the vein of Bill Bryson's A Short History of Nearly Everything? I'm having a great deal of trouble finding other science books that are written well/interestingly.
 
Just curious, for those who read physical books here:

How do you keep your place in the book? I seem to have a mental note in my head of where I am in a book, usually can just open the book within 1-2 pages of where I was. I also just remember page numbers. Most other people I know use bookmarks, so I was wondering if other voracious readers were able to remember the page numbers as easily.

I used to do the exact same thing as you, and my family/friends always found it puzzling. Nowadays I usually use a bookmark (old receipt, cheap Magic: The Gathering Card, etc.), though I'll also dog-ear if nothing's close to hand.

I used to be morally opposed to dog-earring, until I realized that the slow degradation of a book as you move from beginning to end is one of my favourite aspects of reading a physical book, and dog-earring, as a physical marker of each time you picked up a book to read, is something of an interesting archival method. They're like road markers placed on a long journey.

Does anyone have suggestions for other books in the vein of Bill Bryson's A Short History of Nearly Everything? I'm having a great deal of trouble finding other science books that are written well/interestingly.

I'm in this recommendation, too. Loved Short History, but haven't found anything since that comes close enough to satisfy me.
 
I have a large collection of bookmarks. The Book Depository is at the moment sending out some rather nice ones with all its books.

...

I finished Gravity's Engines by Caleb Scharf. The author is astrophysicist, rather than a theoretical physicist like the authors of the two previous popular physics books I listened to (A Universe From Nothing, and From Eternity to Here), which made an interesting difference. It was about black holes, the history of their discovery and how they influence the formation of the universe. It was pretty good in describing the physical reality, scale, contents of the universe and there was some really great stuff like white dwarfs and quasars, but some of the explanations were a bit overburdened by metaphor.

I also finished Superintelligence by Nick Bostrom which for the most part was totally ace. I'd never seriously considered AI to be a big concern for the future, but Bostrom was pretty thorough in his arguments. Much of the book reads like science fiction, and anyone interested in reading - or writing - sci fi should very definitely listen to it. It was mostly about the Control problem, full brain emulation vs true AI, singleton vs multi polar superintelligence etc, but also lots of stuff like a society of emulated worker brains (what rights do they have?), turning the galaxy into computonium in order to calculate Pi, etc. The language/ style is quite academic, and it's unlikely I would have finished it if I'd actually read it, but it was totally fine listening to it. I did think he overlooked a few alternative arguments in order to plump for his own conclusions on occasion, and he seemed to have an odd view of how society worked at times, but those were very minor quibbles and very possibly my own error.

I also finally finished The Unreal Life of Sergey Nabokov, by Paul Russell. Russell is one of my favourite authors and I'd been saving this book up. It couldn't live up to expectations. It's a fictional life of Vladimir Nabokov's brother, covering life in Russia before the Revolution, then mostly Sergey's life in Paris between the wars, and during WWII in Berlin. The main problem I found was that Sergey basically seems to drift though his life (this may have been the point, but still), and all the famous people he meets in Paris (Cocteau etc) were pretty horrible. Vladimir Nabokov also came across as a dick. Russell has apparently taught courses on Nabokov and I think this book probably echoes things in Nabokov's work that I didn't pick up on, only having read Lolita and Pale Fire. It made me want to read all Nabokov's other stuff, minor work included. Russell is great at evoking certain emotions, and there were some great bits, like Sergey's loneliness and unpopularity as a teenager, his longing for closeness with his father and brother, but it didn't quite reach the height of some of Russell's other books. It was still really good, though. The period and events in the book were all really interesting and well done.

I am currently listening to The Physics of the Impossible by Michio Kaku. It's good fun so far.
 
Finished:

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I love the way Murakami writes, or at least how its translated. The atmosphere and feeling that comes from this is just eerie and amazing. Outside of that though, I'm not sure how much I loved this one. The whole duality and comparisons all came across pretty well, but there just seemed like not much conclusion past the idea of acceptance? And even then only maybe? I dunno, loved reading it, but not really sure how I feel about the book as a whole. It doesn't bother me though as I just love reading what I've read of Murakami so far.

Finished The Last Policeman and now strongly jonesin for some country noir so gonna start Knockemstiff ...


Knockemstiff by Donald Ray Pollock

I'm just about to read his The Devil All The Time here soon. Haven't read any of his before, but wasn't feeling like a collection of short stories.
 
CompTia A+ Certification. I figure I should stop procrastinating and take this before it's too late so I'm going back through the book.
 
I remember using the front flap of the dust jacket on my hardcover of Goblet of Fire back in the day for a bookmark, worked quite well. Not sure why I didn't just use a bookmark.
 
Sometimes I keep a mental note, other times I just leave the book open flipped downwards.
That's uncivilized.

I just use whatever's handy. Stuff like ticket stubs, receipts or boarding passes get used a lot.

I often put something solid on top of my paperbacks while they're being read to try to minimize the full impact of page bending too.
 
I remember using the front flap of the dust jacket on my hardcover of Goblet of Fire back in the day for a bookmark, worked quite well. Not sure why I didn't just use a bookmark.

I used to do this, although when I was over halfway I'd switch to the back flap. For paperbacks I'd tear the corner with the date on it off a newspaper page + plus enough to stop them falling out.
 
I'm reading House of Leaves now.


Or is it reading me?



Also you dog ear people are freaking me out. There are hundreds of paper scraps in your vicinity at all times. Let your books live in peace.



Also also, Star Wars:Aftermath was unnecessary, inconsequential meh. Oh well.
 
Cool thread, first time here.

Just finished Bone Clocks.

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As usual David Mitchell has beautiful and engaging prose, but boy am I hating his expanding literary universe. Bone Clocks takes what was facilitating background mysticism in Thousand Autumns and turns it into all-out nerd lore, complete with a DBZ fight scene.

Currently reading:

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And listening to on audiobook:

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First time listening to a competent piece of literature on audio and it's difficult to keep up with the prose. Previously I'd only listened to fantasy which is pretty much garbage so it doesn't matter if you miss the details.
 
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