DieH@rd said:I started Gateway, not bad for now.
Tim the Wiz said:Pohl's blog is pretty interesting - as far as the blog of a ninety year-old writer who can count people like Isaac Asimov as old friends can get interesting.
Fanboydestroyer said:started WeaveWorld. I find it to be interesting so far, but I've only read about 60 or so pages. I hope that I enjoy it though.
"Funes el memorios" by Jorge Luis Borges. It's part of a collection of his short stories, called "Ficciones".
afternoon delight said:Does anyone else doubt that Borges may be in fact, God? His writing just melts faces, minds, concepts, etc.
Undeux said:Also, FnordChan, how's The Secret Pilgrim?
_Isaac said:This book offended and angered me.
Ryu said:Finished Hunger Games book 2: Catching Fire. Two things...
1. I really enjoyed this book despite a...
2. Cliffhanger ending. Sonofabitch. ANGRY. HULK SMASH.
Why oh why is book 3 not till August?! RAWR.
BruceLeeRoy said:HA I felt the same way WTF!!I read that book in two days it was just unrelenting.PETA NOOO!!! Also fu#$ Gale its all about Peta.
Ryu said:I have to agree. Gale is a douche. Peeta knows his shit and how to play a crowd, that's for damn sure.But WTF, No District 12? wat?! August 25th release of book 3?!?! ARGGGGG
threenote said:
Awesome bookLabouredSubterfuge said:The Ascent of Money. Hugely informative. Required reading if you care at all about the economic systems that control our lives.
Witchfinder General said:Michael Crichton - Prey
Just finished reading a book that covered swarm intelligence so this seemed like a natural fun read. Hilariously conservative and right-wing (was Jurrasic Park the same? I don't remember such overtones. Then again, I read it over fifteen years ago) but a fun read all the same. Reminds me a bit of The Stand.
Guileless said:I read that at summer camp in the early 90s. Good times. I read a lot of Barker back then, does he still write?
eznark said:Also picked up Consider Phlebas, but B&N has no ebook image for that.
It is an absolutely fantastic read.Maklershed said:I've added Mason & Dixon to my Amazon cart. Based on the description it sounds right up my alley.
t takes formidable talent to mesmerize readers of a novel that focuses on a deeply flawed, unsympathetic protagonist, but Brown succeeds triumphantly in his most wise, humane and haunting work to date. On the first day that Glen Davis is released from the Mississippi state pen (after serving three years for running over a child while he was drunk), he kills two men; that night, he callously tells the mother of his toddler son that marriage is not part of his plans. On the second day, he rapes a teenaged girl. Glen is a despicable personmean, icily remote, seemingly without conscience. Sheriff Bobby Blanchard is Glen's opposite; a kind and decent man, he epitomizes integrity and responsibility. Bobby is in love with Jewel, the mother of Glen's son, and their relationship is only one of the heartwrenching dramas played out here. Only halfway through the book do we learn that Bobby is Glen's half brother; both are sons of Virgil Davis, whom Glen demonizes and hates and whom Bobby wistfully wishes would acknowledge him. In fact, all of the characters are involved in a web of secret relationships, and much of the resonance of this suspenseful narrative is due to Brown's adroit pacing, as he releases surprising information gradually and with natural understatement. Despite Glen's coldhearted deeds, we come to understand him, too, as he progresses to a desperate act of rage and revenge. As in his previous novels, Brown (Dirty Work; Joe) uses lean, lyrical prose to evoke the cadenced speech and the atmosphere of the rural south in the 1960s, where everybody chainsmokes and drinks whiskey. Though he depicts a basic conflict of good and evil, however, Brown never reduces the issues to stark polarities. Most impressive here are Brown's compassionate view of human nature and his understanding of the subtleties of human behavior and the fabric of society, which, after tragedy reknits itself anew, to reaffirm the essential kinship of a community of souls. Author tour. (Sept.)
Sounds dreadful. Does a woman get raped with corn in it?eznark said:If anyone is looking for a novel, check out Father and Son. Easily my favorite work of fiction.
Vanilla rape is so NY Times bestseller list. If you want that Nobel Prize you gotta get corny with it.eznark said:The style is not the same, but it's as close to a Faulkner feel as I have gotten from any contemporary author. Another of his books, Joe, definitely has a barn rape...no corn though.
Oh, it's far from vanilla. Turn your snob meter down to five and give the book a shot.Karakand said:Vanilla rape is so NY Times bestseller list. If you want that Nobel Prize you gotta get corny with it.
thomaser said:
Finally finished Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon today. Started it on New Year's Eve, so it took a while. But damn, what a book! Worth every second, probably my favourite Pynchon (have yet to read Against the Day and Inherent Vice). I should probably try to say something useful about it, but it's so overwhelming that I have no idea where to start. Just read it, please?
LabouredSubterfuge said:The Ascent of Money. Hugely informative. Required reading if you care at all about the economic systems that control our lives.
I think you have the wrong impression of the book., but hopefully you'll enjoy it anyway. I have no idea what LA Candy is.Karakand said:I advocated reading The Illuminatus Trilogy ITT I am so not a snob.
I am however masochistic so I will read F&S on your dare. If I can handle LA Candy I can handle anything. BRING IT ON.
Holy shit I have to check those out!In 1986 the trilogy won the Prometheus Hall of Fame Award, designed to honor classic libertarian fiction.[2]
Flo_Evans said:This book kicked my ass. I need to finish it someday.
Karakand said:Sounds dreadful. Does a woman get raped with corn in it?
eznark said:After realizing Daemon is the first in what I assume will be a long series I'm kind of done with it. It's ok as a single novel but having to read at least two more to get any sort of conclusion isn't real appetizing.
My only non-hating criticism (I am a hater not a snob) is that the excerpts online read dryly.eznark said:I think you have the wrong impression of the book., but hopefully you'll enjoy it anyway.
You know how Don DeLillo lists name brands? Take that but insert paragraphs between the individual items in the list until you have created a 300+ page work that is literally about nothing and full of caricatures masquerading as people whose only function is to connect these listed consumer items and then slap a cliffhanger ending on it because lists don't have endings, they just end.I have no idea what LA Candy is.
One of the characters in it is Ragnar Danneskjold but not shitty it rules.As far as Illuminatus Trilogy:
Holy shit I have to check those out!