Finished Never Love a Gambler, and now I'm about 60 pages into:
![]()
It's pretty good so far. Starting to pick up.
Not a well received book. Interested to hear what you think of it.
Finished Never Love a Gambler, and now I'm about 60 pages into:
![]()
It's pretty good so far. Starting to pick up.
Just finished this. It was a hard read.
Just started on this. It's fun and easy reading at the moment, though I hope the author doesn't go on too much about 80's trivia. Get into the story proper!
Not a well received book. Interested to hear what you think of it.
http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-ideal-marriage-according-to-novels
Skip past the three first paragraphs if you want to avoid 'spoilers' for Ferrante's Neopolitan novels.
I'll check that out! Thanks!I am a huge fan of Durarara (both anime and light novels) so that. The first 2 are translated with 2 more coming this year.
Quality translations.
I'll check that out! Thanks!
I've read a couple light novels, but I don't really get what officially differentiates them from regular novels. Is it page length? Or is it more just the subject matter?
A light novel (ライトノベル raito noberu?) is a style of Japanese novel primarily targeting middle- and high-school students (young adult demographic).[1][2] "Light novel" is a wasei-eigo, or a Japanese term formed from words in the English language. Such short, light novels are often called ranobe (ラノベ?)[3] or LN in the West. They are typically not more than 40,00050,000 words long (the shorter ones being equivalent to a novella in US publishing terms), are rarely more than a few hundred pages, often have dense publishing schedules, are usually published in bunkobon size (A6, 10.5 cm × 14.8 cm), and are often illustrated.[4] The text is often serialized in anthology magazines before collection in book form.
Not a well received book. Interested to hear what you think of it.
180 pages into City of Stairs by Robert Jackson Bennett and am really enjoying it. The world seems to be built on a solid and interesting foundation. For a book about world building though the writing has felt neither boring nor dry, which is to be expected in a book setting up a new world.
I just finished Wool and really liked it but j don't tend to read a lot of dystopian stuff.Just finished Wool or the Silo series. Decent read but it felt a bit by the numbers to me. Then again I've read a lot of stories with similar settings and stories so I may just be a bit moor critical.
Just started Annihilation and I can already see why people compare it to A Roadside Picnic. Not completely sold yet but I'll continue with it.
I just finished Wool and really liked it but j don't tend to read a lot of dystopian stuff.The stuff I have seen or read doesn't really go into what happened or has very little people or stuff to learn along the way. And this book went in the opposite direction: pretty much what I want out of dystopian stories.
There's a great book on the early days of Nasa, Failure is Not an Option: Mission Control From Mercury to Apollo 13 and Beyond by Gene Kranz. Dude was part of the entire origins of Nasa. Or are you looking for something with a bit more focus on the overall broad picture of the Soviets vs USA?
Now I can either read Dracula (Bram Stoker), Bridge of Birds (Barry Hughart), or Hyperion (Dan Simmons). I think I'm gonna start with Bridge of Birds next, but I haven't decided yet.
Bridge of Birds may still be my favorite book ever. Just an absolute joy of a book to read. Never did pick up the sequels though.
Anyone able to recommend some books out authors similar to China Mieville's stuff. Especially really creative worlds, creatures, characters, etc.?
Love really weird but well written books.
If that sounds cool to you, then dig in. Just don't expect to understand everything at first and enjoy the ride!Surreal, morbid, dreamlike, enigmatic and occasionally humorous are a few words that I would use to briefly describe this book. I know that says very little, but what else can I say?
I don't want to spoil much, but I really love the concept of the novel so I'm going to talk about it for a bit. The main character is the titular Divinity Student, who, in perhaps some sort of mysterious ritual, travels to the top of a mountain during a storm and is killed by a bolt of lightning. His body is recovered, where it is taken and gutted, his innards replaced and stuffed with pages from books, his body resurrected. Then he is set to work as a word-finder, his ultimate goal to find and record words of a sacred language lost to the world of men, except in dreams and in the memories of those passed.
Does anyone have any tips or remember a time where it just "clicked" when it came to fast reading?
Yeah. I do find it's much easier after the first 25%. By then i'm pretty involved.I can slide over sentences pretty well, for me it relies on not having any kind of other language communication going on as well as particular interest in the writing. Music is fine as long as there aren't vocals. But if I don't care what's going on, I find myself getting the "eyes glossed over" state of mind. I think the interest thing is really key for being able to process the information quickly.
Wonder Boys is pretty good. Read it for a college class.Kavalier and Clay was great. I love Chabon's prose and look forward to picking up Wonder Boys at some point in the future.
![]()
Onward to The Confusion. Feels really good to be in this world again and I'm liking the structure with more rapid switching between the characters.
Wonder Boys is pretty good. Read it for a college class.
Zeroville Plenty of arresting imagery and the occasional novel insight into film spectatorship. Mostly, however, a kind of Forrest Gump aimed at cinephilesand even counting myself among that group, this is frequently annoying when its characters actually talk about movies. It makes sense that Vikar's descriptions of movies would be generic and reference-dependent to the point that the identity of the movie being discussed becomes an obscure puzzle, but the other characters talk about movies and music the same distractingly unrealistic way. Instead of "Vikar goes to see Possession" Erickson writes "Vikar goes to see a movie by a Polish director starring the woman who was Victor Hugo's daughter in the movie where she follows her soldier-love to Nova Scotia," and boy does it get exhausting. The added confusion isn't constructive in any way, only serving to further mark references to X-Ray Spex and Force of Evil as hip. Clarity can be cool.
It's still not out on American Amazon ;_;Finished Memories of Ice, probably my favourite out of the three so far, time to read something else.
![]()
Start adding books to wish list, and use this to track prices, Amazon has sales from time to time.Hello Reading GAF. I just bought myself a Kindle Paperwhite, it arrived today. I've been wanting to read lately, I used to read plenty in my free time in high school, but I've needed something to keep me occupied aside from video games, work and GAF.
wanted something short to start out with, so I'm currently reading A Clockwork Orange. My next book I'm planning to read is The Martian, and no I haven't seen the movie. Feels good to read again though! Turn off the TV, put the phone on silent and get lost in a book. Can't wait to expand my library.![]()
![]()
Love love love this! This is one of those books where you want it to never end.
Onward to The Confusion. Feels really good to be in this world again and I'm liking the structure with more rapid switching between the characters.
City of Saints and Madmen by Jeff Vandermeet.Anyone able to recommend some books out authors similar to China Mieville's stuff. Especially really creative worlds, creatures, characters, etc.?
Love really weird but well written books.
Anyone able to recommend some books out authors similar to China Mieville's stuff. Especially really creative worlds, creatures, characters, etc.?
Love really weird but well written books.