allbrancooke
Neo Member

Continuing with volume 2. Very fond memories with this series. Read it on night shifts, in the woods of a park I used to work at. Big mistake; if you enjoy cosmic horror in 17th century jargon, it's a good read.
Reading Nate Silver's The Signal and the Noise and learning more about baseball than I ever wanted to.![]()
After I watched Arrival I decided to read some Ted Chiang short stories...
Story of Your Life
While the basic character beats of the story are pretty similar to the film, the tone and message of the short story are completely different. I'm kinda happy I didn't read the story before watching the film, because I would probably have liked it a lot less. It's interesting to see the difference in approach though. In some ways the themes of the story run completely counter to the themes in the film. Where Villeneuve saw fate and mutual exchange, Chiang sees inevitability and the irrelevance of motive. I think the story is far more elegant, but the movie is definitely more.... tense I guess? Lol.
I've been making my way through the Lightbringer Saga. Should've done this way sooner, book 3 was amazing and I'm now almost halfway through the fourth book.
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Continuing with volume 2. Very fond memories with this series. Read it on night shifts, in the woods of a park I used to work at. Big mistake; if you enjoy cosmic horror in 17th century jargon, it's a good read.
Mostly, but lots of smaller details are naturally omitted. It would need multiple seasons to really do it justice.Anyone watch The Stand miniseries? Reading the book and I can't help but imagine how perfect the story, structure, and characters would be for a TV series. I think it'd be huge, and then I remembered the miniseries which never gained huge notoriety. Is it faithful to the book?
Damn. I was not prepared for that brutal turn in The Literomancer story from The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories.
Been reading more Chiang to build cred with Haly and Dresden.
Yeah this series is great (vast improvement from night angel) but I think someone here said the 4th book lacks resolution and advised waiting for the release of the 5th book to read them together, so I'm being patient. I'm interested to know what you think.
Red Rising Trilogy. I'm about 75% through Golden Son (book 2). Best series I've read in a long while.
Thinking of trying The Luminaries, anyone here read it?
For some reason, I thought this week was a good time to start The Handmaid's Tale.
I couldn't have stopped after the third book even if I'd wanted to. I'm 60% through it anyway, I don't mind waiting though. I've started so many yet to be finished series already, one more doesn't matter.
In terms of voice, I think the author pulled off a small miracle. But it's too long, and overrated (considering it won the Booker). I think there is at least one other Gaffer with the same opinion...
I read it a while ago and found it kind of exhausting, but that may have been a result of my starting to burn out on reading capital L Literature around that time. I've been meaning to take another crack at it eventually.Thinking of trying The Luminaries, anyone here read it?
In terms of voice, I think the author pulled off a small miracle. But it's too long, and overrated (considering it won the Booker). I think there is at least one other Gaffer with the same opinion...
Finished The Human Stain. Felt like it took forever, which is a good thing in this case. Something that I didn't mention in the link, Roth has an ability to fully realize a scene and a conversation. Five minutes in you feel like you've been reading for 20 because of how much of it you're absorbing.
I felt like all the ingredients were there. Novel setting, interesting set up with the mystery, good prose in that anachronistic style. It is too long, but apart from that I don't know why I didn't like it more. Not that I dislike it.
I'm about half way through
Has anyone else read this? It has such a strange and ominous atmosphere. Really enjoying what I've read so far, should finish it up tonight.
This sounds like a novel I'll enjoy. I'll add it to the queue.Call Me by Your Name by André Aciman
Yeah, have to admit I was drawn to the title after seeing the articles on Sony purchasing the distribution rights to the already finished movie adaptation.
Heard about the infamous "peach" scene and found it utterly ridiculous outside the context, but even that couldn't put me off from enjoying the novel. The last chapter was just... phew. Perfect description of nostalgia, longing... Getting old physically, but feeling like you're still in that place 20 years ago like nothing has changed, while at the same time knowing everything's different.
Grabbed it a couple week ago and I intend to read it sometime this year. Good to know the stories have a strange atmosphere since that's the vibe I got from it at first.I'm about half way through
Has anyone else read this? It has such a strange and ominous atmosphere. Really enjoying what I've read so far, should finish it up tonight.
The Man in the High Castle. The only really popular Dick novel I never finished.
Girlfriend got me a book called "Look Who's Back" about Hitler waking up, alive in 2011 Berlin.
I guess I'll read that.
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about halfway through, this is becoming a slog. the section i've been in for the past couple hundred pages feels very dark-YA-adventure type thing, not feeling it at all. i will press on.
Can anyone give me a recommendation? I'm feeling sort of dried up lately and I want something good to read.
Something weird and dark. Not like a normal guy in a weird situation kind of thing, just a weird book overall. I don't really need explanations, just mystery and strangeness.
Can anyone give me a recommendation? I'm feeling sort of dried up lately and I want something good to read.
Something weird and dark. Not like a normal guy in a weird situation kind of thing, just a weird book overall. I don't really need explanations, just mystery and strangeness.
Hey! If you haven't read it yet then "House of Leaves" is EXACTLY what you're asking for with the above.
If you've read that, then "Annihilation" by Jeff Vandermeer, first in a trilogy and they're all brilliant/mysterious/strange/dark/unnerving.
The Wind-up Bird Chronicle by Murakami.
ROOM by Emma Donoghue more for the "weird and dark" aspect.
Edit: House of Leaves really IS your best bet. It's exactly what you want
This from The Guardian's review has stuck with me, too:
"Jerusalem contains a great many inventive and instructive cosmologies. Let me offer my humbler own. Most cultures describe an aboriginal chaos, and into this plenitude intervenes a figure call it God, Demiurge, Artificer, Urizen who gives it form, distinction, coherence, elegance and even meaning. An equally good synonym might be Editor."
Can anyone give me a recommendation? I'm feeling sort of dried up lately and I want something good to read.
Something weird and dark. Not like a normal guy in a weird situation kind of thing, just a weird book overall. I don't really need explanations, just mystery and strangeness.
After I watched Arrival I decided to read some Ted Chiang short stories...
Story of Your Life
While the basic character beats of the story are pretty similar to the film, the tone and message of the short story are completely different. I'm kinda happy I didn't read the story before watching the film, because I would probably have liked it a lot less. It's interesting to see the difference in approach though. In some ways the themes of the story run completely counter to the themes in the film. Where Villeneuve saw fate and mutual exchange, Chiang sees inevitability and the irrelevance of motive. I think the story is far more elegant, but the movie is definitely more.... tense I guess? Lol!
I read the story first, and I think it reduced my enjoyment of the film a lot. Also the bolded is pretty much what I've been telling anyone who'll listen, (you put it much better, I'll need to remember it lol) the film's approach to time is opposite to that of the story and much weaker imo. The film could've done something really clever with the narrative, and the presentation of the language, and it didn't.