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What are you reading? (March 2015)

Nymerio

Member
18138189.jpg
 

Steto96

Neo Member
62% through Freedom by J. Franzen.
It's my first Franzen's Novel (yes, I know, I should have started with The corrections) and I'm finding it rather interesting, nevertheless I'm reading it reaaaaally slowly. Some chapters are a bit boring
yes, Walter, I'm looking at you!
, but overall this is a good book (so far).
 

TheBear

Member
Going on a trip to Thailand and need a few books for my kindle.

Stuff I've enjoyed recently:

Ender Series
Day by Day Armageddon series
Girl with Dragon Tattoo series
The Passage series

Would appreciate any recommendations :)
 

Pastry

Banned
I'm reading Altered Carbon by Richard Morgan and really enjoying it about halfway through. It's a nice take on scifi noir and exactly what I was looking for right now. No idea what to read next, I want to avoid scifi for a couple of books.
 

Piecake

Member
This is of interest to me. Will check out.

Yea, the benefits are truly impressive. I obviously can't personally vouch for it, but a bunch of scientific studies have shown that practicing mindfulness improves one's self-concept, reduces stress, anxiety, and depression, improves executive function, and increases attention and memory. Basically, it trains you to be in the moment and then accept and be non-judgmental of all of your nasty self-involved and self-defeating thoughts that float through your brain while 'meditating' mindfully.

Another good benefit is that all of the exercises revolve around you focusing your attention on a specific thing, like your breathing or the sensations you get while you are in the shower. I'd imagine that it would be a quite intense experience if you focused your increasing attention in the right spots while you are having sex or masturbating.

Obviously this is a thing that the results will correspond to how much effort you put into it, and I am sure that results probably vary from person to person.
 

Nymerio

Member
Started Tower Lord but I don't really remember much of the previous book even though I think I read it just last year. Does anyone know of a good synopsis? I'm usually pretty good about remembering this stuff, but I'm almost completely blank on this.
 
Going on a trip to Thailand and need a few books for my kindle.

Stuff I've enjoyed recently:

Ender Series
Day by Day Armageddon series
Girl with Dragon Tattoo series
The Passage series

Would appreciate any recommendations :)

Brilliance by Marcus Sakey
Under Heaven and River of Stars by Guy Gavriel Kay (it's a fantasy set in a China-like world)
The Golem and the Jinni by Helene Wecker
Old Man's War by John Scalzi
Ahvarra: The Heart of the World by me. :)
 

ngower

Member
FINALLY finished A Storm of Swords. That thing took me something like a year to finish. None of my holds have come through so I'm just gonna try and chip away at Feast of Crows as much as I can before the season starts up.
 

Jarlaxle

Member
Me and my wife were slogging through Johnathan Strange & Mr. Norvell. We both decided to shelve it for now

Make sure to get back to it at some point. Once it picks up, it really picks up. It might take you a month to read the first 300 pages but a day or two to read the other 500.

I absolutely love that book.
 

Althane

Member
Brilliance by Marcus Sakey
Under Heaven and River of Stars by Guy Gavriel Kay (it's a fantasy set in a China-like world)
The Golem and the Jinni by Helene Wecker
Old Man's War by John Scalzi
Ahvarra: The Heart of the World by me. :)


Can agree with everything but Guy Gavriel Kay's book, since I haven't read it.

And if you're going to get Old Man's War, go ahead and get:
The Ghost Brigades
The Last Colony
Zoe's Tale
The Human Division

But you may want to pace them, since Scalzi does have somewhat formulaic writing. Take a breath between each book.
 

Mr.Swag

Banned
Looking for a very specific story

Any book out there deal with a person or group of persons who decide to say no to technology and live without internet etc?
Bonus point if it takes place in an even more technologically advanced future.
 

Althane

Member
Looking for a very specific story

Any book out there deal with a person or group of persons who decide to say no to technology and live without internet etc?
Bonus point if it takes place in an even more technologically advanced future.

Brave New World by Huxley tangentially touches upon that sort of concept. Not sure of anything more direct though.
 
Can agree with everything but Guy Gavriel Kay's book, since I haven't read it.

And if you're going to get Old Man's War, go ahead and get:
The Ghost Brigades
The Last Colony
Zoe's Tale
The Human Division

But you may want to pace them, since Scalzi does have somewhat formulaic writing. Take a breath between each book.

I agree. I haven't read Human Division yet but I have enjoyed all the others in this series. However, YMMV so start with Old Man's War and make a decision from there.
 

bengraven

Member
My book backlog has officially beaten my Steam backlog.

Since I have over 200 unplayed games on Steam that's saying something. Damn you quarter-priced book stores.

Me and my wife were slogging through Johnathan Strange & Mr. Norvell. We both decided to shelve it for now and read:

NIGHT CIRCUS

She's already read it but it's fresh for me. I'm only 1.5 chapters in but it seems promising.

My wife and I read that at the same time as well - I think the only book besides Wool that we did that with. She always finishes before me though, despite my being a much faster reader and her having just become interesting in reading in the last 4-5 years.

We both loved it. In fact, she insisted we pick up a hardcover at our library sale just in case we ever get a chance to meet Erin Morgenstern and can get it autographed.

Next stop:
ONCE AND FUTURE KING

50 pages in, liking it very much. Reckon, I will finish it by the week's end.

One of my favorite novels of all time. I picked it up at a thrift store knowing nothing about it or the author, flipping through I thought it would be a more realistic take on Arthur. One blizzard night when the power went off and I had nothing electric to play with, I started reading it by candelight and quickly, within the first few pages, realized not only was it actually really really funny, but it was also the basis for Disney's Sword in the Stone. Goes so much more beyond that, though.

Wish we could get a trilogy of this book. A kind of comedic drama - maybe like an Edgar Wright version?

Only about 100 pages into The Color of Magic and I can already tell why Christopher Moore is compared to him. I'm loving this.

Interesting, because Christopher Moore has been on my periphery for years now. I love his book titles and covers and they seem like they would be something I can dig, but never had anything to compare it to. If he's even marginally like Pratchett, I will definitely start grabbing his books.

In fact, now I'm kicking myself since I've seen lots of his books for dirt cheap at thrift stores and passed them up.


I need to start reading these as well. I would love some actual space opera for once. I think true space opera is a rarity these days.
 
Interesting, because Christopher Moore has been on my periphery for years now. I love his book titles and covers and they seem like they would be something I can dig, but never had anything to compare it to. If he's even marginally like Pratchett, I will definitely start grabbing his books.

In fact, now I'm kicking myself since I've seen lots of his books for dirt cheap at thrift stores and passed them up.

I was listening to the Terry Pratchett episode of The Incomparable and one of the guests made the comparison which is what made me instantly want to read Terry Pratchett. Moore's A Dirty Job is probably one of my favorite reads of all time and I'd been dying for more writing like him.

Only so far in to the first book, that many people don't recommend starting with for some reason, and I can see where the comparison comes from. The characters and sense of humor when it comes to the interactions of those characters really seems similar to me.

I would definitely recommend Moore though.
 

Akahige

Member
I read The Martian in one sitting, pretty fun adventure book, not as good I I expected but I didn't find many of the characters likeable. I am excited for the movie.
 

Mumei

Member
Heh. I think I did that about three times before I finally powered through the slow opening, and then by the time I got to the end I never wanted it to finish and it was one of my all-time favorites.

I made it through about a paragraph in 2004 before shelving it for the next eleven years, myself.

It's also one of my all-time favorites now.
 
Ok so maybe its just me but did anyone else find A Clockwork Orange to be extremely hard to read? I'm reading it for the first time myself.

I feel like as I'm reading I'm trying to translate at the same time because of the way the main character talks. Took me a while to realize that at one point he says apology but in the book it isn't spelled like that, its spelled something like this 'appie pol ogy'. I'm only on page 6 right now but I am curious if this gets easier to read as I get deeper?
 

Haly

One day I realized that sadness is just another word for not enough coffee.
It was so impenetrable I gave up on it.
 
Ok so maybe its just me but did anyone else find A Clockwork Orange to be extremely hard to read? I'm reading it for the first time myself.

I feel like as I'm reading I'm trying to translate at the same time because of the way the main character talks. Took me a while to realize that at one point he says apology but in the book it isn't spelled like that, its spelled something like this 'appie pol ogy'. I'm only on page 6 right now but I am curious if this gets easier to read as I get deeper?

Yes. For me personally Nadsat just clicked after a while. Pretty much every generation has a youth slang and it was particularly prescient of Burgess to invent his own English/Russian patois.

There's a Nadsat dictionary with notes on the language which may help.
 

survivor

Banned
Ok so maybe its just me but did anyone else find A Clockwork Orange to be extremely hard to read? I'm reading it for the first time myself.

I feel like as I'm reading I'm trying to translate at the same time because of the way the main character talks. Took me a while to realize that at one point he says apology but in the book it isn't spelled like that, its spelled something like this 'appie pol ogy'. I'm only on page 6 right now but I am curious if this gets easier to read as I get deeper?

Yeah for some sentences I had a hard time grasping their meanings, but I powered through it. It probably gets a bit easier later since the same nadsat words get repeated constantly.
 

Narag

Member
Yeah for some sentences I had a hard time grasping their meanings, but I powered through it. It probably gets a bit easier later since the same nadsat words get repeated constantly.

I found being intimately familiar with the film went a long way.
 

bengraven

Member
I think I've posted about it before, but yeah, I've tried to read Strange since it was first released at least four times (?). I've never even met Strange. The furthest I got was
Norrell agreeing to help that big jawed politician by saying his wife who I believe is dead. It was so long ago I remember picturing John Kerry as the politician.
 
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