ant1532 said:Like Kastro though I would also fucking appreciate it if some of you can point me towards some books i might like lol. I find Chuck Palahniuk sense of humor amazing(love his gritty, very sexual, and frank writing) But he is the only author I know of the dark comedy style. I think it would help if I tell you some of my favorite movies which I would like to read something similar. I love the life aquatic with steve zissou, rushmore,(basically any wes anderson movie), kiss kiss bang bang, cohen brother movies like the big lebowski, fargo, burn after reading, etc. I also wouldn't mind books about college-ish comedy romance like garden state and nick and norahs infinite playlist(i am aware that is actually a book too) and real love depictions like movies such as
500 days of summer. I also read all the harry potters which i absolutely love so yeah lol, i guess you can use that too.
Kastro said:How do you guys get ideas on what to read?
Books seem like the hardest thing to get advice on.. I'm good with movies and music, but books.. I never know where to start
I guess posting in this thread is answering my own question.
hack646 said:Just finished:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/713Z0WA7DZL._SL500_AA240_.gif
I don't exactly know what I read, but at least I can say I read it.
Now that I'm done with that beast, I've decided to go back to the Russians. Since I've already read most of Dostoyevsky's works, I'm moving on to Tolstoy.
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images...ow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA240_SH20_OU01_.jpg
It's a big book, but it should be good. Hopefully I can finish it by the end of the month.
besada said:And then Glen Cook's newly re-collected Dread Empire triology:
If you're interested in Glen Cook, but haven't been able to find the out of print Black Company books, look again -- they've done a series of re-releases, combining multiple books into single TPB volumes.
ant1532 said:[
Like Kastro though I would also fucking appreciate it if some of you can point me towards some books i might like lol. I find Chuck Palahniuk sense of humor amazing(love his gritty, very sexual, and frank writing) But he is the only author I know of the dark comedy style. I think it would help if I tell you some of my favorite movies which I would like to read something similar. I love the life aquatic with steve zissou, rushmore,(basically any wes anderson movie), kiss kiss bang bang, cohen brother movies like the big lebowski, fargo, burn after reading, etc. I also wouldn't mind books about college-ish comedy romance like garden state and nick and norahs infinite playlist(i am aware that is actually a book too) and real love depictions like movies such as
500 days of summer. I also read all the harry potters which i absolutely love so yeah lol, i guess you can use that too.
I really couldn't take the slobbing all over Keates which is really the down fall of those books.KingGondo said:Now reading:
Absolutely fantastic so far. Just finished the Priest's tale, the Bikura journals were mind-blowing. Is Fall of Hyperion worth reading?
ant1532 said:
Snuff by Chuck Palahniuk
The Lie by Chad Kultgen
Like Kastro though I would also fucking appreciate it if some of you can point me towards some books i might like lol. I find Chuck Palahniuk sense of humor amazing(love his gritty, very sexual, and frank writing) But he is the only author I know of the dark comedy style. I think it would help if I tell you some of my favorite movies which I would like to read something similar. I love the life aquatic with steve zissou, rushmore,(basically any wes anderson movie), kiss kiss bang bang, cohen brother movies like the big lebowski, fargo, burn after reading, etc. I also wouldn't mind books about college-ish comedy romance like garden state and nick and norahs infinite playlist(i am aware that is actually a book too) and real love depictions like movies such as
500 days of summer. I also read all the harry potters which i absolutely love so yeah lol, i guess you can use that too.
jon bones said:for you i would recommend checking out Cat's Cradle or Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut
um loooking at Kurt Vonnegut and he seems like his books have serious undertones and i am looking for something more light hearted and entertaining.i also prefer books to take place in a contemporary world...hXc_thugg said:Kurt Vonnegut and Don DeLillo, obviously.
looks good to me! ty ty.Jugendstil said:Maybe try The Rules of Attraction by Brett Easton Ellis. It's the only Ellis novel I've read, but I liked it quite a bit. It's definitely very dark, it takes place at a college, and it's really funny (at least I thought so). Please disregard the stupid movie adaptation and just read the book instead.
hXc_thugg said:Day of the Locust.
poweld said:
ant1532 said:um loooking at Kurt Vonnegut and he seems like his books have serious undertones and i am looking for something more light hearted and entertaining.i also prefer books to take place in a contemporary world...
I read that book once every six months. It's so damn great.Cormac McCarthy's "The Crossing", second book in the Border Trilogy. Nearly halfway, and love it. Some don't like McCarthy's breathless language, but I really do. It certainly fits the raw beauty of his stories.
Then avoid Rules of Attraction. It's funny, I'll give it that. But it's most definitely a Bret Easton Ellis novel.i am looking for something more light hearted and entertaining.i also prefer books to take place in a contemporary world...
ant1532 said:um loooking at Kurt Vonnegut and he seems like his books have serious undertones and i am looking for something more light hearted and entertaining.i also prefer books to take place in a contemporary world...
looks good to me! ty ty.
jon bones said:What Hemingway novel should I start with? Perhaps his most accessible?
Alucard said:McCarthy seems to be striving for the poetic with his prose, but I honestly did not think a lot of his stylistic choices, such as abandoning the use of apostrophes and quotation marks, as well as using nouns as verbs, served a greater purpose. If I am missing something, I would welcome a second opinion.
Perhaps the stark writing style was meant to mirror the stark world of the characters that inhabit the book.
mike23 said:LibraryThing does a pretty good job at recommending books that I'd like based on what I've read.
Alucard said:I just finished this tonight, having devoured it in two days. Admittedly, it was a short read, but the experience was made much richer after some reflection, and reading an analysis or two of it online.
The Road by Cormac McCarthy
The Road is a fatalistic, post-apocalyptic novel that follows the futile journey of a man and his son across a scarred American landscape. While McCarthy never explains the reason for the current sad state of the world, he does not truly need to, as it is merely a backdrop for the true story of love and survival that permeates the narrative. When everything is stripped away and the world turns to anarchy, it is only our personal beliefs and love, even when lacking in genuine truth, that separate us from devolving into beasts.
It must be emphasized that this book is rather bleak, and its comments on the natural state of humanity are not very attractive. However, I think the world McCarthy imagines is likely a realistic depiction of the types of actions that people would take in this type of situation. While dystopias have certainly been done before, the existential angle of The Road gives it a unique place in the genre. The best part of the novel is that while he dabbles with ideas of God, atheism, the stubborn instinct to survive, and the power of hope, it never fully commits to one of these belief systems. It simply says that these are the numerous ways of dealing with this particular situation, and lets the reader decide which ethical ground they're going to stand on.
The Road is a short book. While it technically runs 287 pages, its font size is rather large, and paragraphs are seemingly quadruple spaced. This makes it easy to pick up, and more enjoyable to take apart, as the reader can quickly scan pages they want to read over again. McCarthy seems to be striving for the poetic with his prose, but I honestly did not think a lot of his stylistic choices, such as abandoning the use of apostrophes and quotation marks, as well as using nouns as verbs, served a greater purpose. If I am missing something, I would welcome a second opinion. Perhaps the stark writing style was meant to mirror the stark world of the characters that inhabit the book.
Stylistic points aside, I would fully recommend The Road to literary majors and casual readers alike. For a short novel, it has plenty to explore, and its theme of finding hope in hopelessness, stubborn though it may be, leaves a lasting impression and poses piercing questions about the vanity of our own existence, and the realities and mysteries of human life. Regardless of how I felt about the setting and stylistic choices, the book left me with plenty to ponder about human nature, and its nebulous conclusions ensure that I will be coming back to explore this deceptively simple world in the future. 9/10.
Next up: The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly.
Trax416 said:Debating getting
The first Hemingway book I read was a A Farewell to Arms and I loved it.jon bones said:What Hemingway novel should I start with? Perhaps his most accessible?