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What Are You Reading 2013 - Page 55

Forum Index > Media & Entertainment
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packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
April 04 2013 00:33 GMT
#1081
+ Show Spoiler +

On March 31 2013 08:51 packrat386 wrote:
Warning:
This spoiler contains everything I've read this year.
+ Show Spoiler +



2013 Reading Log
Just Finished:
[image loading]

I thought the poetry was really beautiful. Apparently tolkein discarded the works to write LotR (since the general public wanted more action) and I find that really tragic.

I'm in the middle of:
[image loading]


which is a really amazing book. As the author walks you through, you essentially start from batteries, wires, and electromagnets, and you end up building an entire computer. Its really crazy and I can't wait to finish it.

Just finished Code

And I must say its one of the best books I've ever read. I'm now going to go back to reading
[image loading]

which I was about halfway through when I inexplicably stopped it. Its a very interesting book about how the practice of wargaming has developed from its inception in the 1950s to the time the book was written (I believe '85). Its a bit dated, but still a pretty insightful look at how predictions and foreign policy go hand in hand.

Finished War Games
After finishing War Games I decided to pick up a flashy spy novel
[image loading]

I really like Dan Silva books, and I actually finished this one in a single day (oops). If anyone is looking for a quick read and is into the suspense/spy novel type of books I can recommend this quite highly.

finished The Confessor
After that I picked up
[image loading]

Which I've heard is quite a good book. I would have gotten another spy novel but I need to wait until just before my flight on friday so I'll have something to read on the plane.

EDIT: I've realized that the picture I chose was actually for the CD version, but it was the nicest picture I could find :/

Finshed When You Are Engulfed In Flames
It feels weird to post again so soon, but I've actually just finished When You Are Engulfed In Flames. I hope to be able to read some more stuff by Sedaris soon, as these short pieces were particularly good. I really enjoyed the descriptions he gave of everyday experiences and feelings and the way that he jumped from topic.

I've decided to go from there and revisit an author that I liked a lot in high school, and thus I'm reading
[image loading]

which I think I should like quite a bit.

Finished Hemmingway Short Stories
Finished Hemingway on the plane. I find that his style of writing for the short stories is really excellent. He doesn't have to write a lot but he can pack a lot of meaning into a 4 page story.

I picked this up in case I needed something else to read on the plane
[image loading]


I really like these kind of cheap thrills paperback novels so I'll be glad to have another one to read.

Finished Prince of Fire
I finished prince of fire relatively quickly. I thought the overall plot for the series took an interesting turn with this book, but we'll see how it goes. Once again I highly recommend silva.

For a nice read on vacation I decided to pick up
[image loading]

because I've always liked the idea of the hardboiled detective genre and I figured I should start from the beginning.

I also just feel like mentioning, I really love this thread. So many people sharing good books.

Finished Maltese Falcon
Posting with an anddroid is hard so i'll keep it short. Finished the maltese falcon and it was great, I'm looking forward to exploring the genre.

Travelling again so I picked up the next silva book on my list

[image loading]

Should be good!

Finished The Messenger
Dan Silva as usual did not disappoint, although it seems like hes kind of running himself into a corner with the series. It will be interesting for me at least to see how he resolves some of the tensions he's built up in the storyline.

Since I liked the first freakonomics I decided to pick up the second book

[image loading]

which seems like it should be good.

Finished Superfreakonomics

Welp, I finished up Superfreakonomics. Excellent book, but it really wasn't terribly long. I found the discussion on the cheap and easy methods of preventing the adverse effects of global warming extremely interesting.

Given that I liked the Hemingway short stories I read before I decided to check this out of our uni library
[image loading]

I found it kind of funny that for some reason there are about 7 missing copies of this in the library records. Hopefully it will be good.

Finished For Whom the Bell Tolls
I finished For Whom the Bell Tolls and I think its one of the best books I've ever read. I thought that the descriptions and mindsets of war that Hemingway used were really amazing and I would highly recommend it (although it was quite long).

Decided to pick something up because it looked good in the school library.
[image loading]

Should be good.

Finished Much Too Promised Land
I finished The Much Too Promised Land and I think it was a really excellent analysis of US diplomacy with regards to the Middle East Peace Process. I would recommend it to anyone who was interested in the US role in the matter on a sort of personal education level, as it was detailed, but not so much that it seemed overly academic or inaccessible. I think that while it probably falls short of a rigorous academic analysis of the issues at hand its a great set of memoirs, combined with a real message and discussion of what actually went down.

In what I think will be a short read I'm going to pick up
[image loading]

because I know someone who is going to be in the play, and I've known about it for quite a while but never looked into it.

After this, perhaps something about programming... any suggestions?

edit: image failed -_-

Finished Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead
I thought it was a really interesting take on some existentialist ideas, as well as a pretty funny and thought provoking play. I would definitely recommend it, and at ~130 pages its short enough to read in an afternoon (if that).

Picked up in my library
[image loading]

Because it was just sitting there on the new arrivals shelf for today. University of Michigan has a huge library system, and the amount of books that they add to it each day is approximately equal to the amount of books that I own. I got pretty interested in middle east politics from the last book that I read so I'm eager to check out another view.

edit: fixed my archiving.



Finished: Power and Policy in Syria
I found the authors take on the issues surrounding current syrian politics to be really interesting. I t was sort of fresh outside view of the history given that the author is a syrian expatriate (who cannot actually return to t syria for fear of arrest there). I think that his take on the current regime and the past was very balanced especially for someone that has a history with them. While he was critical of the regimes approach to controlling domestic politics and limiting civil engagement in syria he seemd to be somewhat supportive of a foreign policy that ensured that syria could protect some of its interests without becoming the next iraq. I would definitely recommend the book to anyone that wanted to learn about the details of inner politics in syria

I decided to pick up
[image loading]

given how much I liked the last 2 Hemingway books that I read I think I'm in for a treat.



Finished: A Farewell to Arms
This was an excellent book. I found that Hemingway managed to create a war novel that included both the tension and drama that one would expect from the type of cheap paperback that one reads in the airport. He also included all of the heartfelt emotion that I expect from a writer of his class. I highly recommend this book to just about anyone, really good.

This was also a surprisingly fast read so I just decided to pick up something that looked good on the shelf
[image loading]


Should be interesting.

Also @ sam!zdat: Is arednts writing pretty easy to understand? That book looks pretty interesting, but I only know of arendt as a heidegger scholar, and trying to read heideggarian stuff usually makes my head hurt...
dreaming of a sunny day
SecondManRex
Profile Joined December 2011
England24 Posts
April 04 2013 15:26 GMT
#1082
Took something of a break from reading, but recently spent a few days going through some of my back log.

Finished reading:

[image loading]

Just, ugh. Very much went over my head.

[image loading]

More of a re-reading than anything. Always good to go over Hume's worries about induction/causation, though I find him a rather irritating character.

Working on:

[image loading]

Picked up on a whim, about a quarter of the way into it but not sure what to really make of it so far.

[image loading]

Not got very far into it, but I'm told it came recommended.
LiamTheZerg
Profile Joined March 2011
United States523 Posts
April 04 2013 15:30 GMT
#1083
Recently read the Lies of Locke Lamora (great), it's sequel (also great, but nowhere near Locke Lamora), and a few others which I forget ;\ Also finished Malazan!
Jjakji | Sage | Seal | Shuttle | DongRaeGu | oGsTheSTC | Bomber | Curious | Oz
grs
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
Germany2339 Posts
April 04 2013 15:34 GMT
#1084
Finished:
[image loading]
Really, really worth the long read. Shows a lot of philosophical insight.

Currently reading:
[image loading]
Literature at its best imho. The stories are fantastic and even if not, the art of writing from Mitchell alone would make it worth reading.
Blisse
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
Canada3710 Posts
April 04 2013 17:04 GMT
#1085
Not sure if self-help applies or is taboo, but

The 7 habits of highly effective people


would be my pick for, "if you could keep only one book with you".



A Farewell to Arms felt kinda predictable, but I'm not sure what I was supposed to learn from the book.
There is no one like you in the universe.
aZealot
Profile Blog Joined May 2011
New Zealand5447 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-04-04 23:53:32
April 04 2013 23:51 GMT
#1086
On April 04 2013 02:20 sam!zdat wrote:
[image loading]


That's a great book, Sam. I read it as part of my grad studies. Coincidentally enough, I've been thinking of picking it up again.

Enjoy!
KT best KT ~ 2014
aZealot
Profile Blog Joined May 2011
New Zealand5447 Posts
April 04 2013 23:53 GMT
#1087
On April 05 2013 02:04 Blisse wrote:
Not sure if self-help applies or is taboo, but

Show nested quote +
The 7 habits of highly effective people


would be my pick for, "if you could keep only one book with you".



I'd go with a Wodehouse myself. Which one though? That's the question.
KT best KT ~ 2014
thot
Profile Blog Joined March 2012
4 Posts
April 05 2013 00:26 GMT
#1088
On April 04 2013 09:33 packrat386 wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On March 31 2013 08:51 packrat386 wrote:
Warning:
This spoiler contains everything I've read this year.
+ Show Spoiler +



2013 Reading Log
Just Finished:
[image loading]

I thought the poetry was really beautiful. Apparently tolkein discarded the works to write LotR (since the general public wanted more action) and I find that really tragic.

I'm in the middle of:
[image loading]


which is a really amazing book. As the author walks you through, you essentially start from batteries, wires, and electromagnets, and you end up building an entire computer. Its really crazy and I can't wait to finish it.

Just finished Code

And I must say its one of the best books I've ever read. I'm now going to go back to reading
[image loading]

which I was about halfway through when I inexplicably stopped it. Its a very interesting book about how the practice of wargaming has developed from its inception in the 1950s to the time the book was written (I believe '85). Its a bit dated, but still a pretty insightful look at how predictions and foreign policy go hand in hand.

Finished War Games
After finishing War Games I decided to pick up a flashy spy novel
[image loading]

I really like Dan Silva books, and I actually finished this one in a single day (oops). If anyone is looking for a quick read and is into the suspense/spy novel type of books I can recommend this quite highly.

finished The Confessor
After that I picked up
[image loading]

Which I've heard is quite a good book. I would have gotten another spy novel but I need to wait until just before my flight on friday so I'll have something to read on the plane.

EDIT: I've realized that the picture I chose was actually for the CD version, but it was the nicest picture I could find :/

Finshed When You Are Engulfed In Flames
It feels weird to post again so soon, but I've actually just finished When You Are Engulfed In Flames. I hope to be able to read some more stuff by Sedaris soon, as these short pieces were particularly good. I really enjoyed the descriptions he gave of everyday experiences and feelings and the way that he jumped from topic.

I've decided to go from there and revisit an author that I liked a lot in high school, and thus I'm reading
[image loading]

which I think I should like quite a bit.

Finished Hemmingway Short Stories
Finished Hemingway on the plane. I find that his style of writing for the short stories is really excellent. He doesn't have to write a lot but he can pack a lot of meaning into a 4 page story.

I picked this up in case I needed something else to read on the plane
[image loading]


I really like these kind of cheap thrills paperback novels so I'll be glad to have another one to read.

Finished Prince of Fire
I finished prince of fire relatively quickly. I thought the overall plot for the series took an interesting turn with this book, but we'll see how it goes. Once again I highly recommend silva.

For a nice read on vacation I decided to pick up
[image loading]

because I've always liked the idea of the hardboiled detective genre and I figured I should start from the beginning.

I also just feel like mentioning, I really love this thread. So many people sharing good books.

Finished Maltese Falcon
Posting with an anddroid is hard so i'll keep it short. Finished the maltese falcon and it was great, I'm looking forward to exploring the genre.

Travelling again so I picked up the next silva book on my list

[image loading]

Should be good!

Finished The Messenger
Dan Silva as usual did not disappoint, although it seems like hes kind of running himself into a corner with the series. It will be interesting for me at least to see how he resolves some of the tensions he's built up in the storyline.

Since I liked the first freakonomics I decided to pick up the second book

[image loading]

which seems like it should be good.

Finished Superfreakonomics

Welp, I finished up Superfreakonomics. Excellent book, but it really wasn't terribly long. I found the discussion on the cheap and easy methods of preventing the adverse effects of global warming extremely interesting.

Given that I liked the Hemingway short stories I read before I decided to check this out of our uni library
[image loading]

I found it kind of funny that for some reason there are about 7 missing copies of this in the library records. Hopefully it will be good.

Finished For Whom the Bell Tolls
I finished For Whom the Bell Tolls and I think its one of the best books I've ever read. I thought that the descriptions and mindsets of war that Hemingway used were really amazing and I would highly recommend it (although it was quite long).

Decided to pick something up because it looked good in the school library.
[image loading]

Should be good.

Finished Much Too Promised Land
I finished The Much Too Promised Land and I think it was a really excellent analysis of US diplomacy with regards to the Middle East Peace Process. I would recommend it to anyone who was interested in the US role in the matter on a sort of personal education level, as it was detailed, but not so much that it seemed overly academic or inaccessible. I think that while it probably falls short of a rigorous academic analysis of the issues at hand its a great set of memoirs, combined with a real message and discussion of what actually went down.

In what I think will be a short read I'm going to pick up
[image loading]

because I know someone who is going to be in the play, and I've known about it for quite a while but never looked into it.

After this, perhaps something about programming... any suggestions?

edit: image failed -_-

Finished Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead
I thought it was a really interesting take on some existentialist ideas, as well as a pretty funny and thought provoking play. I would definitely recommend it, and at ~130 pages its short enough to read in an afternoon (if that).

Picked up in my library
[image loading]

Because it was just sitting there on the new arrivals shelf for today. University of Michigan has a huge library system, and the amount of books that they add to it each day is approximately equal to the amount of books that I own. I got pretty interested in middle east politics from the last book that I read so I'm eager to check out another view.

edit: fixed my archiving.



Finished: Power and Policy in Syria
I found the authors take on the issues surrounding current syrian politics to be really interesting. I t was sort of fresh outside view of the history given that the author is a syrian expatriate (who cannot actually return to t syria for fear of arrest there). I think that his take on the current regime and the past was very balanced especially for someone that has a history with them. While he was critical of the regimes approach to controlling domestic politics and limiting civil engagement in syria he seemd to be somewhat supportive of a foreign policy that ensured that syria could protect some of its interests without becoming the next iraq. I would definitely recommend the book to anyone that wanted to learn about the details of inner politics in syria

I decided to pick up
[image loading]

given how much I liked the last 2 Hemingway books that I read I think I'm in for a treat.



Finished: A Farewell to Arms
This was an excellent book. I found that Hemingway managed to create a war novel that included both the tension and drama that one would expect from the type of cheap paperback that one reads in the airport. He also included all of the heartfelt emotion that I expect from a writer of his class. I highly recommend this book to just about anyone, really good.

This was also a surprisingly fast read so I just decided to pick up something that looked good on the shelf
[image loading]


Should be interesting.

Also @ sam!zdat: Is arednts writing pretty easy to understand? That book looks pretty interesting, but I only know of arendt as a heidegger scholar, and trying to read heideggarian stuff usually makes my head hurt...


I loved For Whom the Bell Tolls. I liked it a lot more than A Farewell to Arms, although I have to admit that it's been a while since I've read the latter.
hasuprotoss
Profile Blog Joined March 2004
United States4647 Posts
April 05 2013 00:35 GMT
#1089
On April 05 2013 00:30 LiamTheZerg wrote:
Recently read the Lies of Locke Lamora (great), it's sequel (also great, but nowhere near Locke Lamora), and a few others which I forget ;\ Also finished Malazan!


October 8th (US) or October 10th (UK) is the release of Republic of Theives! (Book 3 by Scott Lynch). Apparently he's had some problems with depression/ a divorce, and is claiming that this book will be his most "mature" too date. I can't wait for it, but I still need to read Red Seas Under Red Skies. Hope it's good!
http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/index.php?viewdays=0&show_part=5 <--- Articles Section on TL
cLAN.Anax
Profile Blog Joined July 2012
United States2847 Posts
April 05 2013 00:52 GMT
#1090
Believe I've posted here once already, but I definitely need to update what I'm reading.

I rediscovered Frederic Bastiat.

[image loading]

Current essay of his I'm reading through, "That Which Is Seen and That Which Is Not Seen." Though this was after a brief re-perusal of...

[image loading]

..."The Law." I read this back in my freshman year of college after my former supervisor gave me a copy. I had thought it was interesting then, but only after 3-4 years of formulating my political and economic opinions did I realize how integral his theory was to my foundational beliefs, how clearly he conveyed his message so that almost all could understand him, and how applicable his warnings were even 150+ years beyond his time. I realize I'm strongly biased, but I have to wonder why this man and his theory are not discussed or referenced more in economic topics....

Can't find a cover for it, but the one I'll be reading after these is his "Government."

All are short reads; "The Law" is the longest at ~60 pages. Technically essays and not books. But definitely stuff I'm reading. If anyone does want to discuss him, please PM me. (I'm a little slow in responding, but I do keep my promises )
┬─┬___(ツ)_/¯ 彡┻━┻ I am the 4%. "I cant believe i saw ANAL backwards before i saw the word LAN." - Capped
aZealot
Profile Blog Joined May 2011
New Zealand5447 Posts
April 05 2013 01:23 GMT
#1091
Thanks, I'll have a read of The Law. As to why it is not referenced more, probably because it is already emedded in different strains of political - economic thought? Particulary orthodox right wing and libertarian. Also, if you liked that, I'd recommend Hayek's seminal "The uses of knowledge in society". Another short and illuminating read.

(Not to say that I'm a right wing libertarian, by the way. But I am skeptical of what might crudely be called statism.)
KT best KT ~ 2014
RaginCanadians
Profile Joined January 2013
1 Post
April 05 2013 01:33 GMT
#1092
[image loading]
It's time for my annual read of this monstrosity. Each time through, the lines converge a little clearer, I laugh a little harder, and I respect the genius of DFW more.

[image loading]
Science! Woooo!!

[image loading]
And then my personal summer project...
Protoss: MC Terran: MVP Zerg: DRG
cLAN.Anax
Profile Blog Joined July 2012
United States2847 Posts
April 05 2013 01:46 GMT
#1093
On April 05 2013 10:23 aZealot wrote:
Thanks, I'll have a read of The Law. As to why it is not referenced more, probably because it is already emedded in different strains of political - economic thought? Particulary orthodox right wing and libertarian. Also, if you liked that, I'd recommend Hayek's seminal "The uses of knowledge in society". Another short and illuminating read.

(Not to say that I'm a right wing libertarian, by the way. But I am skeptical of what might crudely be called statism.)


Hayek strongly praised Bastiat. My dad's wanting me to read Hayek's "The Road to Serfdom." (I'm getting him to read "The Law" so I guess I have to repay the favor )
┬─┬___(ツ)_/¯ 彡┻━┻ I am the 4%. "I cant believe i saw ANAL backwards before i saw the word LAN." - Capped
TheToaster
Profile Joined August 2011
United States280 Posts
April 05 2013 01:54 GMT
#1094
Just a few notes I have to share about this thread:

Why do some of you post programming books? I mean, sure that's considered something that you may be reading. But isn't the whole point of this thread to consider what's generally enjoyable to read? Sorry if that sounded out of place, I just don't think there are many of us that read up on programming for pure enjoyment. Even if you read for pure intellectual purpose, there isn't really anything conceptually interesting about programming itself.

Can you guys give more detailed overviews of the books you link? I'm seeing all of this paramount literature by Hemingway, Socrates, Karl Marx, etc. But no actual opinion or analysis that gives me any reason to read them myself. I mine as well just Google "classic literature" and see what I find. Even one of the comments above really confuses me. This guy reads a book called "Infinite Jest" over and over again every single year, but doesn't give one damn reason why. Like what the fuck.
Oh, get a job? Just get a job? Why don't I strap on my job helmet, squeeze down into a job cannon, and fire off into job land, where jobs grow on jobbies!
sam!zdat
Profile Blog Joined October 2010
United States5559 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-04-05 03:41:49
April 05 2013 03:40 GMT
#1095
packrat arendt is totally accessible. Luckily ponderous turgidity isn't sexually transmissable

I read pt 3 in undergrad but I'm going back through the whole book now. I also highly recommend 'the human condition', it's a beautiful book. Hannah arendt is just wonderful
shikata ga nai
aZealot
Profile Blog Joined May 2011
New Zealand5447 Posts
April 05 2013 03:50 GMT
#1096
On April 05 2013 10:46 cLAN.Anax wrote:
Show nested quote +
On April 05 2013 10:23 aZealot wrote:
Thanks, I'll have a read of The Law. As to why it is not referenced more, probably because it is already emedded in different strains of political - economic thought? Particulary orthodox right wing and libertarian. Also, if you liked that, I'd recommend Hayek's seminal "The uses of knowledge in society". Another short and illuminating read.

(Not to say that I'm a right wing libertarian, by the way. But I am skeptical of what might crudely be called statism.)


Hayek strongly praised Bastiat. My dad's wanting me to read Hayek's "The Road to Serfdom." (I'm getting him to read "The Law" so I guess I have to repay the favor )


I think The Road to Serfdom terribly over-rated. There is little logical or historical basis for believing that mixed market models necessarily end up in totalitarian states. In Hayek's defence he was writing at a time when the state, at least officially speaking, played a larger role in the economy (Fordism etc) but that has not been the case since the turn to neo-liberalism in late 70s. The only reason I can imagine the reception it received in the USA, and continues to receive - in amplified form, even - is the cultural milieu of America. Even on its own terms the book has less relevance now than before.

Of course, crony capitalism is another matter entirely.
KT best KT ~ 2014
babylon
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
8765 Posts
April 05 2013 04:34 GMT
#1097
On April 05 2013 10:54 TheToaster wrote:
Just a few notes I have to share about this thread:

Why do some of you post programming books? I mean, sure that's considered something that you may be reading. But isn't the whole point of this thread to consider what's generally enjoyable to read? Sorry if that sounded out of place, I just don't think there are many of us that read up on programming for pure enjoyment. Even if you read for pure intellectual purpose, there isn't really anything conceptually interesting about programming itself.

Can you guys give more detailed overviews of the books you link? I'm seeing all of this paramount literature by Hemingway, Socrates, Karl Marx, etc. But no actual opinion or analysis that gives me any reason to read them myself. I mine as well just Google "classic literature" and see what I find. Even one of the comments above really confuses me. This guy reads a book called "Infinite Jest" over and over again every single year, but doesn't give one damn reason why. Like what the fuck.

This place is infested with insecure English majors and philosophy geeks.

Sorry, couldn't resist the jab.

Anyways, I don't get the Hemingway, Socrates, Karl Marx, etc. recs myself. The only Hemingway book I've liked was Old Man and the Sea, while I hated For Whom the Bell Tolls for its shallow characterizations. I also am not a fan of Cormac McCarthy (who was discussed for a while a page or two back); I find his style incredibly forced. But again, personal opinions.

I'm looking into reading Collingwood's Idea of History since my view of history is a bit flat, and since I am going to be working with history in the future, I need to nuance my view of it. I've heard it's a standard in philosophy of history classes. Also, it's reputedly readable, even for people who typically don't want to touch philosophy with a ten-foot pole (e.g. myself).

Guy Gavriel Kay's a dream at his best. I think his new book (River of Stars) will be a disappointment still, mostly because I don't like where his writing's been heading the past few years, but I'll still read it.
Polygamy
Profile Joined January 2010
Austria1114 Posts
April 05 2013 04:41 GMT
#1098
The Postmortal FFS read this amazing book!
packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
April 05 2013 04:49 GMT
#1099
On April 05 2013 10:54 TheToaster wrote:
Just a few notes I have to share about this thread:

Why do some of you post programming books? I mean, sure that's considered something that you may be reading. But isn't the whole point of this thread to consider what's generally enjoyable to read? Sorry if that sounded out of place, I just don't think there are many of us that read up on programming for pure enjoyment. Even if you read for pure intellectual purpose, there isn't really anything conceptually interesting about programming itself.

Can you guys give more detailed overviews of the books you link? I'm seeing all of this paramount literature by Hemingway, Socrates, Karl Marx, etc. But no actual opinion or analysis that gives me any reason to read them myself. I mine as well just Google "classic literature" and see what I find. Even one of the comments above really confuses me. This guy reads a book called "Infinite Jest" over and over again every single year, but doesn't give one damn reason why. Like what the fuck.


I would say that it seems like this thread isn't really meant to be like a serious literature discussion. Most people who post regularly (including myself) tend to use it most of the time as a way to sort of log the books that they read. I usually try to say a bit of why I liked the book in why I read it, but I'm really not planning on writing an essay about it each time. If I see a book that looks interesting I might ask the poster about it, and its just nice to be able to identify with people who have read and enjoyed some of the same books as myself.

As for the content of the books on here, I myself (and I would guess that many others) are consciously going after the most recognizable classics like Hemingway because they're pretty highly recommended by a lot of people. I don't really read too much into what other people read because this is just a thread about what you happen to be reading.

Its one of my favorite threads on here because I enjoy sharing the books that I've read. I think you'll probably enjoy it yourself if you don't try to take it so seriously
dreaming of a sunny day
babylon
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
8765 Posts
April 05 2013 04:52 GMT
#1100
I suppose one of the ways we could improve the content in this thread would be to either discuss our reasons for reading or recommending or not recommending a book. Or we could try to post reviews to the book(s) whenever we list them, so we give some content to whoever's browsing through this for recommendations.
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