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What Are You Reading 2013 - Page 59

Forum Index > Media & Entertainment
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farvacola
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States18838 Posts
April 13 2013 19:46 GMT
#1161
On April 14 2013 04:24 corumjhaelen wrote:
Show nested quote +
On April 14 2013 03:41 farvacola wrote:
On April 14 2013 03:16 dmnum wrote:
On April 14 2013 02:16 corumjhaelen wrote:
Anything but Proust will be a disappointment Farva :p

I second this. Been meaning to start In Search of Lost Time for a while, but I always end up picking a smaller book(When I start it my OCD will kick in and I'll need to read the whole thing).

Well, my study focus was High Modernism and 1900-1950 European lit in school, so I would love to do a series of books that amount to a survey of emergent Modernist lit during the turn of the century. In Search of Lost Time fits in very nicely with that, though I think we'd need to warm up as a group first. It'd probably be best to start off with a few less chunky works, maybe a bit of Joseph Conrad, a dash of Andrei Bely, and a few excerpts from Pound's Cantos to start us off. In any case, we'll have to see what the general consensus is before narrowing things down too much.

Yeah, starting with such a long book doesn't seem like the greatest idea^^
Anyway can't wait to see what you're cooking up, I'm pretty sure I'll be really interested !

Haha, you better be interested, because if we end up doing something as heavy hitting as Du côté de chez Swann, I am definitely going to need your help
"when the Dead Kennedys found out they had skinhead fans, they literally wrote a song titled 'Nazi Punks Fuck Off'"
Bentus
Profile Joined May 2012
Germany86 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-04-13 19:50:23
April 13 2013 19:50 GMT
#1162
hey guys,

I was wondering if you could help me since many people here read alot. A few years ago, I ve been to a summer school in the staates. One day we read a science fiction short story about a world, where people with talents and skills were getting handicapped by the government. I remember for example, there was some ballet dancers in the tv and they had to wear some iron stuff to slow them down. Do not remember anything about the author though, if anyone has an idea, I would really appreciate if you PM me.

Thanks!
babylon
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
8765 Posts
April 13 2013 19:51 GMT
#1163
Do you mind us spamming you with some recommendations? A bit selfish, but there are some modern authors whom I'd like to see discussed in a more critical light. (I am, however, unsure as to what amounts to "literary fiction" these days.)
farvacola
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States18838 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-04-13 19:53:24
April 13 2013 19:51 GMT
#1164
On April 14 2013 04:50 Bentus wrote:
hey guys,

I was wondering if you could help me since many people here read alot. A few years ago, I ve been to a summer school in the staates. One day we read a science fiction short story about a world, where people with talents and skills were getting handicapped by the government. I remember for example, there was some ballet dancers in the tv and they had to wear some iron stuff to slow them down. Do not remember anything about the author though, if anyone has an idea, I would really appreciate if you PM me.

Thanks!

You are looking for the short story "Harrison Bergeron" by the esteemed Kurt Vonnegut Jr. You have good taste sir

Edit: Babylon, spam me all you like. The more ideas the better. And when I say "literary fiction", I mean it in the most general sense possible.
"when the Dead Kennedys found out they had skinhead fans, they literally wrote a song titled 'Nazi Punks Fuck Off'"
corumjhaelen
Profile Blog Joined October 2009
France6884 Posts
April 13 2013 19:51 GMT
#1165
On April 14 2013 04:46 farvacola wrote:
Show nested quote +
On April 14 2013 04:24 corumjhaelen wrote:
On April 14 2013 03:41 farvacola wrote:
On April 14 2013 03:16 dmnum wrote:
On April 14 2013 02:16 corumjhaelen wrote:
Anything but Proust will be a disappointment Farva :p

I second this. Been meaning to start In Search of Lost Time for a while, but I always end up picking a smaller book(When I start it my OCD will kick in and I'll need to read the whole thing).

Well, my study focus was High Modernism and 1900-1950 European lit in school, so I would love to do a series of books that amount to a survey of emergent Modernist lit during the turn of the century. In Search of Lost Time fits in very nicely with that, though I think we'd need to warm up as a group first. It'd probably be best to start off with a few less chunky works, maybe a bit of Joseph Conrad, a dash of Andrei Bely, and a few excerpts from Pound's Cantos to start us off. In any case, we'll have to see what the general consensus is before narrowing things down too much.

Yeah, starting with such a long book doesn't seem like the greatest idea^^
Anyway can't wait to see what you're cooking up, I'm pretty sure I'll be really interested !

Haha, you better be interested, because if we end up doing something as heavy hitting as Du côté de chez Swann, I am definitely going to need your help

Well the main problem is that I don't really know anything about litterary criticism, but you're here for that I guess^^ On the other hand, I think I know the book pretty well and I've read up quite a few things on Proust, and listened to a few radio shows about it (thank god for Du côté de chez Swann's 100th birthday !), so I think I could help indeed
‎numquam se plus agere quam nihil cum ageret, numquam minus solum esse quam cum solus esset
MotorDouglas
Profile Joined March 2011
Brazil66 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-04-13 19:55:58
April 13 2013 19:55 GMT
#1166
I finished reading 50 shades of grey and may have got brain cancer in the process, so i'm posting here as a warning
i can't come up with something witty to put here (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
hp.Shell
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
United States2527 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-04-13 20:46:49
April 13 2013 20:46 GMT
#1167
Just finished Plato's Apology, and Charmides. Both were quite enjoyable. I'll read more Socrates/Plato in the future.
Please PM me with any songs you like that you think I haven't heard before!
packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
April 13 2013 22:14 GMT
#1168
+ Show Spoiler +

On April 13 2013 03:43 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...



Finished: Thermopylae
I found the book to be a pretty interesting take on a story that has become very well known recently. I like that the author didn't gloss over the faults of the Greeks, but still managed to cast them as fighting in defense of freedom and rule of law vs the (albeit benign) tyranny of the Persian Empire. Its a good look into the event itself and the surrounding bits of history that made it important.

After that I decided to pick up
[image loading]

I think it ought to be pretty interesting, since I've heard a lot about the event (used to live in CO) but never really gotten a good grasp of what really happened.

also @farvacola, I think the book club is a cool idea as long as there is enough time provided to actually acquire and read the book.




Finished: Columbine
I thought that this book had a really interesting take on the event and I like the way that it followed the relevant parties all the way through the event as well as their later rehabilitation. It seemed very much like Capote's In Cold Blood but with a more modern event as the background. I particularly liked the way that the book attempted to dispel some of the myths of the school shooter profile (bullying drove them to do it, they targeted specific groups, etc). I also was pleased that the author tried his best not to place the blame too much on any party (including the killers themselves) and that he tried to highlight those victims and survivors who pushed for forgiveness. I would highly recommend the book to just about anyone, just be ready to tear up a bit at times.

Given my new found love of Hemingway I decided to pick up
[image loading]

I've heard that its has some really excellent descriptive passages, and given how short it looks it shouldn't take too long to read.
dreaming of a sunny day
zmsFlood
Profile Joined April 2013
Finland169 Posts
April 14 2013 02:30 GMT
#1169
TL noob reporting for duty! Reading a really good, meticulously researched biography on Jimi Hendrix (one of my biggest idols of all time) called A Room Full Of Mirrors. I sincerely recommend reading this book to anyone interested in guitar playing/rock'n'roll/Hendrix! A really good read http://covers.booktopia.com.au/big/9781444713909/room-full-of-mirrors.jpg (here's a link to a pic of the cover since new users can't use the image option)
twitter.com/laurifalck | I don't want to get you drunk, but, ah, that's a very fine Chardonnay you're not drinking. | TLO!
jxx
Profile Joined April 2010
Brazil307 Posts
April 14 2013 03:02 GMT
#1170
On April 14 2013 04:55 MotorDouglas wrote:
I finished reading 50 shades of grey and may have got brain cancer in the process, so i'm posting here as a warning


I know that feeling, I stopped reading at about 40~50 pages in or else my brain would start to rot.


Right now I'm reading Dan Ariely's Predictably Irrational:

[image loading]

It's about his studies in the area of Behavioural Economics and how the human behaviour is more irrational than we believe (or percieve) it to be. Simply amazing and mind blowing to discover all the techniques that are used to manipulate human behaviour.

There is also a course about this on Coursera being taught by Dan if anyone is interested. It's called "A beginner's guide to irrational behaviour". The course contents are the same as in this book so you can just do one or the other, but I recommend the book as it's a little more detailed (but the course is awesome too and has exercises!).
KNICK
Profile Blog Joined April 2008
Germany248 Posts
April 15 2013 13:51 GMT
#1171
[image loading]

Just about to start on this one. Apparently Burroughs wrote huge chunks of it while drugged out of his mind, delirious and paranoid. From what I gather it's not so much a novel as a collection of disjointed ramblings, granting insight into the mind of a junkie. Should be a good read.


[image loading]

I'm also reading this monster of a book that serves as a detailed timeline of the Holocaust, one of the few books I own that are written in German (Die Holocaust Chronik = The Holocaust Chronicle). It's 700-something pages and much bulkier than your average paperback. Basically an enormous collection of historical photos with extensive captions, virtually every important date and event, as well as a ton of interesting little tidbits and anecdotes.
I close one eye, and I see half. I close both, and I see everything.
KillerSOS
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
United States4207 Posts
April 15 2013 17:05 GMT
#1172
On April 13 2013 02:23 farvacola wrote:
So, in honor of Sam!zdat's passing as a poster, I was wondering how many folks would be interested in a book club. I'd go ahead and organize a thread and a selection of books I feel comfortable leading discussion on, all of which will probably either be high literature or critical theory (definitely not set in stone), and then, after y'all choose a book, we would meet once every week or two on irc and maybe skype to discuss. Just throwing out a poll to see if anyone would be interested

Poll: Would you be interested in a Sam!zdat memorial book club

Yes (23)
 
88%

No (3)
 
12%

26 total votes

Your vote: Would you be interested in a Sam!zdat memorial book club

(Vote): Yes
(Vote): No



I'm interested as well. Felt like such a loner reading all the time since I graduated from school.
packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
April 15 2013 17:28 GMT
#1173
+ Show Spoiler +

On April 14 2013 07:14 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...

Finished: Thermopylae
I found the book to be a pretty interesting take on a story that has become very well known recently. I like that the author didn't gloss over the faults of the Greeks, but still managed to cast them as fighting in defense of freedom and rule of law vs the (albeit benign) tyranny of the Persian Empire. Its a good look into the event itself and the surrounding bits of history that made it important.

After that I decided to pick up
[image loading]

I think it ought to be pretty interesting, since I've heard a lot about the event (used to live in CO) but never really gotten a good grasp of what really happened.

also @farvacola, I think the book club is a cool idea as long as there is enough time provided to actually acquire and read the book.




Finished: Columbine
I thought that this book had a really interesting take on the event and I like the way that it followed the relevant parties all the way through the event as well as their later rehabilitation. It seemed very much like Capote's In Cold Blood but with a more modern event as the background. I particularly liked the way that the book attempted to dispel some of the myths of the school shooter profile (bullying drove them to do it, they targeted specific groups, etc). I also was pleased that the author tried his best not to place the blame too much on any party (including the killers themselves) and that he tried to highlight those victims and survivors who pushed for forgiveness. I would highly recommend the book to just about anyone, just be ready to tear up a bit at times.

Given my new found love of Hemingway I decided to pick up
[image loading]

I've heard that its has some really excellent descriptive passages, and given how short it looks it shouldn't take too long to read.



Finished: Old Man and the Sea
This book was a pretty quick read as I had expected, but even then Hemingway delivers. I found his descriptions of the fish and the sea itself to be really beautiful. I also thought the way that the old man has a continuing monologue between himself and his body parts made for a really good effect. Entirely through the old mans eyes we see the fish and the sharks as separate, fully formed characters. I would highly recommend this for a good short read. Also this is not the first time after reading Hemingway that I feel a strong desire to go fishing.

Given that it looks like several other people are reading it I decided to pick
[image loading]

Off of my shelf. A friend gave it to me a while ago but I've never read it. Should be good!
dreaming of a sunny day
Brainsurgeon
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
Sweden359 Posts
April 15 2013 17:57 GMT
#1174
On April 16 2013 02:28 packrat386 wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On April 14 2013 07:14 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...

Finished: Thermopylae
I found the book to be a pretty interesting take on a story that has become very well known recently. I like that the author didn't gloss over the faults of the Greeks, but still managed to cast them as fighting in defense of freedom and rule of law vs the (albeit benign) tyranny of the Persian Empire. Its a good look into the event itself and the surrounding bits of history that made it important.

After that I decided to pick up
[image loading]

I think it ought to be pretty interesting, since I've heard a lot about the event (used to live in CO) but never really gotten a good grasp of what really happened.

also @farvacola, I think the book club is a cool idea as long as there is enough time provided to actually acquire and read the book.




Finished: Columbine
I thought that this book had a really interesting take on the event and I like the way that it followed the relevant parties all the way through the event as well as their later rehabilitation. It seemed very much like Capote's In Cold Blood but with a more modern event as the background. I particularly liked the way that the book attempted to dispel some of the myths of the school shooter profile (bullying drove them to do it, they targeted specific groups, etc). I also was pleased that the author tried his best not to place the blame too much on any party (including the killers themselves) and that he tried to highlight those victims and survivors who pushed for forgiveness. I would highly recommend the book to just about anyone, just be ready to tear up a bit at times.

Given my new found love of Hemingway I decided to pick up
[image loading]

I've heard that its has some really excellent descriptive passages, and given how short it looks it shouldn't take too long to read.



Finished: Old Man and the Sea
This book was a pretty quick read as I had expected, but even then Hemingway delivers. I found his descriptions of the fish and the sea itself to be really beautiful. I also thought the way that the old man has a continuing monologue between himself and his body parts made for a really good effect. Entirely through the old mans eyes we see the fish and the sharks as separate, fully formed characters. I would highly recommend this for a good short read. Also this is not the first time after reading Hemingway that I feel a strong desire to go fishing.

Given that it looks like several other people are reading it I decided to pick
[image loading]

Off of my shelf. A friend gave it to me a while ago but I've never read it. Should be good!

You have nice friends.
Say no to drugs. Say yes to hugs!
Cambium
Profile Blog Joined June 2004
United States16368 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-04-15 18:13:57
April 15 2013 18:11 GMT
#1175
On March 04 2013 00:51 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On February 25 2013 12:59 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On February 17 2013 16:21 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On February 04 2013 00:27 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On January 25 2013 01:12 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

On January 15 2013 20:00 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

Gave up on:
Destiny of the Republic
[image loading]

Another exceedingly dry book, I really don't know why I even started reading it.

Reamde
[image loading]

I read over 60% of this book, and finally decided to give it up as well. I've really enjoyed Stephenson's previous works like Snow Crash, and to a lesser extent, The Diamond Ages. This book is excruciatingly long at over 1000 pages, and there were just passages after passages about irrelevant events that neither add anything to character development nor drive the plot forward. As a native speaker of Mandarin Chinese, I found the random Chinese phrases and names (loads of those) in the book as gimmicky nuisances, as they served no purposes other than to appeal to the 'nerdy' crowd who'd perchance find random Chinese phrases fascinating and chic.

The story itself was decent, but the book was just too long and uninteresting for the most part.

Reading:
Mao's Great Famine
[image loading]

So far so good, I've always had a keen interest in North Korean and Chinese histories.

Next
The Fault in our Stars
[image loading]



Just finished:
Mao's Great Famine
[image loading]

This was initially really interesting, but then it read too much like a history/fact book than a novel. The author only had a handful of sources and stories, and he kept on re-using these same examples to proof different points under different section of the book. I did learn a lot about modern Chinese history, of a period I've only heard stories of. While this book only offered one opinion, it did broaden my perspective, and made me realize how lucky I -- nay, China as a whole -- was that China did not turn out to be like North Korea.

While I was reading this book, I read a ton of wikipedia articles on the same topic, which interestingly frequently cited this book.

Strongly recommended for those who wish to learn more about 'the Great Leap Forward'.

Reading:
Hyperion
[image loading]

The Mao book was too dark, need something that pull me away from reality for a while... I might finish the entire series if the this one proves to be captivating enough.

Next
The Fault in our Stars
[image loading]



Just Read:
Hyperion
[image loading]

Okay, that was a great read. There were a lot of times when I couldn't put the book down until I had finished the whole chapter (and those are long, since there are only six of them).

I enjoyed the different writing styles, but, at times, the style would seem really contrived, and obviously not something the author is used to write.

Some of the stories were a lot better than the others, but overall, it was a very pleasant read.

Reading
[image loading]
Okay, the first book was great, except it leaves you with the biggest cliffhanger ever...

Next
The Fault in our Stars
[image loading]



Just Read
The Fall of Hyperion
[image loading]
This was a slight let down from the first book, albeit still a very pleasant read. I read the last 1/3 of the book in one sitting because I was dying to find out what happened to the characters and the fate of their world.

The Hyperion series was not an easy read. The write style was often times overly descriptive, but ultimately, the overarching plots were very complex, and often times, thought-provoking. What I didn't like about the second book in particular, was that, Simmons would, in certain chapters, state his ideals and philosophies point-blank through his characters, rather than leaving them for my interpretation through the stories themselves.

In any case, these were great books with lots of mind-fucks and inconsistencies, well worth a read.

Reading
Nothing to Envy
[image loading]

Yet another book on North Korea for me, probably the last one if it doesn't tell me something I don't already know.

Next
Shantaram
[image loading]

Behind the Beautiful Forevers
[image loading]

The Fault in our Stars
[image loading]
I'm really going to hold this book off for a bit, because there are such great expectations, I don't know how to approach it.



Just Read
Nothing to Envy
[image loading]

This was a very pleasant read. Contrasting with previous books I’ve read on NK, this one was relatively more upbeat. Instead of focusing on the infamous gulags and prison camps, this book focused on normal citizens trying to live normal lives. This book is great because it didn’t talk about the calamities that westerns typically read about; it didn’t thrive on pompous description of famines and prison brutalities; instead, the focus was on how average citizens of North Korea silently coped with difficulties that are forever increasing and continually perceived as the norm.

The story follows five or so main characters of different backgrounds and social statuses, all connected in some way, and how they all eventually came to the realization that they had been living in lies, and ‘escaped’ (don’t really like this word, it’s closer to decided to leave illegally) North Korea via various different methods. There were stories on romance, on movies and gifts, on university enrolments and job assignments, on riding trains, on entrepreneurship, on technologies, and on just about any and every routine thing you can think of.

I like this book primarily because it makes a strong point that, even in North Korea, most people are still normal, not everyone is being tortured and abused in gulags. People still live, or at the very least, try to live normal lives. Aside from the awful regime, NKers are just normal people like everyone else.

Reading
The Round House
[image loading]

I'm about thirty pages in, and it's quite a page turner.

First Man of Rome
[image loading]

I read about ten pages of this, and I was so confused... I think I'll give this another try at some later point.

Next
Shantaram
[image loading]

Behind the Beautiful Forevers
[image loading]

The Fault in our Stars
[image loading]
I'm really going to hold this book off for a bit, because there are such great expectations, I don't know how to approach it.


Just Read
Escape from Camp 14
[image loading]

Read this in two sittings over the weekend, while taking a break from the two below. This book was rather 'meh' compared to the other NK book I read recently (see above). This booked focused on one character and how he escaped from his prison camp. The only reason I read this book was because the talk he gave at Google a few years back, and he was mentioned in various other books I've read in the past.

I knew most of the 'exciting' part of the story already, so it was mostly just a rehash of the events for me. The book was only two hundred pages, and the story was shorter still, but it was nonetheless filled with an abundance of random dramatic descriptions of hardships that authors tend to favour when talking about NK, in attempt to strike an emotional chord via the protagonist's plight.

It's a quick and decent read, but typical with these books, you know the ending before you even begin. It'll unveil some details about prison life about NK, but there are more informative books out there.

Gave up on...
First Man of Rome
[image loading]

Reading
The Round House
[image loading]

Still pretty good.

Next
Shantaram
[image loading]

Behind the Beautiful Forevers
[image loading]

The Fault in our Stars
[image loading]



Gave up on...

The Round House
[image loading]

Pretty boring book that was dragged out for way too long. I got to close to 70% of it and really couldn't stand it any more. Might be enjoyable to those with a deep interest in Aboriginal lives in America.

Just Read

Behind the Beautiful Forevers
[image loading]

I didn't know what to expect from this nonfiction after hearing so much about it. The story was sort of all over the place with a few main characters and a slew of not-so-important characters, and my inability to remember and distinguish Indian names did not help the cause either.

In the end, I think the author wanted to convey the corruption and hardships endured by everyone in India, with the slum dwellers suffering the most, obviously.

Quite an eye opener, but I feel the story could be told better, and the whole time I was thinking, "how could she not help the people in her book?"

Reading

A Hologram for the King
[image loading]

A really easy read, and I'm really enjoying it.

Next

The Windup Girl
[image loading]

Yay, an easy teen book
When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it.
packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
April 15 2013 22:14 GMT
#1176
On April 16 2013 02:57 Brainsurgeon wrote:
Show nested quote +
On April 16 2013 02:28 packrat386 wrote:


Finished: Old Man and the Sea
This book was a pretty quick read as I had expected, but even then Hemingway delivers. I found his descriptions of the fish and the sea itself to be really beautiful. I also thought the way that the old man has a continuing monologue between himself and his body parts made for a really good effect. Entirely through the old mans eyes we see the fish and the sharks as separate, fully formed characters. I would highly recommend this for a good short read. Also this is not the first time after reading Hemingway that I feel a strong desire to go fishing.

Given that it looks like several other people are reading it I decided to pick
[image loading]

Off of my shelf. A friend gave it to me a while ago but I've never read it. Should be good!

You have nice friends.


He got the book for a school project a while ago in which we were supposed to read a book and then write about it (it was like 3 years ago so I forget what exactly we wrote). He also may or may not have intended for me only to borrow it for a short period... oops. Its nice to see his notes though, I'm away at uni and it feels like he's here reading it with me.
dreaming of a sunny day
Syn Harvest
Profile Joined July 2012
United States191 Posts
April 16 2013 00:24 GMT
#1177
Lolita is so disturbing. It is a fantastic book though. I just finished up Kafka on the Shore by Murakami and it was an absolute delight such a great book. I loved Murakami's style so much I went out and picked up Norwedian Wood and am about to start it here in a second. Its a short one in comparison to Kafka so I picked up The Master and Magartia as well because I have heard nothing but good things about it.
Open your heart and embrace the darkness
Syn Harvest
Profile Joined July 2012
United States191 Posts
April 18 2013 13:29 GMT
#1178
Norwegian Wood was awesome such a great book I thoroughly enjoyed it even though it was not fantastical in almost any sense. I just started The Master and Margarita the first chapter was very interesting
Open your heart and embrace the darkness
maru~
Profile Joined February 2013
2345 Posts
April 18 2013 13:33 GMT
#1179
On April 18 2013 22:29 Syn Harvest wrote:
though it was not fantastical in almost any sense

Almost?
Syn Harvest
Profile Joined July 2012
United States191 Posts
April 18 2013 16:21 GMT
#1180
On April 18 2013 22:33 maru~ wrote:
Show nested quote +
On April 18 2013 22:29 Syn Harvest wrote:
though it was not fantastical in almost any sense

Almost?


I guess it depends on your definition of fantastical Watanabe had moments when dreaming about Naoko especially after she died. Though you are right it was virtually non existant
Open your heart and embrace the darkness
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