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What Are You Reading 2013 - Page 65

Forum Index > Media & Entertainment
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Wintex
Profile Blog Joined July 2011
Norway16838 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-05-11 01:05:40
May 11 2013 01:04 GMT
#1281
I just finished Grave Peril by Jim Butcher. The third book was great. Can't wait til I get my hands on number 4.
[image loading]
The Bomber boy
Xialos
Profile Blog Joined August 2011
Canada508 Posts
May 11 2013 01:13 GMT
#1282
On May 03 2013 06:34 likeadiamond wrote:
i red holy bible. \m/
Also i prefer some historical and epic's books like spartak or some books from elinizm period.


I would not recommend the holy bible if you don't like fantasy books >.<

User was warned for this post
TheMooseHeed
Profile Joined July 2010
United Kingdom535 Posts
May 11 2013 01:24 GMT
#1283
So I read Forever War a while back and thought it was a great book. I noticed that there is actually a sequel + Show Spoiler +
about their lives after the events of the war
and I was wondering if anyone had read it?

I kinda wish I had left Enders Game and the Foundation series to my imagination instead of reading the later books (which while good still got gradually worse imo) and I would really like to know what people thought of this one before I consider reading it.
''Swarm hosts are the worst thing in the world, I mean terrorism is pretty bad but swarmhosts are worse'' IdrA on ZvZ
{CC}StealthBlue
Profile Blog Joined January 2003
United States41117 Posts
May 12 2013 01:20 GMT
#1284
[image loading]
"Smokey, this is not 'Nam, this is bowling. There are rules."
Topin
Profile Blog Joined December 2010
Peru10092 Posts
May 12 2013 19:57 GMT
#1285
so im reading 1q84 and then i notice that the book have like 30 pages lost.. wtf? now i cant finish the book... danmn! im looking for a pdf version to download and continue reading but im a little angry right now T_T
i would define my style between a mix of ByuN, Maru and MKP
Surth
Profile Blog Joined May 2011
Germany456 Posts
May 12 2013 20:14 GMT
#1286
1982, Janine by Alasdair Gray. Good read. fucked up.
[image loading]


Never thought I'd read 300 pages of a man masturbating, but there you go.
i believe your actions dishonour Starcraft 2 LotV cybersport!
blubbdavid
Profile Blog Joined February 2010
Switzerland2412 Posts
May 12 2013 20:24 GMT
#1287
Nostromo - by Joseph Conrad

The author's name was familiar so I picked it from the shelf.
And... It's really the history of South America in a nutshell.
What do you desire? Money? Glory? Power? Revenge? Or something that surpasses all other? Whatever you desire - that is here. Tower of God ¦¦Nutella, drink of the Gods
Shiragaku
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
Hong Kong4308 Posts
May 12 2013 21:00 GMT
#1288
Just finished
[image loading]

This is probably the best political book I have read in a long time. It is pretty much an update/opposition towards Guns, Germs, and Steel and led me back to Fukuyama's book, The End of History and convinced me that the most important duty of us is to defend and promote liberal democracy.
p4NDemik
Profile Blog Joined January 2008
United States13896 Posts
May 12 2013 22:32 GMT
#1289
Finished The Count of Monte Cristo, after like 2 months. Enjoyed it but damn, the unabridged version is a serious epic.

On to For Whom the Bell Tolls. 250 pages in and digging it thus far.
Moderator
Sgany
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
United Kingdom790 Posts
May 12 2013 22:38 GMT
#1290
[image loading] Amazing book so far, about an amazing CEO.
NaDa <3, MMA <3, Bisu <3,
wUndertUnge
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
United States1125 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-05-13 14:27:43
May 13 2013 14:20 GMT
#1291
[image loading]

I've read East of Eden and Cannery Row. This book definitely feels like an earlier novel. Where Cannery Row had vignettes that added up to something bigger IMO but still felt episodic in that the events didn't have to relate, this one just feels thinner. I'm enjoying the book and finding it very funny, but I don't feel compelled to finish it. I will though!

[image loading]

Had a conversation with my very Catholic father. I don't understand why the Catholic religion has such exclusivity on God? anyways, I'm a Buddhist. Thich Nat Hanh is a vietnamese Buddhist monk, I believe, and he's writing about interfaith especially in the context of the Vietnam war and the politics surrounding French colonialism. He talks about and finds parallels between the compassion of Christ with Buddhist compassion, mindfullness, the holy trinity, and God.

On May 13 2013 05:14 Surth wrote:
1982, Janine by Alasdair Gray. Good read. fucked up.
[image loading]


Never thought I'd read 300 pages of a man masturbating, but there you go.


What makes it compelling? Have you ever heard of The Fermata by Nicholson Baker? It's all about a guy with the power to stop time, and he fondles women and helps them enact sexual fantasies all unbeknownst to them. It's creepy, perverted, hot, but smart and then kind of romantic. It also has a pretty moral throughline.
Clan: QQGC - wundertunge#1850
TL+ Member
Pika Chu
Profile Blog Joined August 2005
Romania2510 Posts
May 13 2013 14:59 GMT
#1292
Sannikov's Land. It's great for those who love SF and adventures. [image loading]

And Fowles' Magus which is an absolutely mind fucking book. The story changes so many times, screwing with your emotions and giving it a totally imprevisible path.
[image loading]
They first ignore you. After they laugh at you. Next they will fight you. In the end you will win.
wUndertUnge
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
United States1125 Posts
May 13 2013 15:02 GMT
#1293
On May 13 2013 23:59 Pika Chu wrote:
Sannikov's Land. It's great for those who love SF and adventures. [image loading]

And Fowles' Magus which is an absolutely mind fucking book. The story changes so many times, screwing with your emotions and giving it a totally imprevisible path.
[image loading]


The Magus is on my to-read list after a recommendation from a friend and now you. Can't wait.
Clan: QQGC - wundertunge#1850
TL+ Member
Cambium
Profile Blog Joined June 2004
United States16368 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-05-13 15:15:23
May 13 2013 15:14 GMT
#1294
On April 16 2013 03:11 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

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



Just Read

A Hologram for the King
[image loading]

Pretty average book about life struggles of an old American at the end of his career. Easy to read, didn't get much of out it.

Reading

Dune
[image loading]

Just started, not much has happened yet except brief mentions of the new planet, the spices, and the sandworms

Becoming a Supple Leopard
[image loading]
When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it.
packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
May 13 2013 20:22 GMT
#1295
On May 14 2013 00:14 Cambium wrote:
Show nested quote +
On April 16 2013 03:11 Cambium wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +

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



Just Read

A Hologram for the King
[image loading]

Pretty average book about life struggles of an old American at the end of his career. Easy to read, didn't get much of out it.

Reading

Dune
[image loading]

Just started, not much has happened yet except brief mentions of the new planet, the spices, and the sandworms

Becoming a Supple Leopard
[image loading]


omg, Dune :D

Seriously I love that book so much. It makes for a really great sci-fi epic tale. Enjoy
dreaming of a sunny day
TOCHMY
Profile Blog Joined June 2010
Sweden1692 Posts
May 14 2013 08:24 GMT
#1296
+ Show Spoiler +
On April 12 2013 20:43 TOCHMY wrote:
[image loading][image loading][image loading][image loading][image loading]

All of these arrived today!!! I'm so psyched. The question now is which one do I read first?
All of the above books have been mentioned at one point or another in this (or 2012) thread.
Thus, I want to thank everyone in this thread. Without you guys I wouldn't have discovered some of the amazing books I've read!



Recently finished:

[image loading]

God damnit was Way Of Kings fupping epic or what? I'm jumping up and down in anticipation for the next volume! And this will be, at least, a 10 novel series!

[image loading]

This was an interesting read. I kind of knew most of the stuff brought up in this book already, but it was nice to get some more detailed info. It's pretty sad that the people get to suffer because of the dear leaders stubbornness.

Currently reading:

[image loading]

I'm taking it slow with this one, a few pages per night. So many weird medical terms in english that I have to look up like every few sentences. It's a great way to learn more about psychadelics and DMT in general. (other than trying yourself).

Just started:

[image loading]

I read the first chapter last night before bed. I was sooooo tempted to start reading the second chapter, the intro drew me in. I think I will discover that it's true what they say about this book: A real pageturner.

Up Next:

[image loading]
[image loading]
Yoona <3 ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Look! It's Totoro! ☉.☉☂
dravernor
Profile Blog Joined May 2013
Netherlands6189 Posts
May 14 2013 09:25 GMT
#1297
Dune is awesome, such intense writing style, the movie didn't do it justice but was a great way to explain things that were a little harder to comprehend.

I'm sort of in between books at the moment - I stopped reading A Song of Ice and Fire (by George RR Martin) on Book 5 because there just got to be far too many characters in some sections that I struggled to keep up with. I went onto another book straight after that - 'Catcher in the Rye' by JD Salinger and 'Of Mice and Men' by John Steinbeck and have now run out of books to read D: I know I should join a library or something but I have found the libraries in my areas to be very lacking.

I don't think I need to post any info about these books as they are classics and I'm fairly sure most people have read them, even if only in literature class. I would like to say though that I found the writing style of 'The Catcher in the Rye' to be aggravating to follow - so much repetitiveness and minimal use of vocabulary - and I do understand that this was purposefully for character effect, but I still found it annoying. Otherwise, I really enjoyed it.

'Of Mice and Men' was also really good. Short and effective, and quite emotional. Very well written, easy to imagine being there and feeling those emotions. Lenny is a great character in portrayal and the twist at end was surprising and good.

I'd like to read The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo (and series) next. Sorry for no pictures but I am at work right now >_<
<3
nunez
Profile Blog Joined February 2011
Norway4003 Posts
May 14 2013 13:02 GMT
#1298
On May 14 2013 18:25 DragonLord wrote:
Dune is awesome, such intense writing style, the movie didn't do it justice but was a great way to explain things that were a little harder to comprehend.

sting is pretty fly for a white guy though.

reading mo yan, broad shoulders, wide hips (or the other way around). i think it's very playful book with a lot of boobage. only about half way through... picked it up because of comparisons to marquez and i am not very disappointed. i find myself having to trace back to get who's who right, should have taken notes.
conspired against by a confederacy of dunces.
Juice!
Profile Joined January 2011
Belgium295 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-05-14 16:46:36
May 14 2013 16:46 GMT
#1299
+ Show Spoiler +
[image loading]


Just bought this one, I have high hopes

edit: in spoiler because of size
Second place is just a fancy term for loser
elt
Profile Joined July 2010
Thailand1092 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-05-14 18:09:17
May 14 2013 18:08 GMT
#1300
Just finished:
+ Show Spoiler +
[image loading]

Some thoughts: There's certainly a feeling of loss, especially with my hazy memory of Under Heaven which I went back to re-read after and found myself enjoying it a lot more than my previous read. But different themes, different scopes and a different time.

Currently reading:
[image loading]
Seidensticker translation. An interesting read so far. The reference and echoing of Yang Guefei (Wen Jian in Under Heaven) certainly pulled me in.
(Under Construction)
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