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What Are You Reading 2014 - Page 51

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packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
August 05 2014 15:42 GMT
#1001
Book Log
+ Show Spoiler +

And my first book for this year, Love and Math:
[image loading]

This was a birthday gift from my parents and I’m halfway in. It’s partly a biography of a young mathematician overcoming discrimination and finding his passion in soviet Russia. The other part is a sort of an explanation as to why he enjoys math so much. I find the biographical element really interesting, but so far the math has not been terribly engaging. I understand that he’s trying to avoid the kind of nitty gritty detail that makes people hate math in school, but it often leaves me feeling like it hasn’t really been explained. We’ll see how the rest goes.

Happy New Year Folks!

Finished: Love and Math
This book could have been 2 books, one of which I would gladly read, and one of which I would gladly leave on the shelf. The far more interesting part of this book was the biography of the author, who beat the odds and anti-semitism of his home country (soviet russia) to become a mathemetician. His story of working on mathematical discoveries as a side job and sneaking into the best university to read papers and attend lectures, was compelling and interesting.

On the other had his presentation of mathematics was largely boring. I get what feels like a real sense of the passion that he has for math, but I find that his descriptions are too general for me to feel like they've been really explained. Part of my distaste may also stem from the fact that I don't find discussion of these sorts of concepts that interesting to begin with, so it would take a lot for the author to win me over.

I would recommend the book to someone who really enjoys abstract math, but otherwise just get a good biography instead.

Next I'm going to read The Stranger
[image loading]

Since a lot of people on here seem to like it (I'm looking at you corumjhaelen). Should be good!


Finished: The Stranger
Excellent book. I had read a little bit of existentialism before this, so I wasn't unprepared for the content. That said the presentation was great. I really loved the descriptions of the protagonist just experiencing life in the moment. I don't think I need to give a detailed review of this book since half of the people here seem to have read it but, 5/5 would binge read again.


I ditched sixty stories because it didn't look very good in the library (sorry sam). Instead I picked up This Side of Paradise
[image loading]

I've heard from some that it is actually better than gatsby. Should be good.


Finished: This Side of Paradise
Quite a good book. My major criticism is that the plot doesn't move very well, but otherwise the writing is excellent. The portrait of a lost young man hits close to home.

decided to pick up the screenplay, The Seventh Seal
[image loading]

I've always wanted to see the movie, but never have. My uncle gave me the book. Should be good!


Finished: The Seventh Seal
Pretty short, but also pretty good. Really left me wanting to see the movie. I also enjoyed the mildly existential overtones. Not a whole lot to say about this other than that the imagery was amazing and the story itself was the good kind of heavy.

On the topic of existential overtones, I picked up
[image loading]

except in its The Fall because I'm reading the English version (even I'm not that pompous). Should be good!

Finished: The Fall
Another excellent book. I'm genuinely sorry that I didn't start reading Camus' work earlier after having read this. I found the narrative style really cool (always being talked to about the past, makes it seem like an oral history). I also enjoyed the wholehearted endorsement of brothels in this book, all of my friends enjoyed hearing about the feeling of satisfaction that comes from lying drunk between 2 sleeping prostitutes. Great book.

I picked up Across the River and Into the Trees
[image loading]

because I'm on a quest to read everything that hemingway ever wrote. Should be good!

Finished: Across the River and Into the Trees
This book was quite good. The standard stiff drinks, beautiful women, and maimed soldiers that I've come to expect from Hemingway. I think this book was interesting because of the extent to which his warriors were removed from their war. It reminded me a lot of some of the Nick Adams stories in that the colonel finds that he can never really escape his profession. A good read if you want a more hipstery selection of Hemingway's work.

Speaking of hipstery, I've picked for my next book The Torrents of Spring.
[image loading]

Its Hemingway's first piece of published fiction, and that last of Hemingway's non-posthumous novels that I haven't read. Should be good.

Forgot to update, but a few days ago I Finished: The Torrents of Spring
This book was sort of weird. To me it seemed that Hemingway was poking fun at some of the tropes of "lost generation" writing. His characters make numerous references to Paris although they have been there only briefly and many have a massive admiration for continental culture that they don't actually understand. They also tend to heavily overvalue "authentic living" (one his characters prasies pump making factories for about a page and a half), and Hemingway includes numerous asides about his current position in the world of professional writing.

It was enjoyable, but a bit strange since it was written before a lot of the works that it seems to mock, and many of the tropes that it pokes fun at are employed in his later works.

Anyway, for something new and interesting, I picked up a 110 year old copy of The Count of Montecristo.
[image loading]

Should be good.

Finished: The Count of Monte Cristo (Vol 1)
Holy shit, there are 2 volumes O_o

That said, this book as been really fun, I like the adventure feeling and the verbal smack-downs from the count. Its kind of interesting as well to see what the attitudes were toward things like medicine and race at the time. The second volume is supposed to be rife with vegeance, so I can't wait to pick that up, but first an interlude.

I picked up Moonraker
[image loading]

Its one of the Bond books that I haven't yet read since it wasn't in the anthology that I had. Can't wait to get my spy novel fix!

Finished: Moonraker
The book was pretty good. I was super busy this last week so it took me a while to read, but I really did enjoy it. I thought it was kind of interesting in this book to see how little the Bond of the book is like Bond in the movies + Show Spoiler +
I've written about this before, but there is very little shooting and fighting. Mostly Bond plays cards, snoops around, and hits on any woman in the vicinity. I don't think he even fires his gun in this moive
. That said, it was quite nice.

Picked up Count of Monte Cristo: Part 2
Should be good.

Finished: The Count of Monte Cristo
Finally. Exams and projects really killed my free time these last few weeks. This book was pretty awesome. I really liked all of the focus on honor and the intricacies of parisian society. I also kind of enjoyed the way that Dantes was like a 19th century batman. Really fun read, I highly recommend it to anyone with a lot of time.

Picked up Snow Falling on Cedars
[image loading]

My dad really liked this book and I need something to read at baseball games. Should be good!

Finished: Snow Falling on Cedars
This book was really good. It had all the classic elements of a book about war and the toll it takes on people, plus the detective/crime novel thing going on. It was a really fun read, and definitely a page turner.

Since I'm on books my dad liked, I picked up Pillars of the Earth
[image loading]

which I think should be quite nice.

A brief note on the topic of lit, its true that this thread can get a bit over the top sometimes, but I think most people are reading these books because they genuinely like them, and not to fulfill some sort of quota. As for showing off, the point of the thread is to let other people know what you're reading, so there will always kind of be that element here.

edit: Always the formatting

Finished: Pillars of the Earth
I really enjoyed reading this book. Definitely a page turner with all kinds of political conflicts and such, but it also seemed very realistic. I particularly like the way the author handled the passage of time, and didn't feel the need to comment on every singly year of the characters lives (the book was long enough without it). I also particularly enjoy the idea of historical fiction in that the characters interact with real events at the time, but don't go so far as to influence/cause these things to happen.

Travel Bonus: Animal Farm
[image loading]

Picked this up from a friend and read it on the plane. It was pretty mediocre in my opinion. The general message of "Totalitarianism is bad" was obvious and bluntly presented. Don't really get the hype about this book.

Picked up: Cien Anos de Soledad
[image loading]

I loved it in english, now I'm attempting it in the original spanish. Wish me luck.

Still Reading Cien Anos de Soledad, but when it gets a bit heavy I have to have something else to turn to

Finished: The Face of Battle
[image loading]

This book was a really interesting look at the way that military history is written, as well as an investigation of several battles. I really liked the way that the author tried to use the narratives of particular soldiers to see the battle from a particular point of view. It was interesting to set aside the rest of a large battle like Waterloo, and think for a minute about only those things that one officer or soldier could have seen. I also found the discussion of evolving trends of battle to be quite interesting.

Finished: When We Were Orphans
[image loading]

This book was sort of an interesting twist on the classic detective novel. I found it interesting that the author chose to write in the style of journal entries, as it made the book seem as though it was much less of a contemporary work than it is (It was written in the 21st century, but it reads almost like Frankenstein). Despite the strange style, it was quite the page turner. I highly recommend it.

I picked up another book by Ishiguro, Nocturnes
[image loading]

As well as Bram Stoker's Dracula
[image loading]

To hold me over on my vacation. Should be good!

Finished: Dracula
I really loved this book. I thought that the author did an incredibly good job of giving me a sense of just how evil everything is, especially in the first part of the book when Jonathan Harker is in Castle Dracula. I also really liked that the plot moved rather quickly, since some of the other older books that I read sometimes get a bit drawn out. Even though I know how it ends, I was on the edge of my seating reading the last 40 pages as they chase the coffin to the castle. Really good book. Read it with the lights on.

While we were visiting some family friends for a day I began reading Love in the Time of Cholera
[image loading]

I enjoyed One Hundred Years of Solitude, so I thought I'd pick up another book of his. Halfway in, it doesn't disappoint.

Even though I still have Nocturnes and Cien Anos de Soledad back home, I couldn't resist the temptation of our local library, and I picked up Lost Tales
[image loading]

and a spy novel, Ludlum's Matarese Circle
[image loading]

The next few days should be a lot of fun.


Finished: Love in the Time of Cholera
This book was quite good. I found it interesting to read a story about the practical side of love and marriage as well as growing older. I'm not quite sure who the "good guy" is, or even if there is one, but I found that the characters seemed very real, in contrast to the average love story where everyone is an archetype. The only part of the book that I didn't like is a bit of a spoiler, so I'll put it in spoiler tags for people who've read it (or people who haven't read it and don't mind revealing a minor plot point)
+ Show Spoiler +
What the fuck is up with Florentino Ariza fucking his 14 year old niece. I get that he's supposed to be kind of promiscuous, but he seems like a pretty level headed guy for most of the book. I was kind of thrown off by this, since it was like getting 20 pages of Lolita right in the middle of my book. I wish Marquez had left it out, not because the content is that disturbing, but that it just seems out of place, unless there's something I'm missing


Overall, very good book though.

I decided to pick up Ludlums Matarese Circle next, and as a spy novel, it doesn't disappoint (I'm 350 pages in already ).
dreaming of a sunny day
bookwyrm
Profile Joined March 2014
United States722 Posts
August 05 2014 18:13 GMT
#1002
14's not as young as you think
si hortum in bibliotheca habes, deerit nihil
IgnE
Profile Joined November 2010
United States7681 Posts
August 05 2014 18:57 GMT
#1003
On August 05 2014 06:35 bookwyrm wrote:
I'm thinking about it. It's about the collapse of the Kryptonium Standard, bureaucratic machinations at the Intergalactic Reserve Bank, and space pirates smuggling bullion through wormholes to make a killing on arbitrage :D


And a populist leader who won't let the Imperial Senate crucify person-kind on a cross of kryptonium.
The unrealistic sound of these propositions is indicative, not of their utopian character, but of the strength of the forces which prevent their realization.
dmnum
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
Brazil6910 Posts
Last Edited: 2014-08-05 21:02:06
August 05 2014 20:56 GMT
#1004
About Love in the Time of Cholera:
+ Show Spoiler +
Well Florentino is a stalker so I was not too surprised when he fucked his 14 year old protegée, who vaguely resembles a young Fermina.
And she's there so Marquez could really show us the extent of Florentino's obsession with Fermina.
Surth
Profile Blog Joined May 2011
Germany456 Posts
August 06 2014 09:42 GMT
#1005
Gifted by a professor:
[image loading]

Just bought:
[image loading]
Based on the "recommendation" of someone here, i think?
and, also, uhm...
[image loading]
no shame, man. no shame.

Also read Philip K. Dick's Solar Lottery a few days ago. A few tidbits in there i can imagine being read by Baudrillard in an exuberant joy. A lecturer of mine said that "dick was crazy, haunted by psychological illnesses, and, lets face it, kind of a shitty writer, but he's still damn interesting", and I find that assessment surprisingly fair.
i believe your actions dishonour Starcraft 2 LotV cybersport!
corumjhaelen
Profile Blog Joined October 2009
France6884 Posts
August 06 2014 16:02 GMT
#1006
Reading the Tractatus Theologico-Politicus. Spinoza ruuuules, I like it a lot more than his Ethics, Really great text on the Bible.
Also finished Beckett's trilogy, okay but I'm not a fan, the idea is great, but the exécution didn't convince me, I had to force myself on more than one occasion. Also I don't really see where this is supposée to be funny...
‎numquam se plus agere quam nihil cum ageret, numquam minus solum esse quam cum solus esset
farvacola
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States18827 Posts
August 06 2014 16:35 GMT
#1007
But Malone dies! How much more hilarious could it get? Also, Spinoza is indeed a baws. Neutral Monism ftw.
"when the Dead Kennedys found out they had skinhead fans, they literally wrote a song titled 'Nazi Punks Fuck Off'"
bookwyrm
Profile Joined March 2014
United States722 Posts
August 06 2014 19:17 GMT
#1008
LOL let me know how you find "On Longing." I was assigned it for a class last year.

Solar Lottery is a hilarious book, very early PKD
si hortum in bibliotheca habes, deerit nihil
dmnum
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
Brazil6910 Posts
Last Edited: 2014-08-07 02:44:41
August 07 2014 02:23 GMT
#1009
Holy fuck even though Albertine Disparue wasn't finished all the pieces still fell into place.
Proust has it all: the prose, the insights, the complex and believable characters, even the plot twists...it's amazing how he writes a scene and then, thousands of pages later, by revealing one small detail, the whole meaning of the event is changed - not only for us, but for the narrator as well.

Edit: in my last sentence, is it "for us" or "to us"?
bookwyrm
Profile Joined March 2014
United States722 Posts
August 07 2014 03:18 GMT
#1010
for us
si hortum in bibliotheca habes, deerit nihil
IgnE
Profile Joined November 2010
United States7681 Posts
August 07 2014 03:26 GMT
#1011
for the regular dative sense

unless you mean in the accusative sense, the "whole meaning is changed at us," viscerally experienced in the objective subject
The unrealistic sound of these propositions is indicative, not of their utopian character, but of the strength of the forces which prevent their realization.
bookwyrm
Profile Joined March 2014
United States722 Posts
August 07 2014 03:29 GMT
#1012
trying too hard :p
si hortum in bibliotheca habes, deerit nihil
IgnE
Profile Joined November 2010
United States7681 Posts
Last Edited: 2014-08-07 07:18:46
August 07 2014 07:18 GMT
#1013
It's provocative. It gets the people going.
The unrealistic sound of these propositions is indicative, not of their utopian character, but of the strength of the forces which prevent their realization.
MtlGuitarist97
Profile Blog Joined July 2011
United States1539 Posts
August 07 2014 11:42 GMT
#1014
On August 07 2014 16:18 IgnE wrote:
It's provocative. It gets the people going.

+1 for the reference that I'm assuming is intentional.
Prog455
Profile Joined April 2012
Denmark970 Posts
August 07 2014 16:41 GMT
#1015
So i am currently working my way through Swann's Way by Proust. I have read just shy of the first 100 pages, and while i enjoy the book overall, i have to ask if i am the only one that is infuriated by his use of punctuation, or rather lack off. I honestly don't see how it adds anything to his work, but perhaps someone can educate me.

Other than that i have recently read Nighttrain to Lissabon and Lea by Pascal Mercier. I'd recommend both.

[image loading] [image loading]
dmnum
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
Brazil6910 Posts
Last Edited: 2014-08-07 19:22:45
August 07 2014 19:07 GMT
#1016
On August 08 2014 01:41 Prog455 wrote:
So i am currently working my way through Swann's Way by Proust. I have read just shy of the first 100 pages, and while i enjoy the book overall, i have to ask if i am the only one that is infuriated by his use of punctuation, or rather lack off. I honestly don't see how it adds anything to his work, but perhaps someone can educate me.

There are many interpretations to it, I think, but here's how I see it:

When I try to remember my childhood room, at first I see it in a blurry whole. Then, suddenly, I start to clear the picture in my mind: I remember about a box of toys I used to have, about my old closet, etc. All those things don't happen at once but they happen in rapid succession.
Also, the impressions my old room gives me now are not the same it gave me when I was little, and I can't help but compare my present with my former self. It's the same thing that happens when you think "god, how stupid was I?" while remembering about bad decisions you made(this also explains the constant change between past and present tense).

In short, Proust's prose tries to recreate, in writing, the process of remembrance.
Prog455
Profile Joined April 2012
Denmark970 Posts
August 07 2014 20:10 GMT
#1017
On August 08 2014 04:07 dmnum wrote:
Show nested quote +
On August 08 2014 01:41 Prog455 wrote:
So i am currently working my way through Swann's Way by Proust. I have read just shy of the first 100 pages, and while i enjoy the book overall, i have to ask if i am the only one that is infuriated by his use of punctuation, or rather lack off. I honestly don't see how it adds anything to his work, but perhaps someone can educate me.

There are many interpretations to it, I think, but here's how I see it:

When I try to remember my childhood room, at first I see it in a blurry whole. Then, suddenly, I start to clear the picture in my mind: I remember about a box of toys I used to have, about my old closet, etc. All those things don't happen at once but they happen in rapid succession.
Also, the impressions my old room gives me now are not the same it gave me when I was little, and I can't help but compare my present with my former self. It's the same thing that happens when you think "god, how stupid was I?" while remembering about bad decisions you made(this also explains the constant change between past and present tense).

In short, Proust's prose tries to recreate, in writing, the process of remembrance.


That seems like a good explanation. At first i was pretty sure that is was merely some sort of French snobbery, but i can see why you would write in this way. Regardless of his intentions though, i would have enjoyed the book more had he stuck with proper grammar.
packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
August 07 2014 21:10 GMT
#1018
On August 06 2014 03:13 bookwyrm wrote:
14's not as young as you think

She qualifies as a nymphet as far as HH is concerned. Like I said, its not really the content itself that threw me off, just the fact that it was thrown in there with all his other escapades of older women. One of these things is not like the others.
dreaming of a sunny day
packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
August 07 2014 21:19 GMT
#1019
Book Log
+ Show Spoiler +

And my first book for this year, Love and Math:
[image loading]

This was a birthday gift from my parents and I’m halfway in. It’s partly a biography of a young mathematician overcoming discrimination and finding his passion in soviet Russia. The other part is a sort of an explanation as to why he enjoys math so much. I find the biographical element really interesting, but so far the math has not been terribly engaging. I understand that he’s trying to avoid the kind of nitty gritty detail that makes people hate math in school, but it often leaves me feeling like it hasn’t really been explained. We’ll see how the rest goes.

Happy New Year Folks!

Finished: Love and Math
This book could have been 2 books, one of which I would gladly read, and one of which I would gladly leave on the shelf. The far more interesting part of this book was the biography of the author, who beat the odds and anti-semitism of his home country (soviet russia) to become a mathemetician. His story of working on mathematical discoveries as a side job and sneaking into the best university to read papers and attend lectures, was compelling and interesting.

On the other had his presentation of mathematics was largely boring. I get what feels like a real sense of the passion that he has for math, but I find that his descriptions are too general for me to feel like they've been really explained. Part of my distaste may also stem from the fact that I don't find discussion of these sorts of concepts that interesting to begin with, so it would take a lot for the author to win me over.

I would recommend the book to someone who really enjoys abstract math, but otherwise just get a good biography instead.

Next I'm going to read The Stranger
[image loading]

Since a lot of people on here seem to like it (I'm looking at you corumjhaelen). Should be good!


Finished: The Stranger
Excellent book. I had read a little bit of existentialism before this, so I wasn't unprepared for the content. That said the presentation was great. I really loved the descriptions of the protagonist just experiencing life in the moment. I don't think I need to give a detailed review of this book since half of the people here seem to have read it but, 5/5 would binge read again.


I ditched sixty stories because it didn't look very good in the library (sorry sam). Instead I picked up This Side of Paradise
[image loading]

I've heard from some that it is actually better than gatsby. Should be good.


Finished: This Side of Paradise
Quite a good book. My major criticism is that the plot doesn't move very well, but otherwise the writing is excellent. The portrait of a lost young man hits close to home.

decided to pick up the screenplay, The Seventh Seal
[image loading]

I've always wanted to see the movie, but never have. My uncle gave me the book. Should be good!


Finished: The Seventh Seal
Pretty short, but also pretty good. Really left me wanting to see the movie. I also enjoyed the mildly existential overtones. Not a whole lot to say about this other than that the imagery was amazing and the story itself was the good kind of heavy.

On the topic of existential overtones, I picked up
[image loading]

except in its The Fall because I'm reading the English version (even I'm not that pompous). Should be good!

Finished: The Fall
Another excellent book. I'm genuinely sorry that I didn't start reading Camus' work earlier after having read this. I found the narrative style really cool (always being talked to about the past, makes it seem like an oral history). I also enjoyed the wholehearted endorsement of brothels in this book, all of my friends enjoyed hearing about the feeling of satisfaction that comes from lying drunk between 2 sleeping prostitutes. Great book.

I picked up Across the River and Into the Trees
[image loading]

because I'm on a quest to read everything that hemingway ever wrote. Should be good!

Finished: Across the River and Into the Trees
This book was quite good. The standard stiff drinks, beautiful women, and maimed soldiers that I've come to expect from Hemingway. I think this book was interesting because of the extent to which his warriors were removed from their war. It reminded me a lot of some of the Nick Adams stories in that the colonel finds that he can never really escape his profession. A good read if you want a more hipstery selection of Hemingway's work.

Speaking of hipstery, I've picked for my next book The Torrents of Spring.
[image loading]

Its Hemingway's first piece of published fiction, and that last of Hemingway's non-posthumous novels that I haven't read. Should be good.

Forgot to update, but a few days ago I Finished: The Torrents of Spring
This book was sort of weird. To me it seemed that Hemingway was poking fun at some of the tropes of "lost generation" writing. His characters make numerous references to Paris although they have been there only briefly and many have a massive admiration for continental culture that they don't actually understand. They also tend to heavily overvalue "authentic living" (one his characters prasies pump making factories for about a page and a half), and Hemingway includes numerous asides about his current position in the world of professional writing.

It was enjoyable, but a bit strange since it was written before a lot of the works that it seems to mock, and many of the tropes that it pokes fun at are employed in his later works.

Anyway, for something new and interesting, I picked up a 110 year old copy of The Count of Montecristo.
[image loading]

Should be good.

Finished: The Count of Monte Cristo (Vol 1)
Holy shit, there are 2 volumes O_o

That said, this book as been really fun, I like the adventure feeling and the verbal smack-downs from the count. Its kind of interesting as well to see what the attitudes were toward things like medicine and race at the time. The second volume is supposed to be rife with vegeance, so I can't wait to pick that up, but first an interlude.

I picked up Moonraker
[image loading]

Its one of the Bond books that I haven't yet read since it wasn't in the anthology that I had. Can't wait to get my spy novel fix!

Finished: Moonraker
The book was pretty good. I was super busy this last week so it took me a while to read, but I really did enjoy it. I thought it was kind of interesting in this book to see how little the Bond of the book is like Bond in the movies + Show Spoiler +
I've written about this before, but there is very little shooting and fighting. Mostly Bond plays cards, snoops around, and hits on any woman in the vicinity. I don't think he even fires his gun in this moive
. That said, it was quite nice.

Picked up Count of Monte Cristo: Part 2
Should be good.

Finished: The Count of Monte Cristo
Finally. Exams and projects really killed my free time these last few weeks. This book was pretty awesome. I really liked all of the focus on honor and the intricacies of parisian society. I also kind of enjoyed the way that Dantes was like a 19th century batman. Really fun read, I highly recommend it to anyone with a lot of time.

Picked up Snow Falling on Cedars
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My dad really liked this book and I need something to read at baseball games. Should be good!

Finished: Snow Falling on Cedars
This book was really good. It had all the classic elements of a book about war and the toll it takes on people, plus the detective/crime novel thing going on. It was a really fun read, and definitely a page turner.

Since I'm on books my dad liked, I picked up Pillars of the Earth
[image loading]

which I think should be quite nice.

A brief note on the topic of lit, its true that this thread can get a bit over the top sometimes, but I think most people are reading these books because they genuinely like them, and not to fulfill some sort of quota. As for showing off, the point of the thread is to let other people know what you're reading, so there will always kind of be that element here.

edit: Always the formatting

Finished: Pillars of the Earth
I really enjoyed reading this book. Definitely a page turner with all kinds of political conflicts and such, but it also seemed very realistic. I particularly like the way the author handled the passage of time, and didn't feel the need to comment on every singly year of the characters lives (the book was long enough without it). I also particularly enjoy the idea of historical fiction in that the characters interact with real events at the time, but don't go so far as to influence/cause these things to happen.

Travel Bonus: Animal Farm
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Picked this up from a friend and read it on the plane. It was pretty mediocre in my opinion. The general message of "Totalitarianism is bad" was obvious and bluntly presented. Don't really get the hype about this book.

Picked up: Cien Anos de Soledad
[image loading]

I loved it in english, now I'm attempting it in the original spanish. Wish me luck.

Still Reading Cien Anos de Soledad, but when it gets a bit heavy I have to have something else to turn to

Finished: The Face of Battle
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This book was a really interesting look at the way that military history is written, as well as an investigation of several battles. I really liked the way that the author tried to use the narratives of particular soldiers to see the battle from a particular point of view. It was interesting to set aside the rest of a large battle like Waterloo, and think for a minute about only those things that one officer or soldier could have seen. I also found the discussion of evolving trends of battle to be quite interesting.

Finished: When We Were Orphans
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This book was sort of an interesting twist on the classic detective novel. I found it interesting that the author chose to write in the style of journal entries, as it made the book seem as though it was much less of a contemporary work than it is (It was written in the 21st century, but it reads almost like Frankenstein). Despite the strange style, it was quite the page turner. I highly recommend it.

I picked up another book by Ishiguro, Nocturnes
[image loading]

As well as Bram Stoker's Dracula
[image loading]

To hold me over on my vacation. Should be good!

Finished: Dracula
I really loved this book. I thought that the author did an incredibly good job of giving me a sense of just how evil everything is, especially in the first part of the book when Jonathan Harker is in Castle Dracula. I also really liked that the plot moved rather quickly, since some of the other older books that I read sometimes get a bit drawn out. Even though I know how it ends, I was on the edge of my seating reading the last 40 pages as they chase the coffin to the castle. Really good book. Read it with the lights on.

While we were visiting some family friends for a day I began reading Love in the Time of Cholera
[image loading]

I enjoyed One Hundred Years of Solitude, so I thought I'd pick up another book of his. Halfway in, it doesn't disappoint.

Even though I still have Nocturnes and Cien Anos de Soledad back home, I couldn't resist the temptation of our local library, and I picked up Lost Tales
[image loading]

and a spy novel, Ludlum's Matarese Circle
[image loading]

The next few days should be a lot of fun.

Finished: Love in the Time of Cholera
This book was quite good. I found it interesting to read a story about the practical side of love and marriage as well as growing older. I'm not quite sure who the "good guy" is, or even if there is one, but I found that the characters seemed very real, in contrast to the average love story where everyone is an archetype. The only part of the book that I didn't like is a bit of a spoiler, so I'll put it in spoiler tags for people who've read it (or people who haven't read it and don't mind revealing a minor plot point)
+ Show Spoiler +
What the fuck is up with Florentino Ariza fucking his 14 year old niece. I get that he's supposed to be kind of promiscuous, but he seems like a pretty level headed guy for most of the book. I was kind of thrown off by this, since it was like getting 20 pages of Lolita right in the middle of my book. I wish Marquez had left it out, not because the content is that disturbing, but that it just seems out of place, unless there's something I'm missing


Overall, very good book though.

I decided to pick up Ludlums Matarese Circle next, and as a spy novel, it doesn't disappoint (I'm 350 pages in already ).


Finished: Matarese Circle
Classic Cold War era spy novel about a secret society of assassins. Well written, but no surprises.

Finished: Nocturnes
I found this collection of short stories so good that when I picked it up one morning, I didn't put it down until I was finished. I think I'm really beginning to get a feel for Ishiguro's style, and I really like it. One of the things that I liked best about the short stories was the fact that they all take place in the same "universe" and make references to events that happened in other stories. I also particularly liked the theme of music and music lovers.

I picked up reading Lost Tales by Tolkien, but its a little academic for me so far. I also just got from the library The Garden of Eden by Hemingway, should be good!
[image loading]
dreaming of a sunny day
bookwyrm
Profile Joined March 2014
United States722 Posts
Last Edited: 2014-08-08 01:20:18
August 08 2014 00:44 GMT
#1020
any francophones bored over the summer and want to do me a solid and translate a short passage for me? it's about 13 pages, from 1926, about an inscription concerning interest rates at the Temple of Delphi. I just need a rough translation to know what it says, my french is really just atrocious. pm me and I'll email you a pdf

edit: thirteen short pages
si hortum in bibliotheca habes, deerit nihil
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