Pretty interesting to read Bush-era books after Bush's era.
A cyberpunk visual novel from the early 2000s.
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Morzas
United States387 Posts
Pretty interesting to read Bush-era books after Bush's era. A cyberpunk visual novel from the early 2000s. | ||
Spammish
United Kingdom42 Posts
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iKlutz
United Kingdom42 Posts
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ukas
Mexico24 Posts
Best book this year, and i'm starting Domain of the dead | ||
Pericles
United States27 Posts
On January 12 2012 09:51 miercat wrote: Show nested quote + On January 12 2012 03:56 Alby8528 wrote: J+ Show Spoiler + ust read: I was a fan of the original shannara trilogy so I decided to get the prequel. I must say its a really good book. I recommend it for those who like fantasy books currently reading: my friend just threw it at me and told me to read and since I have nothing to do at the moment I decided to read, I'm half way through it and its a pretty interesting will read next: I was reading up on the wheel of time series and it looks like a an interesting series to read, after my current book, I'm gonna grab the first volume and read on There was a prequel written for the Wheel of Time series (The Eye of the World being the first book in the series), titled New Spring; 3 prequels were planned, however this is the only one which has been currently published; in chronological order, "New Spring" is the 2nd of the 3. I am currently reading "Towers of Midnight (among other books)," 13th book (out of 14) in The Wheel of Time series. Recommended for fans of the style. My only complaint: the series is too short. I became aware of/started reading, the whole series in the past few months (even though publishing began in 1990), and tried to pace myself to an extent, but I seem to read too fast. I feel like the series is actually much too long, several of the books toward the end are mainly pointless filler, and then he died before finishing. The books being ghost written are a bit better though, I'm interested to see how the series is going to finish up, however, I think if he'd written about 8 books total, then the later ones would have been on par with the earlier books quality. | ||
Rabbitmaster
1357 Posts
I started reading "The city and the stars" (by Clarke) just before new years, and finished it in about 2 days, and it was absolutely AMAZING! Literally minutes before writing this post i finished "Rama II", the second part of the "Rama-series" and i gotta say these are some of the finest books i have ever read, atleast fiction-wise. Planning to finish the Rama-series now and then maybe move onto some Isaac Asimov as the year progresses, but i might just stay with Clarke for a while longer. I really like reading an authors collected works successively, that way i get a better "feel" for said author, atleast in my opinion! Edit: Also on my reading list for the year is: Metamorphosis by Kafka Brave new world by Huxley And some classic swedish litterature. Mainly Selma Lagerlöf and August Strindberg. | ||
Excelion
Bulgaria59 Posts
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NEXUS6
United States413 Posts
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T.G
Finland8 Posts
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nayhoon
United States4 Posts
Currently reading: It's still so funny, time after time. | ||
snotboogie
Australia3550 Posts
Amazing book. Great commentary on the nature of life and struggle; inspiring. Currently Reading: | ||
Glam
United States325 Posts
Quite a bit of jumping around, but the humor is great. Great at pointing out the ridiculousness of war. Also partway through A Power Governments Cannot Suppress Started reading Zinn with A People's History of the United States and The Zinn Reader this summer, quite a coincidence right before the occupy movement started. Wish he was still alive to see it. Also, I think I've read the whole post-modern mindbender branch of that sci fi flowchart haha. PS On January 09 2012 23:49 TheUltimate wrote: This is the most update to date and complete account of the biggest disaster of the 20th century, perhaps claiming more lives than any event in history except WW2. Thanks to way-too-ambitious plans combined with incredibly naive decision-making, Mao Zedong starved, beat and tortured to death potentially 45 million of his own countrymen, while the other billion Chinese endured privation beyond imagining. More politically speaking, it is a stunning account of precisely why autocracy is a poor form of governance, even when the leader has the best of intentions (which in Mao's case, is very debatable.) A very interesting read, but makes me burn with anger at what so many innocent people were put through for one man's pride. If you're interested in that topic, you should try Legacies: A Chinese Mosaic. Stories of individual Chinese citizens retold by a former citizen who left to the US then came back when she married the US ambassador to China. | ||
Atreides
United States2393 Posts
Old Man and the Sea: Great Great book. Best Novella written imo. If you like it read other stuff by Hemingway his work shares a pretty common theme. Inheritance: I want to go on a little rant on this one... How did his publisher let that book go to print? Did he even write the first book? I mean however many years ago when Eragon first came out, it wasn't great fantasy. But it was good fantasy from a promising young author. Then it got progressively worse up to this one.... which is.... I dunno. This is the second time in my life that I quit midway through a book in a series I was reading. It was so bad. Anyone else have thoughts on this? Current reading list I have sitting on the shelf: The Forever War (and accompanying sequels, this is what I am reading right now) Pretty much all of the Jane Austen novels, I've read a couple allready. (I bought this super girly boxed set lol) The Farseer Trilogy By Robin Hobb Some random modern fiction by John Grisham and Ted Dekker 2 Dostoevskys I got part way through but I was super burnt out on Russian Classics (well big hard to read classics in general) so I shelved lol. (Had just read War and Peace, Anna Karenina, Crime and Punishment, The Brother Karamazov and Les Miserables last year and they were all super good books but its not easy reading for me.) Stuff I've read in the last month or so: The Lost Gate by Orson Scott Card. Not his best but hes my favorite contemporary author and I have all his stuff. ok. Catcher in The Rye: Classic, embarassed that I somehow did not read this till I was 24 Pride and Prejudice: Classic chick book. Worth reading. (along with most of her stuff) Like 3 John Grisham books cuz I spent a bunch of time hanging out in a hospital and I can allways find something of his in the gift shop. His stuff is repetitive but I like it.Only a couple I haven't read. I'll stick in here that "The Rainmaker" was my favorite of his lawyer books, but Bleachers is still the best one by far for me. Reread a couple good ones from long ago: Lord of the Flies so short, def worth a reread. Cook Inlet Decision by Elsa Pedersen. Local Alaskan author who writes on topics near and dear to me. This was a favorite of mine growing up and someone gave my parents a really nice original edition copy for Christmas. (my mom collects local authors stuff kind of) Stuff that I heartily recommend to anyone and everyone interested in sci-fi/fantasy: Dune by Frank Herbert. All 6 of them. I know a lot of people dont like the last 3 but god I love these books. Enders Game and all associated titles by Orson Scott Card. Again a lot of people don't like Xenocide/Children of the Mind but I loved all of it. The Foundation Trilogy by Isacc Asimov. (This is a little different but its very classic and very awesome) I've read allmost all of the popular fantasy stuff published recently and I enjoyed everything but the Sword of Truth series which I thought was pretty terrible compared to most of the other popular works. (eg. Wheel of Time, Game of Thrones, Brandon Sanderson, R. A. Salvatore etc.) Anyways. Sorry I am to lazy to find pictures of all these books. lol Feel free to PM if you have questions about any books mentioned. I like talking about them. | ||
PiRate647
Belgium187 Posts
Plus I read a bunch of juridic works, that must count for something | ||
Rabbitmaster
1357 Posts
On January 14 2012 20:18 Atreides wrote: I've gotten a few books from these threads and read most of the popular ones people list. Good stuff. (I read 1-2 novels every week over the year on average) Some random comments on some from this page. Old Man and the Sea: Great Great book. Best Novella written imo. If you like it read other stuff by Hemingway his work shares a pretty common theme. Inheritance: I want to go on a little rant on this one... How did his publisher let that book go to print? Did he even write the first book? I mean however many years ago when Eragon first came out, it wasn't great fantasy. But it was good fantasy from a promising young author. Then it got progressively worse up to this one.... which is.... I dunno. This is the second time in my life that I quit midway through a book in a series I was reading. It was so bad. Anyone else have thoughts on this? Current reading list I have sitting on the shelf: The Forever War (and accompanying sequels, this is what I am reading right now) Pretty much all of the Jane Austen novels, I've read a couple allready. (I bought this super girly boxed set lol) The Farseer Trilogy By Robin Hobb Some random modern fiction by John Grisham and Ted Dekker 2 Dostoevskys I got part way through but I was super burnt out on Russian Classics (well big hard to read classics in general) so I shelved lol. (Had just read War and Peace, Anna Karenina, Crime and Punishment, The Brother Karamazov and Les Miserables last year and they were all super good books but its not easy reading for me.) Stuff I've read in the last month or so: The Lost Gate by Orson Scott Card. Not his best but hes my favorite contemporary author and I have all his stuff. ok. Catcher in The Rye: Classic, embarassed that I somehow did not read this till I was 24 Pride and Prejudice: Classic chick book. Worth reading. (along with most of her stuff) Like 3 John Grisham books cuz I spent a bunch of time hanging out in a hospital and I can allways find something of his in the gift shop. His stuff is repetitive but I like it.Only a couple I haven't read. I'll stick in here that "The Rainmaker" was my favorite of his lawyer books, but Bleachers is still the best one by far for me. Reread a couple good ones from long ago: Lord of the Flies so short, def worth a reread. Cook Inlet Decision by Elsa Pedersen. Local Alaskan author who writes on topics near and dear to me. This was a favorite of mine growing up and someone gave my parents a really nice original edition copy for Christmas. (my mom collects local authors stuff kind of) Stuff that I heartily recommend to anyone and everyone interested in sci-fi/fantasy: Dune by Frank Herbert. All 6 of them. I know a lot of people dont like the last 3 but god I love these books. Enders Game and all associated titles by Orson Scott Card. Again a lot of people don't like Xenocide/Children of the Mind but I loved all of it. The Foundation Trilogy by Isacc Asimov. (This is a little different but its very classic and very awesome) I've read allmost all of the popular fantasy stuff published recently and I enjoyed everything but the Sword of Truth series which I thought was pretty terrible compared to most of the other popular works. (eg. Wheel of Time, Game of Thrones, Brandon Sanderson, R. A. Salvatore etc.) Anyways. Sorry I am to lazy to find pictures of all these books. lol Feel free to PM if you have questions about any books mentioned. I like talking about them. I can seriously recommend anything Robin Hobb. Amazing fantasy, i read her entire works in about 2 weeks, impossible to put down! | ||
Pika Chu
Romania2510 Posts
I'm only halfway through but seems very nice. Afaik it's his (the authors) biography but it's really interesting, nicely written and with lots of unpredictable turns. | ||
BenBuford
Denmark307 Posts
+ Show Spoiler + Too long. First half was great. Second half: Not so much. Currently reading: + Show Spoiler + Just started. Not sure if I like it yet. Ordered these a few days ago, to get back into reading: + Show Spoiler + Slavoj Zizek is probably the brightest genius alive at this moment in my humble opinion. Until now I've only read some articles of his. Time to get enlightened. Some old school classic horror for amusement. I hate not having any references on this renowned writer. Almost embarassing. | ||
dD3s
Germany130 Posts
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sirkyan
211 Posts
On January 01 2012 16:29 MrBludgeon wrote: I've mainly been doing some light reading as of late to let the brain calm down a bit after this nightmare of a semester. However, I've also recently become interested in some of the more wonky bits of mathematics (free non-abelian groups, non-measurable sets, and the Banach-Tarski paradox in particular). So, in order to satisfy my urge for mathematically weird shit and to keep the reading light, I recently read through: It gives a fairly easy to read account of the history and sketch of the proofs behind some of these paradoxes. The Banach-Tarski paradox (or theorem) is particularly interesting since it (basically) states you can take a sphere of radius one in three dimensional euclidean space (R^3), split it onto five "pieces", move those pieces around, and end up with two spheres of radius one (no holes or anything). ... ... I think it's taking away from the "paradox" by, in your explanation, mentioning you can take five pieces. While it's true that five pieces are the bare minimum for a single sphere, the generalization of this is only true for infinitely many parts or indeed pieces. It's possible I have misunderstood something and it's not the generalization you are talking about, in that case my apologies :D. The proof is mind-boggling, the moment you realize this shit is actually true.. It has you eating pillows for breakfast. | ||
Woroth
United States1 Post
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