Most importantly though, I'm reading the Bible, not in its entirety, but I guess its most well-known parts the Gospels, the Acts which were great, the Apocalypse, and most "historic" and poetic books of the Old Testament. Pretty cool stuff, and at the same time I can, thanks to the Collège de France, listen Thomas Römer explain why I should care about Terah's age (205 or 145 ?), the reasons why the same story is told three times, the possible meanings of those boring genealogies, or why Jerusalem is never mentionned in the first five books. Which is plain awesome.
What Are You Reading 2016 - Page 9
Forum Index > Media & Entertainment |
corumjhaelen
France6884 Posts
Most importantly though, I'm reading the Bible, not in its entirety, but I guess its most well-known parts the Gospels, the Acts which were great, the Apocalypse, and most "historic" and poetic books of the Old Testament. Pretty cool stuff, and at the same time I can, thanks to the Collège de France, listen Thomas Römer explain why I should care about Terah's age (205 or 145 ?), the reasons why the same story is told three times, the possible meanings of those boring genealogies, or why Jerusalem is never mentionned in the first five books. Which is plain awesome. | ||
farvacola
United States18811 Posts
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corumjhaelen
France6884 Posts
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SK.Testie
Canada11084 Posts
Absolutely loved the Malazan books. And this one is starting out quite strong so far. Brilliant writer. Paints South Africa as arguably a prettier place under Apartheid than "free". | ||
zulu_nation8
China26351 Posts
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farvacola
United States18811 Posts
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zulu_nation8
China26351 Posts
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farvacola
United States18811 Posts
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Surth
Germany456 Posts
Reading My Ántonia for uni right now, which is okayish. I really wish I felt like I had the time to read Bolanos Savage Detectives by now :X | ||
Flicky
England2652 Posts
The Innocent Killer by Michael Griesbach - Interesting story but the hook at the end of the blurb is pure clickbait (It describes Stephen Avery's wrongful conviction, then second conviction and ends with an "Or did he?" - regarding the second conviction. This "Or Did He?" is never even alluded to at the end of the book.) Paradise Lost/Regained by Milton - I enjoyed it. I've not read an English poem/story that approaches bible stories this way and I enjoyed it. Easy enough to read and with some very interesting ideas and some pretty cool parts. The Audacity of Hops by Tom Acitelli - A history of the growth of craft beer in America from it's origins in 1965 to about 2012. Unfortunately it misses the massive growth experienced in the last four years but the key information otherwise is all there. Gets a bit unfocused in the middle but works out. | ||
Acrofales
Spain17678 Posts
On June 01 2016 08:48 Manit0u wrote: Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury (60th anniversary edition) Going to re-read this classic. Haha. Me too. | ||
corumjhaelen
France6884 Posts
Starting : Journey to the West (Wu Cheng'En ?) Hope it's half as good as Water Margin ! | ||
KelsierSC
United Kingdom10443 Posts
some girl I like mentioned this book so I started reading it, pretty awesome. | ||
zulu_nation8
China26351 Posts
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farvacola
United States18811 Posts
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zulu_nation8
China26351 Posts
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Carnivorous Sheep
Baa?21242 Posts
On June 20 2016 07:57 farvacola wrote: I enjoyed Pattern Recognition a fair bit, but it's already a bit out dated I feel. gibson doesnt seem to age well ~_~ not as prescient or as insightful as he'd like to be, perhaps? ~~~ | ||
farvacola
United States18811 Posts
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Nyxisto
Germany6287 Posts
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{CC}StealthBlue
United States41117 Posts
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