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What are you reading? (February 2012)

Dresden

Member
About to finish the Hunger Games. Before that read all 7 of the Harry Potter books for the first time.

Any recommendations for similar type of books/series? In between grad school workload and full time job, I love reading something entertaining. Both the HP and HG series filled that need, even if they aren't considered to be literary masterpieces (Hunger Games mostly since I know Harry Potter is well regarded).

Should I start The Hobbit? I never enjoyed the LOTR movies since I never read the books and couldn't get as into it as everyone else.

Hobbit is good. There's always the Flashman novels after that for pure entertainment.
 
About to finish the Hunger Games. Before that read all 7 of the Harry Potter books for the first time.

Any recommendations for similar type of books/series? In between grad school workload and full time job, I love reading something entertaining. Both the HP and HG series filled that need, even if they aren't considered to be literary masterpieces (Hunger Games mostly since I know Harry Potter is well regarded).

Should I start The Hobbit? I never enjoyed the LOTR movies since I never read the books and couldn't get as into it as everyone else.

I'd also recommend The Bartimaeus Trilogy by Jonathan Stroud for some more modern fantasy, or the Percy Jackson series by Rick Riordan for some light-hearted action adventure. Percy Jackson skews a little younger, but if you know that going into them they can be fun.

The Hobbit is definitely better than both of these series, but if you are just looking for something easy an fun to read they should fit the bill.
 

effzee

Member
Thanks for all the recommendations guys!

I think I will start with the Hobbit. Don't want to not enjoy the movie and everyone I know who has read the book can't stop raving about it.

After that I will look into all the recommendations. Thanks again1
 

Octagon

Member
Right now:

419SdxJSMkL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA300_SH20_OU01_.jpg


But on Monday i will finally start reading "An artist of a floating world".
I do hope it's good.
 

Bliany

Member
4489081442_a6251f3138.jpg


Pretty intense read so far. It wouldn't be able to put it down if I didn't need a breath of fresh air from it after every chapter.
 

Dresden

Member
Finished The Fat Years by Chan Koonchung. Pretty good, but I think I would've been fine just reading the preface. I love the concept, but the actual book left me kinda cold.

Started:


About the assassinations in 1992 of Iranian dissidents in Berlin. Good stuff, but what makes it so readable also hampers it somewhat. All the people she writes about are reduced to cartoon heroes or villains--it reads like a novel, but there's something that feels less than authentic about the whole thing.
 

kruis

Exposing the sinister cartel of retailers who allow companies to pay for advertising space.
Finished "Three Hearts and Three Lions" yesterday. A very enjoyable quick and easy read.

Next:

51mGnCOlU%2BL._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg
 

bengraven

Member
Just won these on eBay for literally 1/4 of the cost. It's only half the entire set, but the set goes for $350-400 on Amazon.

0dRMX.png


The Old West Time-Life series. Literally the best, most informative and entertaining historical series I've ever read. Every page is perfection. I completely forgot they existed until I found four of them at the local library a few months ago. I remember my dad having a few of them and I didn't care about them as a kid, but then again I hated the Old West, too. Things have changed recently.
 

JGS

Banned
Enders20Game.jpg


Found this at my library on sale for 80 cents. Yeah paper books!

Anyway, it's pretty good so far and I'm so glad that Hunger Games and it have nothing to do with each other storywise (So far). Why do people make fake comparisons?
 

bengraven

Member
Enders20Game.jpg


Found this at my library on sale for 80 cents. Yeah paper books!

Anyway, it's pretty good so far and I'm so glad that Hunger Games and it have nothing to do with each other storywise (So far). Why do people make fake comparisons?

I would really love to read these; I listened to about 2 hours of one of the Ender books on NPR one weekend a few years ago and liked his writing a lot. I just worry about the propoganda that you hear so much about.
 

JGS

Banned
I would really love to read these; I listened to about 2 hours of one of the Ender books on NPR one weekend a few years ago and liked his writing a lot. I just worry about the propoganda that you hear so much about.
I'm not getting the propaganda too much right now. The most disturbing thing for me is that these are kids. It's the same thing that bugged me about Hunger Games (Not in a bad way), but these guys are much younger. So I'm curious to see just how bad it gets for them.

Looks like I have a new series to read at this point.
 

Dresden

Member
I would really love to read these; I listened to about 2 hours of one of the Ender books on NPR one weekend a few years ago and liked his writing a lot. I just worry about the propoganda that you hear so much about.

I wouldn't worry about it. Ender's Game was written when he wasn't a total nut, iirc.
 
I would really love to read these; I listened to about 2 hours of one of the Ender books on NPR one weekend a few years ago and liked his writing a lot. I just worry about the propoganda that you hear so much about.

Lol. . If you have a mind you should be able to discern and digest content as opposed to fearing or worrying of exposure to it.

As a second, I love audio books. Audio books can be great.
 

iavi

Member
I would really love to read these; I listened to about 2 hours of one of the Ender books on NPR one weekend a few years ago and liked his writing a lot. I just worry about the propoganda that you hear so much about.

The first four books in the Ender series are great books, and the propaganda isn't entirely there in the beginning, really. The ideals are about absent from Ender's Game, rear their head a tiny bit in Speaker, a bit more in Xenocide, and even more by Children, lol. "A War of Gifts," which came much later, is nuts though, just nuts. I finished it not too long ago, and couldn't even tell how the book was related within the endless stream of church-speak.
 

Mumei

Member
I finished The (not so) Complete Short Stories of Marcel Proust and I read a short book (~116 pages) about Gene Wolfe's early books through The Book of the New Sun by Joan Gordon. It was pretty interesting, though unfortunately Goodreads had no picture. :(

And I am starting Cormac McCarthy's The Road today.

Currently Reading

6496927.jpg


I would really love to read these; I listened to about 2 hours of one of the Ender books on NPR one weekend a few years ago and liked his writing a lot. I just worry about the propoganda that you hear so much about.

Don't worry about that.
 

Quote

Member
I gave up on Pandora's Star. There are so many books i'm looking forward to reading and this book makes me feel like i'm wasting my time with so much filler.

Now i'm 120~ pages into Hyperion and happy with it. I had little idea about the story and i'm still not sure where it's going. I couldn't put the book down half way through the first "tale."
200px-Hyperion_cover.jpg
 
9781554682393.jpg

Sorry about using such a large picture, I couldn't really find any decent ones that were much smaller.

Playing with Fire by Theo Fleury

As a guy who really only knows the NHL personally from about 2007 onwards, this is really giving me an insight into what the league was like in the late 80s/early 90s, and the differences are just crazy.

It is pretty well written, in a way that it almost seems like I went somewhere to meet Theo for some Pizza and a brew or two and he's just sitting down telling me his life story. I'm about 2/3s of the way through so far and it has just been a blast to read.

Next on the agenda is:

dryden.jpg
 

Dresden

Member
Finished this tonight. It was a good read, but I wish that Hakakian had kept things a bit more grounded. Also dragged at the end; the interminably long trial was as dull to read about as it must have been to sit through.
 
The Hobbit is great, and it's a much lighter read than LotR. There's also the His Dark Materials trilogy by Philip Pullman (personally I found it to be rather boring and overrated, but ymmv), Neil Gaiman's Stardust which is just absolutely wonderful, the Inkheart trilogy by Cornelia Funke (the first book was the best IMO), Michael Ende's Neverending Story, Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (the first 1/3 - 1/2 of the book can be a bit dry though) and, if you don't mind some rehashing of ideas from Star Wars and LotR, the Inheritance cycle by Christopher Paolini.

Avoid this like the plague. The first book was simply a rehash, nothing *truly* insulting to the eyes. But holy shit, the second book was complete garbage. I remembered not being able to finish that filth.
 

Combichristoffersen

Combovers don't work when there is no hair
Avoid this like the plague. The first book was simply a rehash, nothing *truly* insulting to the eyes. But holy shit, the second book was complete garbage. I remembered not being able to finish that filth.

I could never finish the second book either, as it bored me out of my mind, but a friend of mine keeps raving about how great those books are. I thought the first one was mediocre and the second one was forgettable at best, but ymmv.
 

Mumei

Member
I could never finish the second book either, as it bored me out of my mind, but a friend of mine keeps raving about how great those books are. I thought the first one was mediocre and the second one was forgettable at best, but ymmv.

I had a friend who raved about The Sword of Shannara. Sometimes there's no accounting...
 

Ashes

Banned
Forgot to mention:
Book 3 of 4 for feb:

KsyXK.jpg


That's the original cover. I don't speak French, I'll be reading an English translation.
 
qJ2IL.png


b5lGd.png


I was reading, but put down for the above, The Once & Future King by T.H. White and Adventures of a Young Man by John Dos Passos

Would recommend any of them, Cioran is especially funny - you have to laugh at some of the pessimism, but there are some great lines, i keep noticing lines stolen by David Johansen and used in New York Dolls songs; "we die in proportion to the words that we fling around" / "music; the madness of silence" / "it requires a thousand eyes for hidden tears"

Brodsky is brilliant, always liked his poetry but the essays are fantastic, introduced me to other poets and history i hadn't known, its like reading Borges except the subjects are real

and as for t h white and dos passos, both excellent books, Dos Passos in particular, its the first part of his second trilogy; The Districts of Colombia
 

Mumei

Member
Forgot to mention:
Book 3 of 4 for feb:

KsyXK.jpg


That's the original cover. I don't speak French, I'll be reading an English translation.

That's a great story. I read it for one of the two Western History intro courses (the second, naturally) in college.
 
Mocking-jay-book_300.jpg


Finished the Mockingjay.

Not sure of Collins' intentions, but she did a fabulous job of making Katniss an unlikable character.
Just some random thoughts;
When Peeta came back to 13 and was, what I say, woken the fuck up from his little world - found it hilarious when he called Katniss out - end of ch. 16. or when he was doing the "real or not real?" questions. in the cellar when Gale & Peeta have a convo about Katniss. They knew the condition of the relationships. Peeta and Kat, together at the end. Hated Gale for some reason. Peeta made me hate him.

Oh and when the squad was advancing through the streets, on to Snow's mansion, that all reminded me of Killzone 2 - going after Visari.

Snow = Visari
1063198-visari_speech_super.jpg


Donald Sutherland is too jolly looking to play Snow. Jennifer Lawrence looks and sounds like Kristen Hager, wtf.
 

Brazil

Living in the shadow of Amaz
http://img2.timeinc.net/ew/dynamic/imgs/100405/Mocking-jay-book_300.jpg[IMG]

Finished the Mockingjay.

Not sure of Collins' intentions, but she did a fabulous job of making Katniss an unlikable character.
Just some random thoughts;
[spoiler]When Peeta came back to 13 and was, what I say, woken the fuck up from his little world - found it hilarious when he called Katniss out - end of ch. 16. or when he was doing the "real or not real?" questions. in the cellar when Gale & Peeta have a convo about Katniss. They knew the condition of the relationships. Peeta and Kat, together at the end. Hated Gale for some reason. Peeta made me hate him.[/spoiler]

[spoiler]Oh and when the squad was advancing through the streets, on to Snow's mansion, that all reminded me of Killzone 2 - going after Visari.[/spoiler]

Snow = Visari [IMG]http://media.giantbomb.com/uploads/0/2403/1063198-visari_speech_super.jpg[IMG]

Donald Sutherland is too jolly looking to play Snow. Jennifer Lawrence looks and sounds like Kristen Hager, wtf.[/QUOTE]

[spoiler]I hardly think anyone considers Gale above Peeta. He's the only choice right from the moment Katniss tells his backstory with the bread.[/spoiler]

And personally, I find Lawrence perfect for the role.
 

Heel

Member
what did you think about the prose?

I liked how it was succinct and straightforward. It kept a simple situation as it should be. An old man on his boat left to his thoughts.

Is that the typical Hemingway style? My first time reading him. New reader here!
 

Ashes

Banned
I liked how it was succinct and straightforward. It kept a simple situation as it should be. An old man on his boat left to his thoughts.

Is that the typical Hemingway style? My first time reading him. New reader here!

Pretty much. It is the book that went on to win him a Nobel prize, although people say the sun also rises, is his best work. It's restrained objective writing at its best I suppose. If you have time, you should spend a lazy afternoon reading about the man. He is known as much for his prose, his style of writing, as much as his works. :)
 

JGS

Banned
Mocking-jay-book_300.jpg


Finished the Mockingjay.

Not sure of Collins' intentions, but she did a fabulous job of making Katniss an unlikable character.
Just some random thoughts;
When Peeta came back to 13 and was, what I say, woken the fuck up from his little world - found it hilarious when he called Katniss out - end of ch. 16. or when he was doing the "real or not real?" questions. in the cellar when Gale & Peeta have a convo about Katniss. They knew the condition of the relationships. Peeta and Kat, together at the end. Hated Gale for some reason. Peeta made me hate him.

Oh and when the squad was advancing through the streets, on to Snow's mansion, that all reminded me of Killzone 2 - going after Visari.

Snow = Visari
1063198-visari_speech_super.jpg


Donald Sutherland is too jolly looking to play Snow. Jennifer Lawrence looks and sounds like Kristen Hager, wtf.
I tended to feel sorry for her because she was always the one that was clueless which made her distrust nearly everyone. She couldn't even trust herself. She reminded me of a cranky teenager. I think Collins did a nice job of explaining how much her life sucked and how it would have been worse if not for her skills.
In contrast to most, Mockingjay was my second favorite of the trilogy.

As an aside, I finishing up Ender's Games & unlike Hunger Games, I'm having a hard time not aging the characters. The book remains good and it reminds me quite a bit of my Organizational Management class in college.
 
Pretty much. It is the book that went on to win him a Nobel prize, although people say the sun also rises, is his best work. It's restrained objective writing at its best I suppose. If you have time, you should spend a lazy afternoon reading about the man. He is known as much for his prose, his style of writing, as much as his works. :)

The Old Man and the Sea is waaaaaaaay better than The Sun Also Rises. Like, it's not even close, really.

Hemingway's style really worked for him sometimes, but the more of his work you read, the more obvious the limitations in his style become, in my opinion.

In unrelated news, the phrase "show, don't tell" is one of the worst ever coined. Telling is fine if the author is good at it; in fact, if the author is good at it, it becomes an invaluable tool.
 

Kola

Member
Just finished "The Brothers Karamasov" the other day and still feel a little sad and empty inside. I read Dostoevskiy's five biggest books chronologically and this was the last one. The book does have some long boring stretches (which I might enjoy on a second run, after knowing what happens later on) but what is good about this book is extremely good and quite powerful; something that you won't find in other books in this form. Thinking about (among others) "The Grand Inquisitor", the last words of the "Starez" and the final speech of the defence at the trial.

Now I'll resort to other stuff among them especially Graham Greene and Carl Sagan, the latter one who seems to be held in high regard here on GAF. Really looking forward to that one. Thanks GAF.

Now on to:
41WWP2TENHL._SL500_AA300_.jpg
 
Finally started reading 1Q84, because I was waiting to see if they would ever allow you to read it on more than one Kindle, but it turns out it's been available on multiple Kindle app'ed devices at the same time for a long time. Oh well. I also didn't realize this book was a thousand goddamned pages. That's the one problem with getting books on the Kindle, God only knows how long the book is. Oh well, hope it's good.
 

olore

Member
Read The Old Man And The Sea, wasn`t that blown away by it. What did I miss?

Currently back to Shantaram, wanna finish it
 

Ashes

Banned
Read The Old Man And The Sea, wasn`t that blown away by it. What did I miss?

Well I suppose most of it was supposed to be beneath the surface, iceberg theory etc, but I didn't get blown away by it, just impressed by the man's ability to write. ;)

The Old Man and the Sea is waaaaaaaay better than The Sun Also Rises. Like, it's not even close, really.

Hemingway's style really worked for him sometimes, but the more of his work you read, the more obvious the limitations in his style become, in my opinion.

In unrelated news, the phrase "show, don't tell" is one of the worst ever coined. Telling is fine if the author is good at it; in fact, if the author is good at it, it becomes an invaluable tool

Fair enough. And that last bit is so true. Though arguably, one of the rules of writing, is to break the rules of writing, or at least forget them, where writing advice is concerned. :p
 
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