Unknown Fighter Type II
Member
Just started Eye of the World (Wheel of Time).
Hi Gaf,
Anyone have any recommendations for a book I can read. In my 20's depressed, not sure what I want to do in life. Looking for a meaningful book I can enjoy that might show me different perspectives and such.
Thanks.
Hi Gaf,
Anyone have any recommendations for a book I can read. In my 20's depressed, not sure what I want to do in life. Looking for a meaningful book I can enjoy that might show me different perspectives and such.
Thanks.
I just finished it last week. So good! She has another book that I am going to have to start pretty soon.
Nice! Move immediately to 'Best Served Cold', that is his best in my books, though I actually really loved 'Red Country'.Finished
Hey man, I'm in a very similar predicament. I hadn't read anything but websites for years and I, too, loved King in my youth.Anyone have recommendations to ease me back into reading? I used to really enjoy it and fell out of it for a long time. Now I'm depressed and in a slump and want to take up reading again to help get out of the slump. I just finished Looking For Alaska and really, really liked it. It was an easy, quick read so it kept my attention.
Other books I have loved from the past:
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
The World According to Garp
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
The Road
I think I might re-read The World According to Garp since it is, this far, my favorite book and it's been so long since I read it. In elementary/middle school I read a lot of Stephen King and Dean Koontz and generally enjoyed them. I've read a lot of Palahniuk's stuff and liked it as well. I also liked Eggers' You Shall Know Our Velocity! but wouldn't put it in my "loved" list.
I plan to go through the links in the OP but figured if I spelled out some stuff I liked before and explained that I was looking for some simple, quickish reads that it might be a better start for getting recommendations to get back into reading.
MORT
My favourite of his
I was forced to read "Falling Man" in English class and like every book you have to read in class, it was complete boring. I will give it another spin in a year... :/
first delillo novel. really enjoying it.
Im quite liking it so far and I definitely think that its one of the better fantasy novels out there. The plot reads more like a mystery/suspense novel than a hero quest, and so far does a very good job at it
My only real issue is that the dialogue, while good, feels too 'casual'. I have a hard time buying that tone when the society is supposed to be strongly hierarchical. Though that might change in later books due to the society/clan he is living in currently (outcast bums) and the other people he has associated so far with (not going to spoil it).
http://www.ideonautics.com/manual2.htmHi Gaf,
Anyone have any recommendations for a book I can read. In my 20's depressed, not sure what I want to do in life. Looking for a meaningful book I can enjoy that might show me different perspectives and such.
Thanks.
I started reading Ready Player One last night. Just the introduction, but I am already hooked, can tell I'm really going to love it. I joined the GAF goodreads group as well, is there any consistency to say a monthly book club or reviews or anything? I updated my goal to read 12 books this year. I figure one book a month is a pretty fair average for how slow I can read sometimes.
Also, I am quickly learning about the annoyances of eBook drm. Feels like I've installed 10 different programs to deal with everything getting things from all over on my kobo touch.
Nice! Move immediately to 'Best Served Cold', that is his best in my books, though I actually really loved 'Red Country'.
You are my new favorite poster.
The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon (2009) is a non-fiction book by American author David Grann. It tells the story of the legendary British explorer Percy Fawcett who, in 1925, disappeared with his son in the Amazon while looking for an ancient lost city. For decades, explorers and scientists have tried to find evidence of his party and the Lost City of Z. Perhaps as many as 100 people perished or disappeared searching for Fawcett over the years. Grann made his own journey into the Amazon, revealing new evidence about how Fawcett died and showing that Z may have really existed right under his feet
Love it, and the series is great. Frequently changes things up, too.
The dialogue won't change, though. It's pretty much all casual, all the way through. You might try the Khaavren books by the same author (starting with The Phoenix Guards), if you want fancier dialogue. Beware, it's pretty much at the opposite extreme.
I got sad today because it's highly likely I won't be able to teach any of these stories as a high school teacher, but I probably would have been able to if I followed my dreams of becoming a professor (but I probably wouldn't have gotten a job because there's barely any positions open).
Anyway, let's hang out.
I was forced to read "Falling Man" in English class and like every book you have to read in class, it was complete boring. I will give it another spin in a year... :/
When I stopped reading that meant no more Repairman Jack and now I'm going to correct that. For those of you who've never read anything by F. Paul Wilson I HIGHLY recommend the Repairman Jack series, The Adversary Cycle, and The Barrens and Others (short story collection).
Ok, so. Maybe you can help me out, here. I wanted to try this series, but had a little trouble figuring it out. There are, what, two separate series? And Repairman Jack first appears in one book of the Adversary series, but not the others? Or...?
Basically, where do I start if I want to read Repairman Jack?
+1 Repairman Jack is the shit.
Enjoy it. I loved it!Plan to start this after work.