roosters93
Member
All Dan Brown's books are pretty much the same containing some shitty conspiracy and no subtlety or good use of suspense. But for some reason, I am continuing to read it.
At least I have A Clockwork Orange to look forward to.
Dark FaZe said:
Patient Zero. Zombie book recommended to me by a gaffer in one of my threads. Pretty good read so far.
Extollere said:Can anybody recommend to me a good book about the history of religion, or about world religions? I am fascinated by religions in general (although I don't belong to any myself), and find myself wanting to know more about them.
Alucard said:For a good "pop start," this might be a good place to look.
It only covers the major Abrahamic religions, but considering that they are the most dominant faiths in the world today, you would likely find this to be interesting. Karen Armstrong writes with respect for faith, but still has a historical eye.
Extollere said:Hrmmm sounds good but I think I am looking for something more conclusive. Something that covers from the earliest of religions to now, and why those religions are the way they are. Bloody details and descriptions in contempt are also ok, I'm not really looking for a book that glorifies religious history in particular.
If blackness is the absence of light, then those were the blackest eyes I'll ever see, because there was no light in those eyes, and no smallest possibility of light ever. You couldn't call them sad: sad at least knows what joy is, and grieves at being exiled from joy. However old he really was, those eyes were a thousand years past sad.
He kind of whispered, "You got run over." Hadn't been as close as I was, I'd never have heard him.
"You got run over." Like that - like it had already happened, you see? Exactly - like he was reading the news. You got it.
Okay. Now. This is what's important. This is where you're going to start wondering whether you should have maybe sat just a little closer to the door. See, what happened to Donnie, didn't happen then - it had already happened a week before.
Not even for the sake of at last learning my own being, my own soul. That can go undiscovered forever, and welcome, and I will remain Sayuri, your wife, no more and no less. And I will tend three graves, and pray at the shrine, and live as I can with what I have done. That is how it will be.
"Well, if that is what a war is, so be it. Consider our choices, Vizier, and make your recommendation." He added then, rather quickly, "But do arrange for a gracious war, if you possibly can. Something... something a little tidy. With songs in it, you know."
Mr. Moscowitz smiled, almost wistfully, and the President grew afraid. He had a sudden vision of Mr. Moscowitz banishing him and every other soul in France with a single word, a single gesture; and in that moment's vision it seemed to him that they all went away like clouds, leaving Mr. Moscowitz to dance by himself in cobwebbed Paris on Bastille day.
Plop, flop
Plop
Stewie Hauser - always the second guy to do or say anything, said he double-dared me. So there it was. You couldn't walk away from a double-dare, even from a dumbshit like Stewie. I mean, you could, but the rest of your life wouldn't ever be worth living after that. I knew that then. Not believed. Knew.
Depending on where you drink and with whom, you can hear that the First Chandail fashioned a world before this one of ours: gloriously beautiful, by all accounts, but crafted all of water, which was no problem until the Second Chandail made the sun. More wondrous yet, that must have been for a while, what with the new, new light bending and shattering so dazzlingly through those endless droplets - a rainbow creation, surely. Except, of course, that it melted away, by and by, and sank back into empty dark until the world we know came to be.
Extollere said:Hrmmm sounds good but I think I am looking for something more conclusive. Something that covers from the earliest of religions to now, and why those religions are the way they are. Bloody details and descriptions in contempt are also ok, I'm not really looking for a book that glorifies religious history in particular.