It's pretty enjoyable so far, but I'm only about 70 pages in.Cosmic Bus said:Oh man, I thought this was so terrible.
Bliany said:Restarted reading
http://images.amazon.com/images/P/038533348X.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
because i took a long enough break to forget most of what was going on.
Borges is quite awesome, I'm reading his stories off and on. I find his stories somewhat similar in style to that of Marquez's, in that they seem to have that magical realism flair. Although Borges is a lot tougher to understand due to the symbolic nature. Some of the stories I find too dry and detailed.afternoon delight said:What an awesome novel. I just finished that a while ago - quick read with damn interesting content.
One of the best books I've ever received, in fact an old friend gave it to me a few years ago. What do you think of it so far?
ElectricBlue187 said:
About halfway, I like it a lot.
Yah Slaughterhouse-5 is what got me into Vonnegut. Another other books of his you would recommend? I'm flying through Cat's Cradle pretty fast.HAOHMARU said:I love Kurt Vonnegut. Have you read Slaughter House 5 yet?
Bliany said:Yah Slaughterhouse-5 is what got me into Vonnegut. Another other books of his you would recommend? I'm flying through Cat's Cradle pretty fast.
Is this the same as Ficciones? If so, awesome, awesome book. It has my favorite short stories ever. Death and the Compass <3nitewulf said:juggling:
I finished Mother Night earlier this year, which is really good. So are Siren's of Titan and Welcome to the Monkey House (short story collection). Including S5 and CC, I think those are all of his I've read. Breakfast of Champions is next.Bliany said:Yah Slaughterhouse-5 is what got me into Vonnegut. Another other books of his you would recommend? I'm flying through Cat's Cradle pretty fast.
Ford Prefect said:As I Lay Dying, aka book with the best chapter of all time:
My mother is a fish
Ford Prefect said:As I Lay Dying, aka book with the best chapter of all time:
My mother is a fish
I finished Mother Night earlier this year, which is really good. So are Siren's of Titan and Welcome to the Monkey House (short story collection). Including S5 and CC, I think those are all of his I've read. Breakfast of Champions is next.
n0b said:[/IMG]
Just wanted to echo that this is a great book, although the cover on mine isn't nearly as cool.Guileless said:I love 70s paperback covers. That is a great read. You should search for the thread about Clarke's recent death for some good recommendations.
Cosmic Bus said:The praise this has been showered with is intriguing and I've had a number of people recommend this to me at work, but the general idea, the content and writing style nearly give me a severely negative physical reaction yet I still (almost) feel compelled to give it a try anyway. I'd be interested to hear your thoughts once you're finished.
FnordChan said:Last night I finished Tim Powers' Declare and it was just plain terrific.
iapetus said:Is this a trick fucking question?
wait is this out?iapetus said:Is this a trick fucking question?
Childhood's End is great.Yonn said:Just wanted to echo that this is a great book, although the cover on mine isn't nearly as cool.
I've also read 2001. Could someone list Clarke's essentials for those who are too lazy to search old threads?
Great choice, I just finished a collection of his recently.nitewulf said:
Sounds like good stuff. *Adds to library / Amazon queue.*PhlegmMaster said:
It's taken me months, but I've finally found a book about quantum mechanics that actually tries to make the reader understand quantum mechanics. There's math in it, and I've had to read the second chapter four times to really get it, but it's all very well explained without making assumptions about the reader's mathematical background.
This book is to quantum mechanics what The Blind Watchmaker is to evolution.
Yah Slaughterhouse-5 is what got me into Vonnegut. Another other books of his you would recommend? I'm flying through Cat's Cradle pretty fast.
Childhood's End is great.
Chapter 1 said:I thought of her programmers sitting in their cubicles, surrounded by the well-dressed swirl of analysts and managers. The "system" comes to them done on paper, in English. "All" they have to do is write the code. But somewhere in that translation between the paper and the code, the clarity breaks down. The world as humans understand it and the world as it must be explained to computers come together in the programmer in a strange state of disjunction.
I needed something to push me into supersaver shipping for Death Note volume 6. That looks awesome, and a nice compliment to A Brief History of Time (which I also just picked up).iced lightning said:To the OP: That book sounds really cool and I'll have to check it out, thanks. I'm currently reading this and loving it so far:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61EOm96nQbL._SL500_.jpg
Thanks, I'll check it out.Ford Prefect said:Childhood's End is great.
nitewulf said:juggling:
iapetus said:Is this a trick fucking question?
MIMIC said:Just finished last night: