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Reply #30 posted 11/26/06 11:04am

LleeLlee

2the9s said:

The Inheritance of Loss by Kiran Desai (if LleeLlee ever gets off her ass and gets it.. rolleyes )

The Iranian Labyrinth by Dilip Hiro

Chasing the Sea by Tom Bissell (this may be first up)

And Pynchon's Against the Day just came out! woot! That may be my project for the new year...



By the time I get it, it'll be out in paperback redface

shall I just wait for that? you know, I'm sure its not long now.
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Reply #31 posted 11/26/06 11:04am

applekisses

CarrieMpls said:

AsianBomb777 said:


4) David Sedares - Naked (I read the first 5 pages and it bored me senseless. I will try and reread it again)


omfg

How can you say that? Go read it again now! It's not boring, I promise!


Actually, I liked "Me Talk Pretty One Day" better. nod
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Reply #32 posted 11/26/06 11:05am

NAnomaly

Dante's Inferno

The Tempest and all the other books I'be bought and haven't gotten to yet. wink
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Reply #33 posted 11/26/06 11:06am

2the9s

LleeLlee said:

2the9s said:

The Inheritance of Loss by Kiran Desai (if LleeLlee ever gets off her ass and gets it.. rolleyes )

The Iranian Labyrinth by Dilip Hiro

Chasing the Sea by Tom Bissell (this may be first up)

And Pynchon's Against the Day just came out! woot! That may be my project for the new year...



By the time I get it, it'll be out in paperback redface

shall I just wait for that? you know, I'm sure its not long now.


It *is* in paperback already, git!

mad
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Reply #34 posted 11/26/06 11:06am

littlemissG

avatar

applekisses said:

CarrieMpls said:



omfg

How can you say that? Go read it again now! It's not boring, I promise!


Actually, I liked "Me Talk Pretty One Day" better. nod


That's the one with the speech pathologist?
That was funny.
No More Haters on the Internet.
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Reply #35 posted 11/26/06 11:09am

LleeLlee

2the9s said:

LleeLlee said:




By the time I get it, it'll be out in paperback redface

shall I just wait for that? you know, I'm sure its not long now.


It *is* in paperback already, git!

mad



oh shit! is it!? what already?
Amazon UK only had the Hardback when I last looked, I will buy it definitely.
...
[Edited 11/26/06 11:10am]
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Reply #36 posted 11/26/06 11:10am

Ace

IrresistibleB1tch said:

Well ladies and gentlemen, I don't think any of our contestants this evening have succeeded in encapsulating the intricacies of Proust's masterwork, so I'm going to award the first prize this evening to the girl with the biggest tits.

spit
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Reply #37 posted 11/26/06 11:20am

littlemissG

avatar

I also want to read more Terry Pratchett books:

The Thief of Time

The Fifth Elephant

Only You Can Save Mankind
No More Haters on the Internet.
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Reply #38 posted 11/26/06 11:30am

SnakePeel

I've asked Santa to bring me the Pet Shop Boys coffee table book "Catalouge" for Xmas.

Books I plan on buying or reading in short order:

The Key by Whitley Strieber

Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk (had this on my shelf for half-a-year and still haven't read it).

Exile On Main St. by Robert Greenwald

I, Goldstein by Al Goldstein
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Reply #39 posted 11/26/06 11:34am

2the9s

LleeLlee said:

2the9s said:



It *is* in paperback already, git!

mad



oh shit! is it!? what already?
Amazon UK only had the Hardback when I last looked, I will buy it definitely.



Look, if we read this book together I can't have you cussing all the time.
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Reply #40 posted 11/26/06 1:16pm

babynoz

AsianBomb777 said:

These are books are on my shortlist to read



1) Dean Koontz - Forever Odd (the sequal to Odd Thomas, a charming book about a young man who can see the spiritual realm).

2) Victor Hugo - Les Miserable. JAYSUS this book is big.

3) Alex Garland - The Beach (ok, I'm 50% done with it already, but I put it down months ago. falloff )

4) David Sedares - Naked (I read the first 5 pages and it bored me senseless. I will try and reread it again)

5) Orson Scott Card - All of the Ender's Shadow books.




I loved Dean Koontz's early books but now he seems so formulaic. Midnight is my favorite.

I haven't read Les Miserables but I've been meaning to add it to my list. I just finished Lost Star Of Myth And Time and it was fascinating. I'm about to start reading The Afghan, by Frederick Forsyth.
Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #41 posted 11/26/06 1:26pm

babynoz

evenstar3 said:

war and peace, and anne rice's memnoch the devil.




I've only read The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice and it was excellent. I'm going to check out her new one if I can remember.
Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #42 posted 11/26/06 1:26pm

AsianBomb777

babynoz said:

evenstar3 said:

war and peace, and anne rice's memnoch the devil.




I've only read The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice and it was excellent. I'm going to check out her new one if I can remember.




My favorite Anne Rice book ever is Ramses the Damned.
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Reply #43 posted 11/26/06 2:14pm

evenstar3

avatar

AsianBomb777 said:

babynoz said:





I've only read The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice and it was excellent. I'm going to check out her new one if I can remember.




My favorite Anne Rice book ever is Ramses the Damned.


That one is good! I haven't read it in years & years, but I liked it at the time nod

I can't decide whether I like Interview or The Vampire Lestat more. hmmm
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Reply #44 posted 11/26/06 2:18pm

Ace








"If you read only one book by an heiress' pet this year, pass up the DJ A.M. tome and pick-up Tinkerbell Hilton's engrossing page-turner! You'll feel like you've actually lived inside that purse!" - Gene Shalit
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Reply #45 posted 11/26/06 2:31pm

IrresistibleB1
tch

Ace said:








"If you read only one book by an heiress' pet this year, pass up the DJ A.M. tome and pick-up Tinkerbell Hilton's engrossing page-turner! You'll feel like you've actually lived inside that purse!" - Gene Shalit


spit
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Reply #46 posted 11/26/06 2:31pm

evenstar3

avatar

Ace said:








"If you read only one book by an heiress' pet this year, pass up the DJ A.M. tome and pick-up Tinkerbell Hilton's engrossing page-turner! You'll feel like you've actually lived inside that purse!" - Gene Shalit


eek

the cover of that book makes me want to scratch my eyes out.
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Reply #47 posted 11/26/06 2:39pm

IrresistibleB1
tch

evenstar3 said:

Ace said:








"If you read only one book by an heiress' pet this year, pass up the DJ A.M. tome and pick-up Tinkerbell Hilton's engrossing page-turner! You'll feel like you've actually lived inside that purse!" - Gene Shalit


eek

the cover of that book makes me want to scratch my eyes out.


there should be a law against using living beings as accessories...
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Reply #48 posted 11/26/06 2:48pm

evenstar3

avatar

IrresistibleB1tch said:

evenstar3 said:



eek

the cover of that book makes me want to scratch my eyes out.


there should be a law against using living beings as accessories...


definitely nod you know these girls have no concept of what the needs of the poor things actually are, they just treat them like stuffed animals or something disbelief
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Reply #49 posted 11/26/06 2:51pm

IrresistibleB1
tch

evenstar3 said:

IrresistibleB1tch said:



there should be a law against using living beings as accessories...


definitely nod you know these girls have no concept of what the needs of the poor things actually are, they just treat them like stuffed animals or something disbelief


yup... and you know there are teenage girls trying to emulate them sigh
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Reply #50 posted 11/26/06 2:52pm

2the9s

IrresistibleB1tch said:

evenstar3 said:



definitely nod you know these girls have no concept of what the needs of the poor things actually are, they just treat them like stuffed animals or something disbelief


yup... and you know there are teenage girls trying to emulate them sigh


Ummm...fellas? Back to the books, please.
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Reply #51 posted 11/26/06 2:53pm

IrresistibleB1
tch

2the9s said:

IrresistibleB1tch said:



yup... and you know there are teenage girls trying to emulate them sigh


Ummm...fellas? Back to the books, please.


ok, prof... rolleyes

i'm going to try & tackle War & Peace again this winter... this makes the 6th year, i think... sigh

other than that, i'm reading dog training books in preparation for my own...
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Reply #52 posted 11/26/06 2:58pm

evenstar3

avatar

IrresistibleB1tch said:

2the9s said:



Ummm...fellas? Back to the books, please.


ok, prof... rolleyes

i'm going to try & tackle War & Peace again this winter... this makes the 6th year, i think... sigh

other than that, i'm reading dog training books in preparation for my own...


wouldn't want him to smash a cellphone or something rolleyes

i want to try and finish it before christmas but i think school will get in the way sigh
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Reply #53 posted 11/26/06 3:00pm

IrresistibleB1
tch

evenstar3 said:

IrresistibleB1tch said:



ok, prof... rolleyes

i'm going to try & tackle War & Peace again this winter... this makes the 6th year, i think... sigh

other than that, i'm reading dog training books in preparation for my own...


wouldn't want him to smash a cellphone or something rolleyes

i want to try and finish it before christmas but i think school will get in the way sigh


eek i looked back and just saw that...

let's read it together!! which translation do you have? my hubby and i decided to read it together one year, but i swear he had the easier translation, with less french stuff to look up...
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Reply #54 posted 11/26/06 4:23pm

evenstar3

avatar

IrresistibleB1tch said:

evenstar3 said:



wouldn't want him to smash a cellphone or something rolleyes

i want to try and finish it before christmas but i think school will get in the way sigh


eek i looked back and just saw that...

let's read it together!! which translation do you have? my hubby and i decided to read it together one year, but i swear he had the easier translation, with less french stuff to look up...


it's a signet book, the translation's by anne dunnigan. smile there's quite a bit of french but it's mostly little phrases that aren't too bad.
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Reply #55 posted 11/26/06 4:35pm

TheResistor

avatar

Anx said:

A friend told me last week to finish reading whatever I'm slogging through right now, because I have to start reading Proust as soon as humanly possible. So, yeah. I guess that's on my short list, whether I like it or not. lol


Hi Anx!

I read all of Proust from December 04 to January 06. It's a bit hard to get into at the beginning. But, once you get the hang of it there's no putting it down...

my favorite is "Within A Budding Grove" volume two of six.

It's an amazing experience Anx, once you complete the ride, you'll never read anything the same again. In fact, everything (at least it's been my experience) I've read since has paled in comparison.

By the way I took a recommendation you made on one of these threads and read "Oh the Glory Of It All!"
rainbow

"...literal people are scary, man
literal people scare me
out there trying to rid the world of its poetry
while getting it wrong fundamentally
down at the church of "look, it says right here, see!" - ani difranco
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Reply #56 posted 11/26/06 4:41pm

IrresistibleB1
tch

evenstar3 said:

IrresistibleB1tch said:



eek i looked back and just saw that...

let's read it together!! which translation do you have? my hubby and i decided to read it together one year, but i swear he had the easier translation, with less french stuff to look up...


it's a signet book, the translation's by anne dunnigan. smile there's quite a bit of french but it's mostly little phrases that aren't too bad.


that's the version my husband read. i had a hard time with the Penguin edition, translated by Rosemary Edmonds.

i'm ready to give it another shot! woot!
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Reply #57 posted 11/26/06 4:53pm

DevotedPuppy

avatar

I'm in a book club with some co-workers so on the book club short list is:

Atonement yawn
Devil in the White City (almost finished)
The Bluest Eye
Tropic of Cancer
White Teeth
The Good Earth
In the Time of Butterflies
The Beautiful & the Damned
I am Charlotte Simmons (?)
The Namesake

(We all suggested books & then voted on which to read...I don't think any of my choices made it except Fitzgerald. confused )


On my personal short list there are too many to list (I have at least 7 lists in my palm pilot divided by genre geek), but I'd say at the top are:

Debating American Modernism: Stieglitz, Duchamp & the New York Avant-Garde
The Duchamp Effect
The Wretched of the Earth
Things Fall Apart
Brave New World
Profiles in Courage
some Camus...

but realistically, not sure what I'll get to sigh
"Your presence and dry wit are appealing in a mysterious way."
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Reply #58 posted 11/26/06 6:13pm

Anx

TheResistor said:

Anx said:

A friend told me last week to finish reading whatever I'm slogging through right now, because I have to start reading Proust as soon as humanly possible. So, yeah. I guess that's on my short list, whether I like it or not. lol


Hi Anx!

I read all of Proust from December 04 to January 06. It's a bit hard to get into at the beginning. But, once you get the hang of it there's no putting it down...

my favorite is "Within A Budding Grove" volume two of six.

It's an amazing experience Anx, once you complete the ride, you'll never read anything the same again. In fact, everything (at least it's been my experience) I've read since has paled in comparison.

By the way I took a recommendation you made on one of these threads and read "Oh the Glory Of It All!"


Really? What did you think of "Oh the Glory of it All"? I thought it was a really fun ride, and I found his family really interesting (and uncomfortably familiar in parts). I especially loved reading about Didi, that old hag!

I'm a little intimidated to start in on Proust, but too many people whose opinions I really respect have told me over the years that I need to read it. Is there an edition I should look for? One that's fairly inexpensive?
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Reply #59 posted 11/26/06 7:06pm

TheResistor

avatar

Anx said:

TheResistor said:



Hi Anx!

I read all of Proust from December 04 to January 06. It's a bit hard to get into at the beginning. But, once you get the hang of it there's no putting it down...

my favorite is "Within A Budding Grove" volume two of six.

It's an amazing experience Anx, once you complete the ride, you'll never read anything the same again. In fact, everything (at least it's been my experience) I've read since has paled in comparison.

By the way I took a recommendation you made on one of these threads and read "Oh the Glory Of It All!"


Really? What did you think of "Oh the Glory of it All"? I thought it was a really fun ride, and I found his family really interesting (and uncomfortably familiar in parts). I especially loved reading about Didi, that old hag!

I'm a little intimidated to start in on Proust, but too many people whose opinions I really respect have told me over the years that I need to read it. Is there an edition I should look for? One that's fairly inexpensive?


You know I really did enjoy "Oh the Glory of it All," and both Dede and Pat are so fucked up in the "fictional character" kind of way.

The version of "In Search of Lost Time" that I read is by Moncrief & Kilmartin from the Modern Day Libray. The volumes are in paperback and come in a beige cover (sp?) with gold fonts. Each volume has a differnt modern looking picture on the cover. "Swann's Way" has a picture of an unmade bed and pillow. When you start reading you'll get the gist of the cover photo. I've seen all six volumes (used) on Amazon for like $30 bucks. Depending on whether you like to buy used paperbacks or not. I had to have new copies because I highlight and make notes on the margins of all my books.

There is a new translation out that's supposed to be easier to read but they've only translated up to three volumes. My goal was to finish the whole thing so the newer translations were not going to work.

Let me know if you have any questions. Proust is an experience. He describes everything right down to "the shade of a butterfly wing." I used the task of reading this opus to coincide with my Zen Meditation (zazen) training. As it is a book about the moment. Every single moment. So, come on brother, pick up Volume One, and you'll never look at literature the same again.
rainbow

"...literal people are scary, man
literal people scare me
out there trying to rid the world of its poetry
while getting it wrong fundamentally
down at the church of "look, it says right here, see!" - ani difranco
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