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Thread started 02/18/07 5:35pm

2the9s

What Are You Reading?

I just finished Cormac McCarthy's The Road. I'd heard rave reviews of it but it struck me as a little too Stephen King without the engaging horror.

shrug

Don't get me wrong, I like Stephen King.

This book was about a man and a boy (his son) walking through some post-apocalyptic landscape, just trying to survive. They meet various ruffians/cannibals/haz-mat-suited people along the way and they manage to find enough jarred preserved foodstuffs to keep the plot going longer than I was comfortable with.

We never find out why the world was a charred wreck covered by a patina of soot and ash, and by three quarters of the way through we stop caring.

One thing that bothered me was that the boy was born as the world was ending, and yet he seemed to be more nostalgic for what was lost (and for what he could not have known) than anyone.

Maybe that was the point? That the man's loss was so completely handed down, so successfully transferred?

shrug

At one point the boy is playing a flute that he seems to have carved while no one was paying attention and I literally said out loud: "WTF?" (The actual letters...)

Anyway, it was like Mad Max meets The Stand meets Andy Griffith meets my last nerve.

Thumbs down.
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Reply #1 posted 02/18/07 5:38pm

Imago

I just now read this post but I feel more nostalgic than anyone on this site about a time before this shit was posted. shrug
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Reply #2 posted 02/18/07 5:39pm

karmatornado

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I'm reading two books actually. One is called Rope Burns, by F.X. Toole. Its a bunch of different short stories about boxers. One of the short stories inspired that movie Million Dollar Baby.

The second book I am reading is called A Case for Christ. The title is self explanitory.
Carpenters bend wood, fletchers bend arrows, wise men fashion themselves.

Don't Talk About It, Be About It!
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Reply #3 posted 02/18/07 5:39pm

2the9s

Imago said:

I just now read this post but I feel more nostalgic than anyone on this site about a time before this shit was posted. shrug


See, now you actually read my review. mushy
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Reply #4 posted 02/18/07 5:40pm

2the9s

karmatornado said:

The second book I am reading is called A Case for Christ. The title is self explanitory.


A case of beer for Christ?
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Reply #5 posted 02/18/07 5:42pm

karmatornado

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2the9s said:

karmatornado said:

The second book I am reading is called A Case for Christ. The title is self explanitory.


A case of beer for Christ?

lol Although the man did turn water to wine?
Carpenters bend wood, fletchers bend arrows, wise men fashion themselves.

Don't Talk About It, Be About It!
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Reply #6 posted 02/18/07 5:42pm

evenstar3

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just started this...though i don't know if i can take much more of how the author describes people. ill
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Reply #7 posted 02/18/07 5:46pm

2the9s

evenstar3 said:



just started this...though i don't know if i can take much more of how the author describes people. ill


2 1/2 stars on Amazon.

Ouch.

smile
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Reply #8 posted 02/18/07 5:53pm

evenstar3

avatar

2the9s said:

evenstar3 said:



just started this...though i don't know if i can take much more of how the author describes people. ill


2 1/2 stars on Amazon.

Ouch.

smile


damn! but i got for $3 at a bookstore's going out of business sale, so i wasn't expecting much lol
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Reply #9 posted 02/18/07 5:54pm

ZombieKitten



I got it for my birthday from my sister mushy
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Reply #10 posted 02/18/07 5:55pm

ZombieKitten

2the9s said:

I just finished Cormac McCarthy's The Road. I'd heard rave reviews of it but it struck me as a little too Stephen King without the engaging horror.

shrug

Don't get me wrong, I like Stephen King.

This book was about a man and a boy (his son) walking through some post-apocalyptic landscape, just trying to survive. They meet various ruffians/cannibals/haz-mat-suited people along the way and they manage to find enough jarred preserved foodstuffs to keep the plot going longer than I was comfortable with.

We never find out why the world was a charred wreck covered by a patina of soot and ash, and by three quarters of the way through we stop caring.

One thing that bothered me was that the boy was born as the world was ending, and yet he seemed to be more nostalgic for what was lost (and for what he could not have known) than anyone.

Maybe that was the point? That the man's loss was so completely handed down, so successfully transferred?

shrug

At one point the boy is playing a flute that he seems to have carved while no one was paying attention and I literally said out loud: "WTF?" (The actual letters...)

Anyway, it was like Mad Max meets The Stand meets Andy Griffith meets my last nerve.

Thumbs down.


so I don't have to go and read it then
biggrin

Phew!
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Reply #11 posted 02/18/07 5:57pm

Protege

avatar

evenstar3 said:

2the9s said:



2 1/2 stars on Amazon.

Ouch.

smile


damn! but i got for $3 at a bookstore's going out of business sale, so i wasn't expecting much lol

I borrowed that from a friend a while ago. Still haven't finished reading it yet lol I have so many books laying around that aren't mine, but I haven't completed yet...

HE'S COMING AGAIN
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Reply #12 posted 02/18/07 5:59pm

2the9s

ZombieKitten said:



I got it for my birthday from my sister mushy


From Publisher's Weekly...

The premise may be rather stale, but Beckman's intense, ironic response to her impending divorce makes for fascinating reading as she refuses to pass judgment on Martin, instead offering a running series of pithy analytical observations about their split: "Love is not a social democrat, Martin. It doesn't allow itself to be redistributed, it doesn't go in much for solidarity. You thought it did, didn't you?"


Yikes.

What happened to A Suitable Boy?

biggrin
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Reply #13 posted 02/18/07 6:02pm

Imago



This book, so far, has alot of humerous passages, and some of the author's experiences are very similar to mine from having travelled abraod.

My main beef with this book is that the author does not tell you very much about the culture of the folks she runs into at the various locales. For example, her experiences in Oktoberfest in Germany were often hilarious, but the accounts of the people she runs into seem incidental and nothing about them gives you very much of a feel for the society she finds herself in. It reads like a very humorous diary, more so than a hardcore travelogue. Still entertaining though. shrug





A better travel book is this one:


Though it isn't as humorous as "No Touch Monkey", it paints an image of the authors travel destinations so vividly you can feel the heat of the tropical sun, and smell the food of the feasts he's been lucky enough to witness. Great read.
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Reply #14 posted 02/18/07 6:02pm

evenstar3

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Protege said:

evenstar3 said:



damn! but i got for $3 at a bookstore's going out of business sale, so i wasn't expecting much lol

I borrowed that from a friend a while ago. Still haven't finished reading it yet lol I have so many books laying around that aren't mine, but I haven't completed yet...


i have whole boxes of boxes that i haven't gotten around to reading yet, but can't give away lol redface
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Reply #15 posted 02/18/07 6:04pm

Protege

avatar

evenstar3 said:

Protege said:


I borrowed that from a friend a while ago. Still haven't finished reading it yet lol I have so many books laying around that aren't mine, but I haven't completed yet...


i have whole boxes of boxes that i haven't gotten around to reading yet, but can't give away lol redface

giggle I can definitely identify with that.

HE'S COMING AGAIN
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Reply #16 posted 02/18/07 6:08pm

2the9s

Imago said:



This book, so far, has alot of humerous passages, and some of the author's experiences are very similar to mine from having travelled abraod.

My main beef with this book is that the author does not tell you very much about the culture of the folks she runs into at the various locales. For example, her experiences in Oktoberfest in Germany were often hilarious, but the accounts of the people she runs into seem incidental and nothing about them gives you very much of a feel for the society she finds herself in. It reads like a very humorous diary, more so than a hardcore travelogue. Still entertaining though. shrug


I've seen this book. I love travel writing, though this sounds lame. lol
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Reply #17 posted 02/18/07 6:10pm

Imago

2the9s said:

Imago said:



This book, so far, has alot of humerous passages, and some of the author's experiences are very similar to mine from having travelled abraod.

My main beef with this book is that the author does not tell you very much about the culture of the folks she runs into at the various locales. For example, her experiences in Oktoberfest in Germany were often hilarious, but the accounts of the people she runs into seem incidental and nothing about them gives you very much of a feel for the society she finds herself in. It reads like a very humorous diary, more so than a hardcore travelogue. Still entertaining though. shrug


I've seen this book. I love travel writing, though this sounds lame. lol


It's not bad at all.
But I'd recommend it as a guilty pleasure moreso than a learning experience.

what travel books do you like? Also, do you feel that we're becoming closer lately? Like, we're totally friends. I mean, I feel like I'm going to be in your uber-clique soon. Or whatever, you're calling that thing nowadays. shrug
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Reply #18 posted 02/18/07 6:12pm

Protege

avatar

I'm reading -
Skeleton Crew (still in tiny bits) by Stephen King
and I will soon be reading Hannibal when I can get my hands on it falloff Then Red Dragon, which might take a while. hmm Sadly.

HE'S COMING AGAIN
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Reply #19 posted 02/18/07 6:16pm

Imago




Also, I just started this last night. The first 3 pages hooked me. I used to be a total sci-fi geek when it came to books (Orson Scott Card, Asimov, Arthur C Clarke, etc.), but I stopped for some reason.

I've started reading it again starting with Arthur C. Clarke's strange and eeri "Childhood's End", and now am on this book by Baxter.

I think the reason why I like sci-fi is that aside from alarmist warnings, and the usual anti-religous rant, it's a genre that explores possibilities rather than limitations.
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Reply #20 posted 02/18/07 6:21pm

2the9s

Imago said:

2the9s said:



I've seen this book. I love travel writing, though this sounds lame. lol


It's not bad at all.
But I'd recommend it as a guilty pleasure moreso than a learning experience.

what travel books do you like? Also, do you feel that we're becoming closer lately? Like, we're totally friends. I mean, I feel like I'm going to be in your uber-clique soon. Or whatever, you're calling that thing nowadays. shrug


To answer your second question first: no, we are definitely NOT becoming closer.

I've been reading essays by Jan Morris lately, who is good. She traveled everywhere and her writing is good. One of my all time favorite books is Rebecca West's Black Lamb Grey Falcon. I also like Bruce Chatwin's Songlines, Robert Byron's Road to Oxiana, so many more.
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Reply #21 posted 02/18/07 6:23pm

2the9s

Imago said:




Also, I just started this last night. The first 3 pages hooked me. I used to be a total sci-fi geek when it came to books (Orson Scott Card, Asimov, Arthur C Clarke, etc.), but I stopped for some reason.

I've started reading it again starting with Arthur C. Clarke's strange and eeri "Childhood's End", and now am on this book by Baxter.

I think the reason why I like sci-fi is that aside from alarmist warnings, and the usual anti-religous rant, it's a genre that explores possibilities rather than limitations.


Do you read Philip K. Dick? LleeLlee turned me on to him. Valis is just incredible.

Stanislav Lem is amazing too.
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Reply #22 posted 02/18/07 6:24pm

FunkMistress

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CHICKENS ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO DO COCAINE, SILKY HEN.
The Normal Whores Club
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Reply #23 posted 02/18/07 6:49pm

ZombieKitten

2the9s said:

From Publisher's Weekly...

The premise may be rather stale, but Beckman's intense, ironic response to her impending divorce makes for fascinating reading as she refuses to pass judgment on Martin, instead offering a running series of pithy analytical observations about their split: "Love is not a social democrat, Martin. It doesn't allow itself to be redistributed, it doesn't go in much for solidarity. You thought it did, didn't you?"


Yikes.

What happened to A Suitable Boy?

biggrin


NOTHING!
I am thinking of using it as a doorstop nod
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Reply #24 posted 02/18/07 6:52pm

IrresistibleB1
tch



and

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Reply #25 posted 02/18/07 7:32pm

WillyWonka



Just got this but haven't yet begun reading it.
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Reply #26 posted 02/18/07 7:40pm

DanceWme

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Reply #27 posted 02/18/07 7:42pm

evenstar3

avatar

DanceWme said:



eek
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Reply #28 posted 02/18/07 7:43pm

DanceWme

evenstar3 said:

DanceWme said:



eek

lol



I read A divine revelation of hell before this one nod

Now, that one deserves a eek
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Reply #29 posted 02/19/07 6:21am

Sweeny79

Moderator

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Arkansas investigative journalist Leveritt (The Boys on the Tracks) presents an affecting account of a controversial trial in the wake of three child murders in Arkansas. In May 1993, three eight-year-old boys were found mutilated and murdered in West Memphis, a small and tattered Arkansas town. The crime scene and forensic evidence were mishandled, but a probation officer directed the police toward Damien Echols, a youth with a troubled home life, antiauthoritarian attitudes and admiration for the "Goth" and Wiccan subcultures. Amid rumors of satanic cult activity, investigators browbeat Jesse Misskelley, a mentally challenged 16-year-old acquaintance of Echols, into providing a wildly inconsistent confession that he'd helped Echols and a third teen, Jason Baldwin, assault the boys. Leveritt meticulously reconstructs the clamorous investigation and two jury trials that followed. All three boys were convicted on the basis of Misskelley's dubious statements and such "evidence" as Echols's fondness for William Blake and Stephen King. Leveritt, who makes a strong argument that the convictions were a miscarriage of justice, also suggests an alternative suspect: one victim's stepfather, who had a history of domestic violence, yet was seemingly shielded by authorities because he was a drug informant for local investigators. Sure to be locally controversial, Leveritt's carefully researched book offers a riveting portrait of a down-at-the-heels, socially conservative rural town with more than its share of corruption and violence.

eek and cry
In spite of the cost of living, it's still popular.
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