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Official Winter Book Reading Thread I can't find the past thread, and maybe it's locked at this point. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I also found The Goldfinch to be very long and a lot of blathering at times, but I was so drawn in to Theo's story, his relationship with Boris and everything else going on in this story. I particularly enjoyed the relationships Theo had with other characters in the book too. Donna Tartt has written only 3 books and all are very quirky and don't always leave you with a sense of completion or believeability, but she's such a good writer and I can't wait to read her next novel.
I'm about to start Harlem Nights from Colson Whitehead. I've read a few of this books and he never disappoints. | |
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Will The Bomber Mafia The Body Keeps The Score Midnight In Washington Prince Lestat Finding Soul on the Psth of Orisa Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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I will also be reading Diana Gabaldon's Go Tell The Bees That I Am Gone - the 9th book in the Outlander series. I've been reading this series for over 25 years and have been patiently waiting about 6 years for this next installment to be released. Also, Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. I really enjoy her books. | |
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I plan on reading Nothing Lasts Forever by Roderick Thorpe on Christmas Eve when the kids have gone to bed. It's fairly short so I should be able to get through it in one go. For anyone who doesn't know, it's the book that Die Hard was based on. I've never read it before so I'm looking forward to it. | |
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I just happened to be in my local independent bookstore to discover there was a promo from the Bill Gates' foundation that bought his 5 recommendations, sent them to a bunch of independent book stores, to give away for free! I was the 100th person out of 100 free book stacks. So these are on my Winter Reading List: http://gatesnotes.com/Abo...Books-2021
. So far I've read Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell, and would recommend it. . I've also been reading Alan Davis' Jerusalem. I'm 200 pages into this monster, and so far it is so, so dry. Would not recommend. . I just finished Ijeoma Olou's Mediocre, non-fiction - I would definitely recommend. I usually have 3 books in progress, so my current non-fiction book is Thomas Sowell's A Conflict of Visions. A nice conservative balance to my usual reading.
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I'm reading The Conquest of the Incas by John Hemming, which is exactly about what the title suggests: the conquest of the Inca empire by the Spanish conquistadores. The book is from 1970, which means it's older than I am, but it's still the definitive history. And it brings me back to when I visited Peru myself. If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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Not really reading but working through, but it is not Winter in Australia anyway: . Burmese: A Cultural Approach. This is co written by a friend of mine in Mandalay, Myanmar, Allen Lynn and Ward Keeler, and . Burmese: A Comprehensive Grammar by San San Hnin Tun and Mathias Jenny . Bot because I am working on basic grammar tools for learning Burmese. | |
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MarkThrust said: I just happened to be in my local independent bookstore to discover there was a promo from the Bill Gates' foundation that bought his 5 recommendations, sent them to a bunch of independent book stores, to give away for free! I was the 100th person out of 100 free book stacks. So these are on my Winter Reading List: http://gatesnotes.com/Abo...Books-2021
. So far I've read Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell, and would recommend it. . I've also been reading Alan Davis' Jerusalem. I'm 200 pages into this monster, and so far it is so, so dry. Would not recommend. . I just finished Ijeoma Olou's Mediocre, non-fiction - I would definitely recommend. I usually have 3 books in progress, so my current non-fiction book is Thomas Sowell's A Conflict of Visions. A nice conservative balance to my usual reading.
Thanks for mentioning Hamnet, it's on my reading list too. The reviews are very good but I don't know anyone that's read it. | |
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Vanishing New York by Jeremiah Moss - decent critique of hyper-gentrification, but tends to repeat the same points over and over, so I'm struggling to get through all 400+ pages.
Duck Soup by J Hoberman. Again, quite decent. A slim volume, somewhat academic in nature. Doesn't really add anything new to what is already known about the film, but at least it doesn't do it fairly quickly. | |
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IanRG said: Not really reading but working through, but it is not Winter in Australia anyway: . Burmese: A Cultural Approach. This is co written by a friend of mine in Mandalay, Myanmar, Allen Lynn and Ward Keeler, and . Burmese: A Comprehensive Grammar by San San Hnin Tun and Mathias Jenny . Bot because I am working on basic grammar tools for learning Burmese. Are you planning to go there? If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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. Not currently with Covid and the Coup. . I have been there a number of times, most recently January/February 2020 - For the flight and layover on Bangkok, we were masked up, temperature checked and fortunately got back to Australia before the 2 week quarantines. When we were at Manadalay University, two busloads of Chinese tourists arrived at our hotel and it was only then that masks were worn within Myanmar. I am in constant contact with family and friends there. | |
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I see. And then it makes sense to learn the language. If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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Only non fiction babee. All you others say Hell Yea!! | |
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Now how hard is it to list what you're reading? | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Serious question, do visual novels count? 99% of them are pervy nonsense but sometimes you come across one that is better written than most books that are considered to be classics. | |
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. With classics like "Watchmen", "The Sandman" series, "Maus" and "Persepolis", I don't see why not. . There are others like "They called us enemy", the "Fullmetal Alchemist" series and the "Death Note" series. The last one was much better than the TV series "Dexter". | |
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IanRG said:
. With classics like "Watchmen", "The Sandman" series, "Maus" and "Persepolis", I don't see why not. . There are others like "They called us enemy", the "Fullmetal Alchemist" series and the "Death Note" series. The last one was much better than the TV series "Dexter". Just to be clear, when I say visual novel, I'm not talking about graphic novels or comic books. I'm referring to actual visual novels like The House In Fata Morgana or the Zero Escape series. | |
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. That clarifies the comment about visual novels tending to be "pervy nonsense", but I don't see why either could not be considered winter reading books. | |
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IanRG said:
. That clarifies the comment about visual novels tending to be "pervy nonsense", but I don't see why either could not be considered winter reading books. Because you can read them... in winter? Like any other book. | |
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. Exactly | |
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onlyforaminute said: Will The Bomber Mafia The Body Keeps The Score Midnight In Washington Prince Lestat Finding Soul on the Psth of Orisa I wish Anne were still alive so I could tweet her and ask why she was creating a long list of ancient vampires. Good lawd, this is like a frikkin roll call. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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. If ever there was a person who could answer after their death Anne would be one. | |
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IanRG said:
. Exactly | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I’ll try to focus on reading A Course In Miracles by Helen Schucman. Hell, some of it at the very least, it’s a hard read for me but an important one. I’ve been reading Mark Nepo’s The Book of Awakening for the whole entire past year and I only have two entries to finish left, you’re supposed to read each entry per day, like a journal, even better if you go back & reread those entries you read that day, which explain my reading’s long time span of the book. | |
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