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Thread: What are you currently reading?

  1. #126
    Quote Originally Posted by per anporth View Post
    If this isn't the best short story ever written, then there are very few that are better than it.
    Absolutely. I was stunned how good it was. I'd read Moby Dick years ago in school, so I knew Melville was good. I guess I forgot how good he could be.
    I want to dynamite your mind with love tonight.

  2. #127
    Estimated Prophet notallwhowander's Avatar
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    I'm now into Jon Ronson's The Men Who Stare at Goats. It's pretty awesome: weird, frightening, and hysterical in turns, or all at the same time.
    Wake up to find out that you are the eyes of the world.

  3. #128
    Quote Originally Posted by -=RTFR666=- View Post
    Douglas Preston and Lee Child are another two that I'm starting to dig into. I had a chance to meet and speak with Preston when he stopped in to my ASU magazine writing class for a Q&A, and he was extremely affable and forthcoming.
    I just finished Lincoln Child's Unitopia. I thought it was a pretty solid read. I wonder how much input/influence the other has on their solo efforts. they've penned some very good books together but it hard to top Relic. I've missed some of their work because I kinda tired of Pendergast but with advance reviews of Two Graves being so positive, I need to go back and read what I've missed.

  4. #129
    Member Planechant's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by kid_runningfox View Post
    AJP Taylor: The Habsburg Monarchy
    I have a real weakness for AJP Taylor that I was mocked for when at school, but he's kind of like Tom Costain, good storytelling history books.
    Gary Chapin

    French accordion blog: http://www.accordeonaire.blogspot.com

  5. #130
    Member Camelogue's Avatar
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    Ishmael and something by Eric Hoffer

  6. #131
    Animal Farm by Orwell.

  7. #132
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    Smallcreep's Day is Peter Currell Brown's only novel and it is a very good one. Sorta like a Gormenghast where the castle-world is instead a factory-world.
    And of course...the prog connection.

  8. #133
    facetious maximus Yves's Avatar
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    A Fire Upon The Deep- Vernor Vinge.

    I got away from SF for a while. I was getting caught up on many of the classics I never read as a teen; which came free with me e-reader. But I needed something a little more complex to sink my teeth into.
    "Corn Flakes pissed in. You ranted. Mission accomplished. Thread closed."

    -Cozy 3:16-

  9. #134
    Jefferson James
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    I'm currently reading a trippy book called "Out West" by Fred G. Leebron; it's a murder story involving two of my favorite locations: San Francisco (Tenderloin District) and Van Nuys.

  10. #135
    Member Big Ears's Avatar
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    Tales From Shakespeare by Charles and Mary Lamb (first published in 1807). Described as a helpful preface to the actual plays, these are just fun to read. The Lambs were fine writers, but prone to mental instability - Mary murdered their mother in a fit of insanity.



    The 20 stories adapted from the selected plays are:

    The Tempest (Mary Lamb)
    A Midsummer Night's Dream (Mary Lamb)
    The Winter's Tale (Mary Lamb)
    Much Ado About Nothing (Mary Lamb)
    As You Like It (Mary Lamb)
    Two Gentlemen of Verona (Mary Lamb)
    The Merchant of Venice (Mary Lamb)
    Cymbeline (Mary Lamb)
    King Lear (Charles Lamb)
    Macbeth (Charles Lamb)
    All's Well That Ends Well (Mary Lamb)
    The Taming of the Shrew (Mary Lamb)
    The Comedy of Errors (Mary Lamb)
    Measure for Measure (Mary Lamb)
    Twelfth Night (Mary Lamb)
    Timon of Athens (Charles Lamb)
    Romeo and Juliet (Charles Lamb)
    Hamlet, Prince of Denmark (Charles Lamb)
    Othello (Charles Lamb)
    Pericles, Prince of Tyre (Mary Lamb)

    There is a full copy online with beautiful artwork from Walter Paget (1910):

    http://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00078081/00001/8j
    Last edited by Big Ears; 12-14-2012 at 01:32 PM.
    Member since Wednesday 09.09.09

  11. #136
    The Catcher in the Rye.

  12. #137
    Studmuffin Scott Bails's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by KerryKompost View Post
    I'm currently reading a trippy book

    Of course you are.
    Music isn't about chops, or even about talent - it's about sound and the way that sound communicates to people. Mike Keneally

  13. #138
    Estimated Prophet notallwhowander's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by KerryKompost View Post
    I'm currently reading a trippy book called "Out West" by Fred G. Leebron; it's a murder story involving two of my favorite locations: San Francisco (Tenderloin District) and Van Nuys.
    May I ask why Van Nuys is one of your favorite locations?
    Wake up to find out that you are the eyes of the world.

  14. #139
    Just started Keith Richards' "Life". Liking it so far - seems like the man's personality, intonation and manner of speech is really present in the book, even though it was of course written by someone else.

  15. #140
    The Given Day- by Dennis Lehane. Set at the end of the first World War in Boston. Fantastic historical fiction.
    Don Cassidy
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  16. #141
    facetious maximus Yves's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Levgan View Post
    Just started Keith Richards' "Life". Liking it so far
    I think that he too took some enjoyment from it.
    "Corn Flakes pissed in. You ranted. Mission accomplished. Thread closed."

    -Cozy 3:16-

  17. #142
    Member davis's Avatar
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    Interviews with Dick Dale, George Thorogood, Kim Lenz, and Devin Townsend as I await a book called 'Conversationally Speaking."
    Last edited by davis; 12-27-2012 at 05:17 PM.

  18. #143
    Couple of things to take on vacation. Bukowski's Post Office and Salinger's Nine Stories.

    Also reading some Melville shorts on my iPad and blazing through the second compendium of Walking Dead. I'd take it on vacation with me, but that sucker weighs five pounds.
    I want to dynamite your mind with love tonight.

  19. #144
    Moderator Duncan Glenday's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by polmico View Post
    ...I'd take it on vacation with me, but that sucker weighs five pounds.
    You need a Kindle, or a Nook!

    I carry about 30 pounds of books with me on my phone, and double that on my Nook.
    Regards,

    Duncan

  20. #145
    Member -=RTFR666=-'s Avatar
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    My stocking stuffers XMAS 2012:

    Who I Am - Pete Townshend

    Far and Away: A Prize Every Time - Neil Peart

    A book about the history of the MAFIA from first-hand accounts - the exact subtitle and authors (brothers) escape me at present
    -=Will you stand by me against the cold night, or are you afraid of the ice?=-

  21. #146
    Traversing The Dream 100423's Avatar
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    The First Four Notes - Matthew Guerrieri

    http://www.thefirstfournotes.com/p/about-book.html

    Received it as a gift for Christmas...

  22. #147
    Finished the Catcher in the Rye this week. Might read The Call of the Wild starting today. On my Iphone.

    If the author has been dead for 70 years, you can get the book for free online. In the public domain.

  23. #148
    Quote Originally Posted by Duncan Glenday View Post
    You need a Kindle, or a Nook!

    I carry about 30 pounds of books with me on my phone, and double that on my Nook.
    Well, I've got the iPad, though I'm not sure I feel comfortable taking it with me on the beach.

    In the case of the Walking Dead book, financially it was a better option. $35 for the compendium versus $2.99 per single issue or $9.99 for each collection of ten issues. The compendium collects 50 issues, and it will like nice on my shelf next to the other compendium.

    I still prefer real books, but I've started reading things here and there on my iPad--mostly public domain stuff.
    I want to dynamite your mind with love tonight.

  24. #149
    I'm here for the moosic NogbadTheBad's Avatar
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    I think I'm going to download the complete HP Lovecraft and complete Shelock Holmes onto the wife's Nook. Grand total of $4.
    Ian

    Host of the Post-Avant Jazzcore Happy Hour on progrock.com
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    I blame Wynton, what was the question?
    There are only 10 types of people in the World, those who understand binary and those that don't.
    I'm one of the 212.

  25. #150
    Traversing The Dream 100423's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by NogbadTheBad View Post
    I think I'm going to download the complete HP Lovecraft and complete Shelock Holmes onto the wife's Nook. Grand total of $4.

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