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12-02-2012, 07:28 PM
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I read Young Stalin. Extremely interesting if you're into European history, otherwise I guess I can see a skip. Nonetheless, after that I read Blood Meridian, and dear god is that a dark book. Very worth reading, but at the same time very dark.
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Last edited by Cigaro : 12-02-2012 at 07:32 PM.
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12-02-2012, 07:30 PM
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TomTom Out
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forgot about this thread.
recent books I've finished:
Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk
Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy
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12-02-2012, 07:34 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brent
forgot about this thread.
recent books I've finished:
Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk
Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy
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Any thoughts after Blood Meridian? I realized once I met the judge I was in for one helluva dark ride.
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12-02-2012, 07:39 PM
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TomTom Out
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cigaro
Any thoughts after Blood Meridian? I realized once I met the judge I was in for one helluva dark ride.
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I think The Judge is one of my favorite characters ever. Also, that book is so goddamn violent, I love it.
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Pick the Winners / '08: 171-96 (W) / '09: 177-90 / '10: 171-96 / '11: 183-84 (W) / '12: 173-94
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12-02-2012, 07:55 PM
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All-NFLDC
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What did you think about Haunted? I found it hit and miss but there were some ******* brilliant stories in there and the writer's retreat plot I found pretty great at times.
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12-02-2012, 08:03 PM
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TomTom Out
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr. Gonzo
What did you think about Haunted? I found it hit and miss but there were some ******* brilliant stories in there and the writer's retreat plot I found pretty great at times.
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the shorts about each member of the workshop was far more entertaining than the actual plot of the story
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Pick the Winners / '08: 171-96 (W) / '09: 177-90 / '10: 171-96 / '11: 183-84 (W) / '12: 173-94
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12-02-2012, 08:05 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brent
the shorts about each member of the workshop was far more entertaining than the actual plot of the story
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Agreed. That story I feel like had a ton of potential but really fell flat most of the time though I did think it had it's moments. I think I was in grade 10 when Chuck Palahniuk started reading Guts to audiences and making them faint. I remember bringing in an audio recording and just playing it for people.
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12-06-2012, 02:45 PM
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Anyone care to talk about Cloud Atlas? I just finished it and plan on starting again, soon, actually. Simply because I enjoy it so much its worth a second read.
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12-06-2012, 11:41 PM
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I will be reading The Road after finishing LotR tomorrow. Unless there is another McCarthy book I should tackle first..?
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12-07-2012, 12:37 AM
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It might not be my favorite McCarthy book, but it is the first one I read by him and I have no suggestion against you doing the same.
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12-07-2012, 07:27 AM
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TomTom Out
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hobbes2053
I will be reading The Road after finishing LotR tomorrow. Unless there is another McCarthy book I should tackle first..?
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The Road and All the Pretty Horses are probably the easiest to follow. I love Blood Meridian, but that isn't exactly for the faint of heart.
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Pick the Winners / '08: 171-96 (W) / '09: 177-90 / '10: 171-96 / '11: 183-84 (W) / '12: 173-94
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12-08-2012, 06:11 AM
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LotR is done. The Road it is. I expect that I'll get to more of McCarthy's stuff in due time.
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12-08-2012, 08:14 AM
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Just finished The Shining. The ending was epicly (words?) better than the movie.
It was odd to see that all the famous scenes in the movie aren't in the book.
(Here's Johnny! The twin girls in the hallway)
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12-20-2012, 11:15 PM
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Recently finished Slaughterhouse-Five and All The King's Men. Slaughterhouse was good, not spectacular, but solid throughout and easily readable. I like All The King's Men a bit more. I had expected from what it had been described as to just be reading a mostly political/thriller narrative, and it was absolutely nothing like that. Definitely one of my favorite books that I have read so far.
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12-20-2012, 11:20 PM
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Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him Horatio; a fellow of infinite jest.
Yeah, I just started Infinite Jest. Hopefully it proves... finite.
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<+njx9> i'm pretty sure your people still eat boots in north korea, bantx. they don't know what vegetables are.
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12-27-2012, 01:18 PM
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Mr. Rogers
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Finally read Ender's Game, any recommendations on whether I should read any others in the Ender's series and, if so, which ones? (This goes for the Bean books as well...)
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12-27-2012, 01:45 PM
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I'd skip the original sequels to Ender's Game and go into the Bean books personally.
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** RIP themaninblack. You will be missed. **
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12-27-2012, 03:14 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by vidae
I'd skip the original sequels to Ender's Game and go into the Bean books personally.
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Agreed, the original sequels aren't the same type of books. But the Bean book is awesome.
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03-09-2013, 12:03 AM
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I've given up mentioning most books I read in this thread, but recently I read The Naked Lunch. Don't read The Naked Lunch. APS may have some thoughts on this, I know he's studying the Beat Generation to some extent, but that book is just, not right.
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03-09-2013, 12:05 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Damix
Agreed, the original sequels aren't the same type of books. But the Bean book is awesome.
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Thirded. Ender's Shadow might be better than Ender's Game.
The rest of the sequels are fun as well. The original sequels blow donkey balls and bore the hell out of me. He was striving for way too much with them and he failed spectacularly.
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03-09-2013, 12:09 AM
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All-NFLDC
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cigaro
I've given up mentioning most books I read in this thread, but recently I read The Naked Lunch. Don't read The Naked Lunch. APS may have some thoughts on this, I know he's studying the Beat Generation to some extent, but that book is just, not right.
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I personally loved Naked Lunch. It is ******* out there for sure and a bit difficult to get into but once I found my groove I really enjoyed it. William Burroughs was a fascinating dude.
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03-09-2013, 12:19 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr. Gonzo
I personally loved Naked Lunch. It is ******* out there for sure and a bit difficult to get into but once I found my groove I really enjoyed it. William Burroughs was a fascinating dude.
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I really tried, but I came to conclusion I was reading nothing more than grotesque lunacy. Not even "insane genius," just merely perversion and grotesqueness proliferated over how many pages. I know its a recount of heroin and addiction, and I did catch some of the deeper themes(the political parties, for instance), but I walked away feeling I had read nothing more than a maniac describing anal sex and rape in as many ways as possible for no apparent reason(admittedly, there is more to it than that). I hate censorship, and although I don't think this book should be, I did somewhat understand why there would be backlash against.
I don't know, maybe a few years down the road I can approach it again a little bit more "enlightened," but that book was simply off. That being said, is all of Burroughs' writing that same way? I was attracted to the book because I find drugs an interesting topic, so I'm wondering if some of his other works are a bit more accessible and frankly sane.
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03-09-2013, 12:28 AM
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All-NFLDC
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cigaro
I really tried, but I came to conclusion I was reading nothing more than grotesque lunacy. Not even "insane genius," just merely perversion and grotesqueness proliferated over how many pages. I know its a recount of heroin and addiction, and I did catch some of the deeper themes(the political parties, for instance), but I walked away feeling I had read nothing more than a maniac describing anal sex and rape in as many ways as possible for no apparent reason(admittedly, there is more to it than that). I hate censorship, and although I don't think this book should be, I did somewhat understand why there would be backlash against.
I don't know, maybe a few years down the road I can approach it again a little bit more "enlightened," but that book was simply off. That being said, is all of Burroughs' writing that same way? I was attracted to the book because I find drugs an interesting topic, so I'm wondering if some of his other works are a bit more accessible and frankly sane.
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I actually have never read any of his others books though I have always meant to. I completely get where you are coming from. It is certainly a ****** up novel. I just kind of took the plunge and embraced the lunacy of it all. That helped though I don't see myself ever reading it again so maybe my appreciation of it is merely a ****** up nostalgic longing for a novel that really is incredibly macabre and demented.
I still stand by liking it though. I read it after watching the film by David Cronenberg and was not let down. I went in expecting crazy and it exceeded those expectations.
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03-09-2013, 01:05 PM
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TomTom Out
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cigaro
I've given up mentioning most books I read in this thread, but recently I read The Naked Lunch. Don't read The Naked Lunch. APS may have some thoughts on this, I know he's studying the Beat Generation to some extent, but that book is just, not right.
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Naked Lunch is interesting. I read that like a year or so ago. The best part was describing the orgy that ends in someone getting impaled or something along those lines.
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Pick the Winners / '08: 171-96 (W) / '09: 177-90 / '10: 171-96 / '11: 183-84 (W) / '12: 173-94
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03-09-2013, 01:10 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JoeJoeBrown
Thirded. Ender's Shadow might be better than Ender's Game.
The rest of the sequels are fun as well. The original sequels blow donkey balls and bore the hell out of me. He was striving for way too much with them and he failed spectacularly.
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I agree. I was super hyped for Speaker for the Dead and I made it through about the first 100 pages, then I realized I was bored out of my mind.
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3. Bjoern Werener – Flordia State – Vince from shamwow once said “Germans make good stuff”
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