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Author Topic: What are you reading?  (Read 99819 times)

Great Order

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #870 on: March 27, 2025, 11:00:02 am »

Been and read a few new books. Project Hail Mary, Children of Time, and The Mercy of Gods and its associated novella, Livesuit.

Hail Mary was interesting but... I dunno if it's one I'll revisit. It was missing something for me that made it properly memorable and enjoyable.

Children of Time was good, I enjoyed the speculative evolution aspect but the ending did leave me feeling underwhelmed some. It was kind of anticlimactic.

The Mercy of Gods is my favourite out of them, which might be because it's the first bit of media I've read or watched where humanity is attacked by a technologically superior alien force and straight up loses. No ifs, ands or buts, the aliens arrive and immediately execute 1/8th of the humans, organised resistance ends within five days, and everyone is rounded up like sheep
I also like media that emphasises how alien an extraterrestrial's mindset could easily be. It's all too common to have an alien race be human, or human but trait X is exaggerated.

Livesuit wasn't as good as TMoG, but then it was a novella so it's not got as much depth. It did expand on it some though, which is interesting in and of itself.
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Travis Bickle 2

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #871 on: March 30, 2025, 02:00:53 am »

I read The Definitive Guide to Catholic Fasting & Abstinence by Matthew R. Plese over the course of an airplane ride. Despite its title, several topics were covered very briefly and the text as a whole felt more like several blog posts cobbled together than a proper book; given that the author himself seems to primarily write for a blog, this is unsurprising. At some point after I purchased my copy, a second edition was published which—if the information listed on Amazon's website is accurate—is over twice as long in page count, hopefully making up for the deficiencies of the first edition.

On the advice of a friend, I read "The Bet" by Anton Tchekhov—as his name is rendered in the collection I read from. I found the story to be good enough to make me consider reading the rest of the collection.
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boredestry

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #872 on: April 02, 2025, 08:03:08 pm »

This was a while ago, but the book 'Pie' by Sarah Weeks absolutely opened my eyes to a universe of loving to bake, even if the books intentions weren't to do that. I recently baked a pie, actually. It was a custard pie and it was so good.
back to the topic of the book, I, at first, expected it to be a cheesy book, but as soon as I got to page 20 I was hooked. from then on during reading class I was reading it as much as I could every day. I hate to say it, but I even shed multiple tears while I read it.
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Il Palazzo

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #873 on: April 02, 2025, 08:15:35 pm »

Has anyone here read anything by Bukowski?
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delphonso

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #874 on: April 03, 2025, 01:36:39 pm »

Has anyone here read anything by Bukowski?

A lot of poetry but none of his novels/short stories.

Il Palazzo

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #875 on: April 03, 2025, 03:04:19 pm »

A lot of poetry but none of his novels/short stories.
Alright. I had a question about his prose too, but this is also good.
I've just started to get acquainted with his writing. Got myself one of his novels, as well as a collection of poems - the You get so alone... one. While I liked the prose, I'm kinda bouncing off the poetry. I think I was expecting something like a bolder, more gnarly, plebeian Frost. But there's almost no structure here. Feels closer to a record of free-flowing thoughts, like unedited notes from a journal. A bit lazy and pretentious, tbh. I'm struggling to find an angle to connect.
Now, is this style typical of his poetry? If not, is there something more conventional of his you'd recommend? And if it is, do you have any advice on how to approach reading this?

Full disclosure, I'm not a particularly sophisticated reader of poetry. So if it all sounds to you like somebody complaining about jazz not being melodic enough, it'd probably be a fair criticism. Try and indulge me, though.

*typo
« Last Edit: April 03, 2025, 03:41:07 pm by Il Palazzo »
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DANNYX3

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #876 on: April 05, 2025, 04:03:13 pm »

I am personally into space and so I got a book for RLLY cheap and it is called "Merlin's tour of the universe" by Neil Degrasse tyson,so far its been good well to me  :D
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delphonso

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #877 on: April 06, 2025, 12:39:11 am »

A lot of poetry but none of his novels/short stories.
Alright. I had a question about his prose too, but this is also good.
I've just started to get acquainted with his writing. Got myself one of his novels, as well as a collection of poems - the You get so alone... one. While I liked the prose, I'm kinda bouncing off the poetry. I think I was expecting something like a bolder, more gnarly, plebeian Frost. But there's almost no structure here. Feels closer to a record of free-flowing thoughts, like unedited notes from a journal. A bit lazy and pretentious, tbh. I'm struggling to find an angle to connect.
Now, is this style typical of his poetry? If not, is there something more conventional of his you'd recommend? And if it is, do you have any advice on how to approach reading this?

Full disclosure, I'm not a particularly sophisticated reader of poetry. So if it all sounds to you like somebody complaining about jazz not being melodic enough, it'd probably be a fair criticism. Try and indulge me, though.

*typo

If you read it in high school it'd have blown your mind. That's mostly his style, the poetry lies in his choices of words, the surprise and shock between lines, and the powerful imagery he can call up. Dinosauria, We is maybe his best and best known poem. The imagery there is great, but yeah, it's not following a rhyme scheme, but there is a musicality/rhythm still in the words.

Loud Whispers

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #878 on: April 07, 2025, 10:27:07 am »

Finally got around to finishing the Eisenhorn & Ravenor series. 40k space detectives in space. There's a pretty cool generational quality to the series that I think books can do that other mediums struggle with. Just being able to show how someone started off at point x in life and ended up on the last page. There's also something hilarious in that in the setting, the main characters are really anxious about remaining pure, by the book, righteous. But they start making compromises, start learning more about the world that nudges them in different directions. There is a very funny moment where both Ravenor and Eisenhorn reunite and consider the other one to be a little too radical for their own good, whilst considering themselves a puritan who just knows better.

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Yoink

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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #879 on: April 07, 2025, 03:18:36 pm »

Inns, Ales and Drinking Customs of Old England, by Frederick Hackwood.   

Probably gonna start reading The Sex Lives of Siamese Twins concurrently, since I picked up a copy the other day and I find it very difficult to hold off on reading anything by Mr. Welsh. Plus, one fiction and one non-fiction at the same time ain't so bad.   
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Re: What are you reading?
« Reply #880 on: April 08, 2025, 05:45:08 am »

So, I've been having this project of reading old TSR Forgotten Realms books from the 80s and 90s. Most of them I've read as a kid/teenager back in the day, so I've been interested to see how they hold up. Some have been decent or even good (for pulp fantasy novels, that is), but then there are some that make me ask, "Why the hell am I doing this?"

Just finished reading Pool of Radiance by James M. Ward and Jane Cooper Hong and, uh, yeah... I've read it once when I was nine or ten, I think. I was impressed by it then, but dear God it was terrible. It's got to be one of the worst books (if not the worst) I've ever read.

I'd rather read furry fanfic for the rest of my life than that one again.
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