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What book are you reading?

A place to discuss largely non-Pogues related things.
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1860 posts • Page 65 of 124 • 1 ... 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68 ... 124
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Post Sat Nov 24, 2007 1:40 pm

I'm reading "The book thief" by Forgothisnamealready. I like it lots, especially his writing style (The art of Saumensching!). The whole idea of having Death as the narrator of a story also quite appeals to me.

I've also picked out a few books to read up on Michael Collins and the Treaty.

Michael Collins "The path to freedom" (articles and speeches by the man himself)
Tim Pat Coogan "The IRA"

Will have to roam through my boxes of books stashed away for more. I'm afraid the TP Coogan book might not be too relevant here.
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Post Mon Nov 26, 2007 12:10 am

"Moby Dick"... i shit you not. I've been listening to "Leviathan" by mastodon for a while and i thought, "shit, i gotta know what this is all about".
You're the only story that I never told
You're my dirty little secret, wanna' keep you so
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what book are you reading?

Post Mon Nov 26, 2007 3:22 am

Hmm, so how is Moby Dick? It's absolutely the only thing I neglected to read at school.

Just so people don't think I do nothing but read comic books, I also read Sacred Games by Vikram Chandra. It's a gently noir-ish novel about police and organized crime in India.

Also read Neuromancer, by William Gibson. Gibson's just said science fiction is becoming impossible to write. Society and technology are changing so fast that the best a sci fi writer can do is develop alternate, concurrent realities. Sci fi meets magic realism?
The thing I mean couldn't possibly be done by a thief. Stephen Leacock
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Re: what book are you reading?

Post Mon Nov 26, 2007 5:35 am

Sandyfromvancouver wrote:...Gibson's just said science fiction is becoming impossible to write. Society and technology are changing so fast that the best a sci fi writer can do is develop alternate, concurrent realities. Sci fi meets magic realism?


Great point. Great writer.
Craig Andrew Batty @ http://www.reverbnation.com/fintan Please join and support and enjoy live music and musicians. Thanks folks!
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Post Mon Nov 26, 2007 9:45 am

echo park - michael connelly
It's not the creed nor nationality that counts, it's the man himself
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Post Tue Nov 27, 2007 2:43 am

Eckhard wrote:
Johan From Sweden wrote:
Eckhard wrote:"A History of Cannibalism" - Nathan Constantine


Did he put his foot in his mouth? :wink:



:lol:


Jaysus! HE puts his foot in his mouth, YOU laugh yer head off. It's not the anthropophagism I'm worried about, it's looking more like a plague of leprosy. :lol:
Craig Andrew Batty @ http://www.reverbnation.com/fintan Please join and support and enjoy live music and musicians. Thanks folks!
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Post Tue Nov 27, 2007 2:46 am

Caine Mutiny-Herman Wouk
Allow not nature more than nature needs, man's life is cheap as beast's.
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Re: What book are you reading?

Post Thu Nov 29, 2007 4:46 am

Sandyfromvancouver wrote:Anybody read Neil Gaiman's Endless Nights? I found it enthralling. Graphic novels can be so cool.


I have not, but i'll put it on my list, as i love Neil Gaiman. Got to meet him & the kids had their copy of "Wolves In The Walls" signed, too.

I'm reading One Long Tune: the Life & Music of Lenny Breau right now. I'll happily admit a lot of the music theory talk is beyond me, but thus far it's also a great portrait of an artist growing & struggling for his craft & all that. Plus it just told me that he did some demos in Toronto in 1961 with Rick Danko & Levon Helm (at that time still in Ronnie Hawkin's Hawks in residence on Younge Street) as the rhythm section. These were released in 2003 as The Hallmark Sessions. Look for this to pop up in the What album have you just bought thread in the next few months...
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Post Thu Nov 29, 2007 6:42 am

Hey Low D, I notice you are from Coast Salish territory. I'm living on Burrard and Musqueam territory.

Speaking of aboriginal matters, right now I'm reading Me Funny, edited by Drew Hayden Taylor. If you ever get a copy, check out Tomson's Highway's version of Creation. It is hilarious and life affirming.

Speaking of Tomson Highway, did you catch the Rez Sisters at Freddy Wood? I thought the actor who played Nanabush/bingomaster did fantastic work.
The thing I mean couldn't possibly be done by a thief. Stephen Leacock
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Post Thu Nov 29, 2007 6:59 am

Just finished Fun Home by Alison Bechdel

it was rather spectacular
casey don't stare at that light-- you have epilepsy!!
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Post Thu Nov 29, 2007 12:06 pm

Finished: Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha by Roddy Doyle
Started: Nine Stories by J.D. Salinger
Then they'll take you to Cloughprior
Shove you in the ground
But you'll stick your head back out and shout
"Let's have another round!"
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Post Wed Dec 19, 2007 9:07 am

Celtic United - Frank Worrall
It's not the creed nor nationality that counts, it's the man himself
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Post Wed Dec 19, 2007 5:41 pm

I'm reading a book called The Shipwrecked Men by Alvar Nuñez Cabeça de Vaca.

Cabeça de Vaca a conquistador in the 1500s and sailed with around 600 other men from Castile to Cuba, then to Florida, and from Florida the men marched to Mexico City. They were the first white men to ever view the American Southwest. Yet, due to the poor leadership of Governor Pánfilo, only four men, including Cabeça de Vaca, survived.

He wrote a long chronicle of the journey to give to the Charles V, king of Spain, explaining what all happened and how the journey could be that much of a failure. Eventually it got published as a book, the very one I'm reading, and Cabeça de Vaca became famous.
“An’ this is the last of Brummy,” he said, leaning on his spade and looking away over the tops of the ragged gums on the distant range.
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Post Wed Dec 19, 2007 9:15 pm

The Road from Wigan Pier by Andrew Ross.
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Post Wed Dec 19, 2007 9:32 pm

Stieg Larsson: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Humungous Swedish crime novel, finally translated into English, and it's an absolute gem. Larsson, who was a journalist campaigning against the far right, died a couple of years ago. Not long before he died he apparently went to a publishers and gave them three manuscripts. This is the first one.
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