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Topic Starter Topic: Re: currently reading....

Elite
Elite
Joined: 21 Oct 2001
Posts: 6519
PostPosted: 02-19-2012 08:38 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Atlas Shrugged




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Etile
Etile
Joined: 19 Nov 2003
Posts: 34898
PostPosted: 02-19-2012 09:03 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


it's a art




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Glayven?
Glayven?
Joined: 23 Jan 2005
Posts: 13025
PostPosted: 02-19-2012 09:04 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Underpants? wrote:
Atlas Shrugged


I worry about you.




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puzl
puzl
Joined: 06 May 2000
Posts: 30344
PostPosted: 02-20-2012 08:25 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote





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Digital Nausea
Digital Nausea
Joined: 10 Feb 2001
Posts: 24709
PostPosted: 02-20-2012 09:13 AM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


The dude has talent. A very strange talent, but very cool nonetheless...




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The Afflicted
The Afflicted
Joined: 16 Aug 2005
Posts: 690
PostPosted: 03-14-2012 05:42 PM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


The New Jim Crow: Mass incarceration

Slavery is alive and well. Good read.




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!Berserker!
!Berserker!
Joined: 22 Feb 2005
Posts: 2100
PostPosted: 03-14-2012 06:32 PM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


seremtan wrote:
finished his diamond age and snow crash recently (really enjoyed), about to start cryptonomicon

might also give gibson's last trilogy (the hubertus bigend/blue ant thing) a go too

annoyingly, very few of stephenson's - or indeed anyone's - books are available for Kindle. seems to be heavily weighted toward out-of-copyright stuff

in fact, as a platform, e-books and e-book readers have a lot of maturing to do


The whole Baroque Cycle and Anathem are available through Amazon. Was there something in particular that wasn't there?




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Karot!
Karot!
Joined: 31 Jul 2001
Posts: 19348
PostPosted: 03-15-2012 12:37 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


I too have been reading Stephenson!

Zodiac :up:



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Legend
Legend
Joined: 04 Jan 2006
Posts: 16498
PostPosted: 03-25-2012 03:28 PM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Just started reading Idoru by William Gibson.




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Shambolic
Shambolic
Joined: 11 Apr 2000
Posts: 8023
PostPosted: 03-25-2012 10:39 PM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Heh, I've got a signed copy of that one :)




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The Afflicted
The Afflicted
Joined: 16 Aug 2005
Posts: 690
PostPosted: 04-21-2012 06:22 PM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


The hunger games. Want to read the book before seeing the movie.




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i liek boobies
i liek boobies
Joined: 26 Nov 2000
Posts: 11930
PostPosted: 04-21-2012 06:35 PM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Just started Dan Simmons' Ilium. Not enjoying it anywhere near as much as the Hyperion Cantos [which was fucking sublime], but I guess it simply hasn't taken off just yet.

Image




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menkent
menkent
Joined: 22 Jul 2000
Posts: 4758
PostPosted: 04-21-2012 08:10 PM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


finally reading The Wheel of Time. a bit into book 2, so far it's pretty good. i can really see its influence on Brian Sanderson's "The Way of Kings" (though i like WoK better so far!)




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Shambolic
Shambolic
Joined: 11 Apr 2000
Posts: 8023
PostPosted: 04-21-2012 10:41 PM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


At the moment, Scott Sigler's new one, Nocturnal. He's got a great style that really pulls the reader along, having been described as the horror genre's Chuck Palahniuk. This one has got elements of Clive Barker's Cabal with a touch of Blade.




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Unquantifiable Abstract
Unquantifiable Abstract
Joined: 31 Dec 1969
Posts: 52132
PostPosted: 04-22-2012 06:46 AM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Game of Thrones

After finishing that I am likely to start on "The book of Dave"




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Etile
Etile
Joined: 19 Nov 2003
Posts: 34898
PostPosted: 04-22-2012 07:55 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Captain Mazda wrote:
Just started reading Idoru by William Gibson.


the whole bridge trilogy is good, though not as good as his sprawl trilogy

on a somewhat related note: Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson, and The Servile Mind by Kenneth Minogue




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Etile
Etile
Joined: 19 Nov 2003
Posts: 34898
PostPosted: 04-22-2012 07:56 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Don Carlos wrote:
After finishing that I am likely to start on "The book of Dave"


isn't that just full of writing that came out years ago, only under a different publisher?




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Unquantifiable Abstract
Unquantifiable Abstract
Joined: 31 Dec 1969
Posts: 52132
PostPosted: 04-22-2012 11:12 AM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Dunno? All I know is that it's a Will Self effort that is mean't to be interesting and funny




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Etile
Etile
Joined: 19 Nov 2003
Posts: 34898
PostPosted: 04-22-2012 12:03 PM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


ok so that tv reference was missed :(




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Kempston Joy
Kempston Joy
Joined: 11 Aug 2000
Posts: 48594
PostPosted: 04-22-2012 12:17 PM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Anything by Alastair Reynolds at the moment. Can't beat a bit of epic space opera.




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Unquantifiable Abstract
Unquantifiable Abstract
Joined: 31 Dec 1969
Posts: 52132
PostPosted: 04-23-2012 03:09 AM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


seremtan wrote:
ok so that tv reference was missed :(


I don't watch much TV :paranoid:




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True Nightmare
True Nightmare
Joined: 23 Aug 2002
Posts: 3378
PostPosted: 04-23-2012 07:16 AM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Last 3 books I read.

Dispatches- "Dispatches is a New Journalism book by Michael Herr that describes the author's experiences in Vietnam as a war correspondent for Esquire magazine. First published in 1977, Dispatches was one of the first pieces of American literature that allowed Americans to understand the experiences of soldiers in the Vietnam War.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispatches_%28book%29
http://www.amazon.com/Dispatches-Michae ... 0679735259

This was an amazing book, I really enjoyed it. Michael Herr co-wrote the screenplay for Full Metal Jacket, and he also contributed to the narration for Francis Ford Coppola's "Apocalypse Now".

Band of Brothers- The book that the 2001 HBO TV Series was based on. The book follows Easy Company, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division from Normandy to Hitler's Eagle's Nest at Berchtesgaden.
http://www.amazon.com/Band-Brothers-Reg ... 0743216458

I've watched the TV Series multiple times. This book is much more in depth compared to the TV Series. Very good read.

Marine Sniper: 93 Confirmed Kills- This is a story about Carlos Hathcock, a sniper in the Vietnam War who helped pioneer the role of the sniper in the Marine Corps sniper program.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_Hathcock
http://www.amazon.com/Marine-Sniper-93- ... 0425103552

This was another amazing book. This guy's exploits are almost unimaginable. While he had 93 Confirmed kills, he probably had another 200 Unconfirmed.




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Karot!
Karot!
Joined: 31 Jul 2001
Posts: 19348
PostPosted: 04-23-2012 07:22 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Ah, Dispatches :up:
Has been on my to-read list for years (it's a large list).



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Glayven?
Glayven?
Joined: 23 Jan 2005
Posts: 13025
PostPosted: 04-23-2012 08:08 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Doombrain wrote:
Anything by Alastair Reynolds at the moment. Can't beat a bit of epic space opera.


lol star wars nerd, etc




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True Nightmare
True Nightmare
Joined: 23 Aug 2002
Posts: 3378
PostPosted: 04-23-2012 01:20 PM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Ryoki wrote:
Ah, Dispatches :up:
Has been on my to-read list for years (it's a large list).


I was watching a Documentary about Vietnam and the Siege of Khe Sanh. Khe Sanh was a remote outpost in the very northwestern area of South Vietnam along the DMZ. Anyways the Americans/South Vietnamese at Khe Sanh were under siege for 77 days or so. They we're surrounded and totally dependent on Air Support. In the Documentary their were quotes from Dispatches, and hearing them gave me the chills and they stuck with me so I had to read the book.

One of them went something like this:

Quote:
"Colonel (I wanted to ask), this is purely hypothetical, I hope you understand."

"But what if all the gooks that you think are out there are really out there? And what if they attack before the monsoons blow south, some mist-clogged night when our planes just cannot get up there? What if they really want Khe'Sanh, want it so badly that they are willing to maneuver over the triple lines of barbed wire, the German razor wire too, over the barricades formed by their own dead, coming in waves, human waves, and in such numbers that the barrels of our 50.-calibers overheat and melt and all the M16's are jammed, until all of the death in all of the claymore mines on our defenses has been spent and absorbed? What if they are still coming, moving toward the center of a base so smashed by their artillery that those pissy little trenches and bunkers that your Marines half got up are useless, coming at you 20,000 to 40,000 strong? And what if they pass over every barricade we can put in their way, and kill every living thing defending or retreating and take Khe Sanh?"




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Digital Nausea
Digital Nausea
Joined: 10 Feb 2001
Posts: 24709
PostPosted: 09-19-2012 05:55 PM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


The Art of War

It was tough to get through, but a lot of it makes sense...




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opa!
opa!
Joined: 02 Mar 2000
Posts: 14658
PostPosted: 09-19-2012 07:34 PM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


lol you're like a walking cliche




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Cool #9
Cool #9
Joined: 01 Dec 2000
Posts: 44131
PostPosted: 09-20-2012 12:20 AM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Read the first few chapters of A Clash of Kings. Before that I read Monstrous Regiment by Terry Prachett. And before that I read A Game of Thrones.




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Karot!
Karot!
Joined: 31 Jul 2001
Posts: 19348
PostPosted: 09-21-2012 04:13 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


xer0s wrote:
The Art of War

It was tough to get through, but a lot of it makes sense...


Tough to get through, wtf? It's a list of non specific rules that require the reader think creatively and translate them into modern circumstance, how is it tough to get through? Try von Clauswewitz or Machiavelli, that shit is tough to get through.

The Art of War is the easiest to comprehend book on war ever written (and also by far the best). As i recall the only rule that doesn't apply anymore is one where he gets too specific on logistics, but even there the principle remains the same. The man was a genius and the world would be a better place if The Art of War was obligated reading material for everyone in a position to send poor bastards to their deaths in the name of some greater good.

Currently reading Letters of an Unteroffizier by Carl Heller, one of those ultradark WW1 accounts by some German born Dutchie who was crazy enough to volunteer for duty in the Imperial army at the start of the war and lucky enough to survive until it ended. Incredibly powerful stuff, and not badly written either. Also rereading On the Campaign Trail '72 by Hunter Thompson, for the lulz.

Also this thread has reminded me once again to pick up Dispatches, maybe i'll actually go ahead and do it now...



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Digital Nausea
Digital Nausea
Joined: 10 Feb 2001
Posts: 24709
PostPosted: 09-21-2012 06:47 AM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


It was hard to get through because it was boring as fuck. I comprehended it just fine...




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Digital Nausea
Digital Nausea
Joined: 10 Feb 2001
Posts: 24709
PostPosted: 09-26-2012 11:59 AM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Just finished Damned by Chuck Palahniuk. It wasn't too bad. Had the same non-conformist feel as Fight Club. But I guess that's justs Chuck's style. Had several funny parts too...




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Karot!
Karot!
Joined: 31 Jul 2001
Posts: 19348
PostPosted: 10-16-2012 12:07 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Just finished Pol Pot, the History of a Nightmare by Philip Short. A photocopied book i picked up in Thailand for less than a euro :D Really good read, well written and thoroughly researched.

And just as i finished it, one of the main subjects of the books dies: http://rendezvous.blogs.nytimes.com/201 ... leon-king/



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Digital Nausea
Digital Nausea
Joined: 10 Feb 2001
Posts: 24709
PostPosted: 10-16-2012 05:42 AM           Profile   Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


I've started A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs. I'm on a bit of an early science fiction kick...




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plained
plained
Joined: 12 Jun 2002
Posts: 18772
PostPosted: 10-16-2012 09:47 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Right now I am reading bruc Campbells if chins could talk

It's really good and funny

I always have multi biography s going at once

Finished up Nikkei Sixx Henon ddiary

His head is massive



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I'm the dude!
I'm the dude!
Joined: 04 Feb 2002
Posts: 12498
PostPosted: 10-16-2012 10:16 AM           Profile Send private message  E-mail  Edit post Reply with quote


Ryoki wrote:
And just as i finished it, one of the main subjects of the books dies: http://rendezvous.blogs.nytimes.com/201 ... leon-king/


I've been to his palace. It's quaint.



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