Yeah, I must pick that one up.Ryoki wrote:Theo van Gogh - Sla ik mijn vrouw wel hard genoeg?
By that guy that got killed, it's a like a selection of his columns.
Summer reading (BOOK THREAD - KRACUS BEWARE)
Haha don't bother, it's not that good.
I'm only reading it because i'm interested in all the weird and sometimes true things he said (i didn't follow his stuff at all when he was alive) and because i found the book laying on the street in the middle of the night.
I'm only reading it because i'm interested in all the weird and sometimes true things he said (i didn't follow his stuff at all when he was alive) and because i found the book laying on the street in the middle of the night.
[size=85][color=#0080BF]io chiamo pinguini![/color][/size]
I'm only about a quarter into it but he seems to be more about the idea that the "wired" individual has a greater propensity for individuality than the average person. He's all about his liberation of humanity through the machine.Massive Quasars wrote:Oddly enough, doesn't he oppose a more fundamental combination of man and machine? I ask because I don't recall with certainty.Jackal wrote:I'm also reading "Cyborg" by Steven Mann.
I just finished "The New American Militarism" by Andrew Bacevich. I reccomend it highly to anyone who wants a little insight as to why Americans are so fucked up. It's very succinct and politically neutral - the author is very much a constructionist in the strictest sense of the word (not the right-wing hijacked version). I'm leaning in that direction myself these days...
I'm going to start Freakanomics by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner tomorrow.
I'm going to start Freakanomics by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner tomorrow.
[color=red]You're Pretty When I'm Drunk[/color]
lol fucking bum youRyoki wrote:Haha don't bother, it's not that good.
I'm only reading it because i'm interested in all the weird and sometimes true things he said (i didn't follow his stuff at all when he was alive) and because i found the book laying on the street in the middle of the night.

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I didn't particularly care for that book *shrug* but if it suits you, go for it.megami wrote:Going to check out The Jungle by Upton Sinclair- have heard all about it for ages but never got around to actually reading the book.
Right now I'm reading Harry Potter book 1. I never read it before. Its okay so far. Not as amazing as everyone makes it out to be (or perhaps it gets better later?)
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Nah it's not that I don't like reading I used to read a lot I just don't have the time.Nightshade wrote:One shouldn't revel in one's ignorance, Krasuc.Kracus wrote:Nothing :icon19: Last book I read was Mass Control, Human engineering.

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or Asskrac
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Do you like it? I got it from my high school as a grade 12 writerscraft prize, and i thought it was okay but nothing to write home about.Jackal wrote:reading Oryx and Crake right now, by Margaret Atwood.
I'm currently reading The Last Light of the Sun by Guy Gavriel Kay, having just finished The Lions of Al-Rassan and A Song For Arbonne by the same author.
Next up are Les Misérables, by Victor Hugo, Such a Long Journey by Rohinton Mistry (I highly recommend his later work, A Fine Balance to anyone who enjoys fiction or is interested in India), and the first two books of R. Scott Bakkar's Prince of Nothing trilogy, seeing as the third isn't due out until next year.
I also want to reread Tad Williams' incredible Otherland series before I go back to school.
As an aside, I am proud to note that Guy Kay and Scott Bakkar, two of the most pre-eminent contemporary writers of fantasy, are both fellow residents of Ontario.
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