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Recommend books
 

offline X-tomatic from ze war room on 2007-12-27 17:33 [#02158348]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker



more specifically recommend great, out of the ordinary
literature

thank you


 

offline dariusgriffin from cool on 2007-12-27 17:35 [#02158349]
Points: 12423 Status: Regular



you might have heard of ulysses


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2007-12-27 17:40 [#02158351]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker



House of Leaves , Mark Z. Danielewski

This is one fucked up book. It's certainly out of the
ordinary, as you request. One long spooky mindfuck

Choke : Chuck Palahniuk

Well, if you liked Fight Club, this is a must.

Siddhartha , Hermann Hesse

To put it very simply, this book changed my life
(Seriously).

Look them up on Amazon.com and see if it's for you! It's my
3 favourite books at least.


 

offline X-tomatic from ze war room on 2007-12-27 17:40 [#02158352]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker



Indeed I have. Thank you for the tip. Plz also recommend
some oustanding literature written in the past 5 years give
or take


 

offline X-tomatic from ze war room on 2007-12-27 17:41 [#02158353]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker | Followup to X-tomatic: #02158352



Thank you dirty priest, keep 'em comin' y'all


 

offline ecnadniarb on 2007-12-27 17:42 [#02158354]
Points: 24805 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



Meg's Eggs. First book I ever read and still yet to be
beaten.


 

offline X-tomatic from ze war room on 2007-12-27 17:43 [#02158355]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker | Followup to DirtyPriest: #02158351



and did you read my mind cos yeah I liked Fight Club


 

offline ecnadniarb on 2007-12-27 17:44 [#02158356]
Points: 24805 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



Meg's Eggs Synopsis:

"A board book version of this classic Meg and Mog story.
This time, one of Meg's spells goes spectacularly wrong. She
is trying to conjure up eggs for tea and although she
manages to make three eggs, they look rather different to
usual. One by one they hatch and reveal - dinosaurs! Meg,
Mog and Owl manage to look after the first two dinosaurs but
then a fearsome Tyrannosaurus hatches and wants to eat them
all! Meg has to try another spell to save from being eaten -
again it doesn't go quite to plan but at least they're
safe!"


 

offline ecnadniarb on 2007-12-27 17:45 [#02158357]
Points: 24805 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



DINOSAURS!


 

offline X-tomatic from ze war room on 2007-12-27 17:48 [#02158360]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker



thank you mr. reverse braindance


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2007-12-27 17:50 [#02158361]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to X-tomatic: #02158353



When my brother bought his copy of House of leaves, he was
flirting with this cute employe in a book store. He's a big
book worm, so they were casually talking about litterature
back and forth. Suddenly he got drawn to this book on the
shelve, that just had some weird aura around it. When he
picked up house of leaves, she just blurted out
"no, not that. That book is just... I don't know... Theres
something evil about it... That book scared me"
He bought it, and it scared the shit out of him (He was 28
at the time).

True story!

He lend it to me, and it scared the shit out of me as well.

It's not just a book. It's this weird occult experience.
It's a book within a book, descriping some very strange
things, that i wont go into detail with, as it's my hope
that you will read it.

My english is in no way sufficiant to descripe the weirdness
of this book, i can only reccomend you to get a copy of it
ASAP. When you're done reading it, it's also a beautiful
book in itself, that you can show to people, and make them
go WOW.


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2007-12-27 17:54 [#02158363]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to X-tomatic: #02158360



Well, then "Survivor" (Also by the imposible to spell
PALAHNIUK) is a must read as well as "Choke". I'm not really
a book man myself, but as soon as i've read 10 pages of both
those books, i finished them within 2 days. Real page
turners. Fun, inspiring and entertaining books they are.


 

offline X-tomatic from ze war room on 2007-12-27 18:07 [#02158365]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker | Followup to DirtyPriest: #02158361



Ok, you do understand that I now HAVE to read House of
leaves don't you?
And yeah Survivor also immediately drew my attention


 

offline optimus prime on 2007-12-27 18:18 [#02158371]
Points: 6447 Status: Lurker



great, out-of-the-ordinary modern literature:

White Noise by Don DeLillo
As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
Ulysses by James Joyce
The Black Prince by Iris Murdoch
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brien


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2007-12-27 18:20 [#02158372]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to X-tomatic: #02158365



It's simply great. You wont regret it a bit. It's a book
that's worth every dollar (or other currency). It's so
scary, yet clever. It's not about some big scary monster or
some other corny shit, somehow this book just goes in and
stirrs up some very fundemental human fears, in a way that
i've never experienced any book doing in my grown up life.
It's not that difficult to read actually. It's a big book,
which might be off-putting, but it's till easy to read in a
way. It works on many many levels.

It's also supposed to be read as a book, and only as a book.
It would be impossible to make it into a film - You will
understand if you read it. It's one of those books that you
will sometimes glare at, at your shelve, reminding you of
that eerie feeling, and you will force your friends to read
it, just to have someone to talk about it to. Promise me to
read it, and reply in this thread if you do!!!


 

offline X-tomatic from ze war room on 2007-12-27 18:35 [#02158383]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker | Followup to DirtyPriest: #02158372



From the description I'm thinking maybe David Lynch could
pull it off?


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2007-12-27 18:43 [#02158384]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to X-tomatic: #02158383



I love David Lynch, but this book is simply mean to be read
as a book. Revealing a bit here, some poster on Wikipedia
did a better job than i ever could.

"House of Leaves begins with a first-person narrative by
Johnny Truant, a Los Angeles tattoo parlor employee. Truant
is searching for a new apartment when his friend Lude tells
him about the apartment of the recently deceased Zampanò, a
blind, elderly man who lived in the same building as Lude.

In Zampanò's apartment, Truant discovers a manuscript
written by Zampanò that turns out to be a very academic
study of a documentary film called The Navidson Record.

The rest of the novel alternates between Zampanò's report
on the fictional film, Johnny's autobiographical
interjections, a small transcript of part of the film from
Navidson's brother, Tom, and occasional brief notes by
unidentified editors, all woven together by a mass of
footnotes. There is also a fourth narrator, Johnny's mother,
whose voice is presented through a self-contained set of
letters titled The Whalestoe Letters. Each narrator's text
is printed in a distinct font, making it easier for the
reader to follow the occasionally challenging format of the
novel."


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2007-12-27 18:47 [#02158385]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker



And what is it he discovers?

"Zampanò's narrative deals primarily with the Navidson
family: Will Navidson, a photojournalist (partly based on
Kevin Carter), his partner Karen Green, an attractive former
fashion model, and their two children, Chad and Daisy.

Upon returning from a trip to Seattle, the Navidson family
discovers a change in their home. A closet-like space shut
behind an undecorated door appears inexplicably where
previously there was only a blank wall. A second door
appears at the end of the closet, leading to the children's
room. As Navidson investigates this phenomenon, he finds
that the internal measurements of the house are somehow
larger than external measurements. Initially there is less
than an inch of difference, but as time passes the interior
of the house is found to be seemingly expanding, while
maintaining the same exterior proportions. A third change
asserts itself: a dark, cold hallway in their living room
wall that, according to the laws of physics, should extend
out into their yard, but doesn't. Navidson films this
strange place, looping around the house to show where the
space should be and clearly is not. The fictional filming of
this anomaly comes to be referred to as "The Five and a Half
Minute Hallway"."

Hopefully, this will get you to want to know the rest :P


 

offline PS on 2007-12-27 20:41 [#02158443]
Points: 1876 Status: Lurker



Jorge Luis Borges short stories

They're not so unknown, but they're definately out of the
ordinary and great. I got the big book of Andrew Hurley
translations at Friends Bookstore, it's worth a thousand
worlds to me. I even make wiki link!


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2007-12-28 04:43 [#02158479]
Points: 24588 Status: Lurker



:: Order Of The Assassins: The Psychology Of Murder:
Colin Wilson



 

offline Wolfslice from Bay Area, CA (United States) on 2007-12-28 05:09 [#02158485]
Points: 4909 Status: Regular



The Dark Tower Series by Stephen King.

(a little more of a mainstream pick, but oh well...)


 

offline Wolfslice from Bay Area, CA (United States) on 2007-12-28 05:15 [#02158488]
Points: 4909 Status: Regular | Followup to Wolfslice: #02158485



(not that Dark Tower is ordinary. It's a
fantasy/horror/western that has moments of outright
Lynchiness scattered throughout)


 

offline The_Funkmaster from St. John's (Canada) on 2007-12-28 05:17 [#02158489]
Points: 16280 Status: Lurker



If you like fantasy, check out the Wheel of Time series by
Robert Jordan. But be prepared to read through like 11
books, each like at least 500-600 pages. It's a long read,
but really it's the best "story" I've ever really read. So
good I read them twice. :P

The author actually died in the last year or so, and the
series isn't completed, but I've heard his son is going to
complete it based on the manuscripts which Robert Jordan had
completed.


 

offline Wolfslice from Bay Area, CA (United States) on 2007-12-28 05:19 [#02158490]
Points: 4909 Status: Regular | Followup to The_Funkmaster: #02158489



Oh yeah that sucks so bad about Robert Jordan :(

I read through book 4 in WoT a couple years back, but
decided to put it on hold until the series is finished. I
guess we can only hope the last book is in good hands.


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2007-12-28 05:43 [#02158503]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular



Fyodor Dostoyevsky - The Idiot


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2007-12-28 14:01 [#02158627]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



Aldous Huxley - Brave New World
Douglas Adams - The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy


 

offline Sclah from Freudian Slipmat on 2007-12-28 15:19 [#02158673]
Points: 3121 Status: Lurker



Haruki Murakami - The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2007-12-28 15:29 [#02158678]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Followup to Sclah: #02158673 | Show recordbag



ace. i am so immensely curious about that. it's very high on
my 'to buy' list.

have you read other stuff by him? if so, is wind-up bird a
good one to start with?


 

offline odiethe666 from da dirty south (United States) on 2007-12-28 21:02 [#02158786]
Points: 15 Status: Regular




the last temptation of christ - nikos kazantzakis
in cold blood - truman capote
american psycho and less than zero - bret easton ellis
necroscope - brian lumley
terrorizer mag in the loo


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2007-12-29 07:48 [#02158822]
Points: 24588 Status: Lurker | Followup to FlyAgaric: #02158503



great choice.


 

offline Monoid from one source all things depend on 2007-12-29 08:41 [#02158833]
Points: 11010 Status: Lurker



Hans Küng - Does God Exist? An Answer For Today
Friedrich Hayek - The Road to Serfdom


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2007-12-29 09:33 [#02158837]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular | Followup to marlowe: #02158822



it's certainly great and out of the ordinary.


 

offline ijonspeches from 109P/Swift-Tuttle on 2007-12-31 08:10 [#02159447]
Points: 7846 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



-sensing others- by frank talis

LAZY_BOOK

it has everything a book needs
+ a hideous murderer with a ruler tattooed on his arm!


 

offline retape from http://retape.net (Norway) on 2007-12-31 08:39 [#02159449]
Points: 2355 Status: Lurker



the dog climbing that tree is very cute, x-tomatic. ;o)


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2008-10-26 02:42 [#02248177]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular



Napoleon A. Chagnon - Yanomamö: The Fierce People

This rules. You don't need to be an academic to read and
enjoy this, it's nicely presented and damn interesting.

p.s Don't let the thread die. I'm interested in what you
read.


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2008-10-26 02:56 [#02248180]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular



forget the original instructions, just post any old
thing...

bah, this is futile.


 

offline IronLung from the 91fwy in soCAL (United States) on 2008-10-26 02:25 [#02248183]
Points: 8032 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



Apt Pupil - short story by Stephen King

mindblowing


 

offline prrei on 2008-10-26 02:28 [#02248184]
Points: 24 Status: Lurker



seconding the Borges short stories, they're amazing.


 

offline wimp on 2008-10-26 02:57 [#02248186]
Points: 1389 Status: Lurker



Tales of the Dying Earth by Jack Vance

something different... best fantasy this side of Gene
Wolfe

Selected Poems: Robinson Jeffers

some honest rustic poetry


 

offline big from lsg on 2008-10-26 04:45 [#02248189]
Points: 23725 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



fiction is overrated


 

offline big from lsg on 2008-10-26 04:46 [#02248190]
Points: 23725 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



art of seduction is good, i only read the first half because
it got depressing . i also liked the game by neil strauss


 

offline mortsto-x from Trondheim/Bodø (Norway) on 2008-10-26 07:09 [#02248202]
Points: 8062 Status: Lurker



Reading this atm.


"Petterson’s kinship with Knut Hamsun, which he has
himself acknowledged, is palpable in Hamsun’s
“Pan,” “Victoria” and even the
lighthearted “Dreamers.” But nothing should
suggest that his superb novel is so embedded in its sources
as to be less than a gripping account of such originality as
to expand the reader’s own experience of life."


 

offline Cliff Glitchard from DEEP DOWN INSIDE on 2008-10-26 14:49 [#02248262]
Points: 4158 Status: Lurker



SHOOT! ANNNUAL 1989


 

offline Tractern from Brighton (United Kingdom) on 2008-10-26 14:56 [#02248265]
Points: 4210 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



Siddhartha is a good choice- Hesse is all about life
changing literature.

Another good book by Hermann Hesse is Narcissus and
Goldmund. Beautiful poetic language, nature imagery and
personal self discovery. Probably my favourite book ever.

Also, Steppenwolf.


 

offline kurrrak from Bialystok (Poland) on 2008-10-26 16:36 [#02248275]
Points: 1264 Status: Lurker



Altered Carbon by Richard Morgan
You even can read a fragment of it, wow.


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2008-10-26 16:55 [#02248276]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to Tractern: #02248265



I've read them all, and i completely agree. Siddharta was
just the one that had the biggest impact on me!


 

offline thatne from United States on 2008-10-26 17:22 [#02248279]
Points: 3026 Status: Lurker



i'm reading philip pullman's his dark materials
if you've never read the neverending story read that
far better than the movie which cuts out the entire second
half


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2008-10-27 12:51 [#02248362]
Points: 31226 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



joe dispenza - evolve your brain

any osho is also recommended


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2008-10-27 12:55 [#02248363]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular



Isaac Asimov - The Complete Robot


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2008-10-27 13:16 [#02248371]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Followup to thatne: #02248279 | Show recordbag



his dark materials is an epically wonderful series. i love
those books so much i don't think i'll watch the movie.



 


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