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B3n
from Manchester (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:04 [#00313422]
Points: 4700 Status: Lurker
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What have you read recently? I'd like to know, i've read 4 books recently, I dunno if you've heard of them all..
Our Man In Havana - About a vacuum cleaner saleman who is enlisted as a spy and makes up everything, passing off vacuum diagrams as atomic bomb schematics...but then things start becoming real and people die. Very enjoyable read.
1984 - I think since this was year I was born I had to read it. Very ahead of its time but its ending seemed a bit too abrupt and a bit of a comedown...anyone agree? I'd like to rent the film, whats it like?
Brave New World - I'd never heard of this until it was lent to me recently and I much preferred it to 1984 because it seemed to me to ask more questions rather than put in a scenario for you...the choice of lunacy in a uncivilised world or insanity in a civilised pleasant world. In my opinion this book is VASTLY underrated and even more ahead of its time than 1984 (this was written in 1930's I think)...however I don't know if society could undergo such a change to reply solely on fordism.
Sorrow Of War - I didn't quite understand this book straight away because it kept moving around, but once i'd finished it it made more sense. A view of the vietnam war but this time from a viet congs perspective. not autobiographical but very moving and made me think more of what it must have been like for the 'enemy' that in most films we view as dehumanised savages.
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Jarworski
from The Grove (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:06 [#00313424]
Points: 10836 Status: Lurker
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I haven't read any of those but I do have 1984 and will read it...
I just tried to read the new Clive Barker. Only the second book I've ever given up in my life...
I'm re-reading 'Rules Of Attraction' by Bret Easton Ellis now. Oh and I read 'Rising Sun' by Crichton a coupla weeks ago.
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earthleakage
from tell the world you're winning on 2002-07-17 23:07 [#00313426]
Points: 27795 Status: Regular
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i went there once, its just one big fly-over
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mylittlesister
from ...wherever (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:07 [#00313427]
Points: 8472 Status: Regular | Followup to Jarworski: #00313424
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why did u give up on it jar?
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flim-flam
from In a cupboard, in the kitchen. (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:08 [#00313428]
Points: 751 Status: Lurker
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I have been reading:
Mark cadbourne - Worlds End series. The ancient gods of legend are returning to the world (odin, Herne etc) and technology is failing. Humans are regaining the power to tap ley-lines control nature. But the forces of evil are at play nad the Black-Shuk is on the prowl in London.
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B3n
from Manchester (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:09 [#00313429]
Points: 4700 Status: Lurker
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anyone read the killing fields? i've never seen it and haden't really heard of it until recently
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Jarworski
from The Grove (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:11 [#00313430]
Points: 10836 Status: Lurker | Followup to mylittlesister: #00313427
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It was fucking cack Jack
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thethirdball
from Polly Pisspot (Canada) on 2002-07-17 23:12 [#00313432]
Points: 1629 Status: Lurker
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I've just started:
American Pastoral - Philip Roth
Swede Levov, a legendary athlete at his Newark hihg school, who grows up in the boom postwar years to marry a former Miss New Jersey, inherit his father's glove factory and move into a stone house in teh idyllic hamlet of Old Rimrock. And then one day in 1968, Swede's beautiful American luck deserts him.
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize
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Dozier
from United States on 2002-07-17 23:13 [#00313433]
Points: 2080 Status: Lurker
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I enjoyed 1984 quite a bit. And I also thought the ending was a letdown, but in a good way. I'll probably read it again soon, after I finish with Atlas Shrugged, but I'm only about half way through that.
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B3n
from Manchester (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:16 [#00313437]
Points: 4700 Status: Lurker | Followup to Dozier: #00313433
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yeah, it was better than a cop out romantic ending...I hate those..(in the lnog run anyway)
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jand
from Braintree (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:17 [#00313438]
Points: 5975 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag
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Finished the biography of Keith Haring today....read it before but was a long while ago so cool to re-read...He's the guy who did all that little radiant baby & dog graffetti work back in 80s...you'd know it if you saw it....
but bios are always sad as the you just know the person is gonna die in the end...make's it a bit weird...Like Andy Warhols Diairies; huge book but so worth it...
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CORTEX
from Canada on 2002-07-17 23:19 [#00313440]
Points: 3346 Status: Regular
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ive reread chuck palahniuk's CHOKE. he's the author of FIGHT CLUB. good, but not as good. everyone should read his novel titled SURVIVOR. that one i really liked.
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B3n
from Manchester (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:19 [#00313441]
Points: 4700 Status: Lurker | Followup to jand: #00313438
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was it you that read francis wheen's biography of marx?
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Thelonious Punk
from *fap fap fap* on 2002-07-17 23:24 [#00313452]
Points: 581 Status: Lurker
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Ann Rand? Yuck.. Political drivel. *Yawn*
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Smyrma
from Beloit, WI (United States) on 2002-07-17 23:29 [#00313464]
Points: 2478 Status: Lurker | Followup to CORTEX: #00313440
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Yea, I agree that "Survivor" is his best
I've been reading "The End of Nature" by I forget whom. It's summer reading for school about global warming and how the earth is doomed. A very interesting read.
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Thelonious Punk
from *fap fap fap* on 2002-07-17 23:34 [#00313469]
Points: 581 Status: Lurker
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Ayn? Can I not type today? Apparently not.
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jand
from Braintree (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:44 [#00313485]
Points: 5975 Status: Moderator | Followup to B3n: #00313441 | Show recordbag
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nah B3n...is it good?...
I love those Chuck Paulaniuk books like Fight C & Choke.....all of his are very good & so funny...
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B3n
from Manchester (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-17 23:45 [#00313486]
Points: 4700 Status: Lurker | Followup to jand: #00313485
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yeah I enjoyed it a lot...I think it must've been jonesy (he liked it too)
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Zephyr Twin
from ΔΔΔ on 2002-07-18 00:06 [#00313500]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Show recordbag
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I'm about to start reading Dickens' Great Expectations (because im forced to for school) and Brian Jaques' Legend of Luke.
Anyone familiar with Brian Jaques' Redwall series? My personal fav. book series of all time, you should check em out.
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B3n
from Manchester (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-18 10:05 [#00314121]
Points: 4700 Status: Lurker
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"Anyone familiar with Brian Jaques' Redwall series? My personal fav. book series of all time, you should check em out."
Yeah I got Return To Redwall but never botherede reading it all, that fantasy stuff isn't really my bag (baby)
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license
from out of nowhere on 2002-07-18 10:07 [#00314124]
Points: 865 Status: Lurker
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shit, I need to read more books.
what's a good story that's scary as shit, but intelligent and philosophical? oh and kinda weird?
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Pirotess
from Swansea (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-18 10:08 [#00314128]
Points: 571 Status: Lurker
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I'm reading HP Lovecradt's Dagon: And other Macabre Tales, LotR: Return of The King, Dream Brother: Biographies of Jeff and Tim Buckley, and I recen;ty finished: Bitch by Elizabeth Wurtzel, The Tenth Kingdom (based on the tv series) by Kathryn Wesley and Talking to Addison by Jenny Colgan (free from Cosmo :D)
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pOgO
from behind your belly button fluff on 2002-07-18 10:09 [#00314130]
Points: 12687 Status: Lurker
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I'm reading K-PAX III which I'm finding V boring, but It's the last one so I have to finish it. I LOADS of books to read though
Soul Survivor Harry Potter I & II The whole Hitch Hikers Set (apart from the newest one) Coldheart Canyon
I'm sure there's more but I can't remember
Jar's always giving me books to read aswell, I always love the books he gives me to read. If it wasent for Jar I would never have read the Dark Tower books *Shivers*
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B3n
from Manchester (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-18 10:10 [#00314133]
Points: 4700 Status: Lurker
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Dark Tower books p0g0!?
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license
from out of nowhere on 2002-07-18 10:13 [#00314136]
Points: 865 Status: Lurker
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oh Lovecraft's awesome I read some of his stuff last summer; he's great.
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pOgO
from behind your belly button fluff on 2002-07-18 10:19 [#00314147]
Points: 12687 Status: Lurker | Followup to B3n: #00314133
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OOOOOHHHHHH YEAH !!
Love it =oD
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pOgO
from behind your belly button fluff on 2002-07-18 10:19 [#00314149]
Points: 12687 Status: Lurker | Followup to B3n: #00314133
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All things serve the beam
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Inverted Whale
from United States Minor Outlying Islands on 2002-07-18 10:22 [#00314159]
Points: 3301 Status: Lurker
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Anyone like Thomas Pynchon?
"The Crying of Lot 49" is a great little book in 7 chapters that can easily be read in a week.
If you're feeling smart, you could try tackling the amazingly ponderous "Gravity's Rainbow." I'm truly afraid of that book.
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jand
from Braintree (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-18 10:26 [#00314170]
Points: 5975 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag
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I keep meaning to read some Pynchon as a lot of my designer mates think he's the tops....
Just started Underworld by Don DeLillo (sp??) yesterday...that's about a 1000 pages long & bloody heavy so it's a right arse to carry around (I read a lot on my journey to work)...still I guess the exercise will do me good :)......
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B3n
from Manchester (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-18 10:28 [#00314178]
Points: 4700 Status: Lurker
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I see nick hornby is really 'in' now....everyone on the beach had a hornby book
anylike roddy doyle's paddy clarke har har har?
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pOgO
from behind your belly button fluff on 2002-07-18 10:29 [#00314183]
Points: 12687 Status: Lurker
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I havent read any hornby. worth it?
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Inverted Whale
from United States Minor Outlying Islands on 2002-07-18 10:29 [#00314185]
Points: 3301 Status: Lurker | Followup to jand: #00314170
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I enjoyed Don DeLillo's "White Noise."
For a long time I wanted to start a band named after the centerpiece of the the novel - the "Airborne Toxic Event."
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jand
from Braintree (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-18 10:31 [#00314190]
Points: 5975 Status: Moderator | Followup to Inverted Whale: #00314185 | Show recordbag
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think I'll go for that next as I'm really enjoying Underworld...
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B3n
from Manchester (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-18 10:32 [#00314194]
Points: 4700 Status: Lurker | Followup to pOgO: #00314183
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I much preferred 'high fidelity' to 'about a boy'
the film high fidelity is good too, even though they changed it from london to chicago
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HeWhoCannotBeNa
from -qp- (Netherlands, The) on 2002-07-18 11:25 [#00314298]
Points: 218 Status: Lurker
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Ayn Rand - Letters of Ayn Rand
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pOgO
from behind your belly button fluff on 2002-07-18 12:40 [#00314456]
Points: 12687 Status: Lurker | Followup to B3n: #00314194
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Oh yeah, that's one of his innit !!
I've seen the first 1/2 of the film then fell asleep (it was about 5am and I was stoned =o\) I'll give that one a go =oD
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Ceri JC
from Jefferson City (United States) on 2002-07-18 12:45 [#00314460]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag
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Ada or Ardor. Everything else seems so empty and poorly written after reading this.
I've reading the complete works of oscar wilde at the moment, currently the play "Vera: Or, the Nihilists" it's quite weak compared to his masterpiece, "The importance of being ernest" and "The portrait of Dorian Grey".
I'm also reading some "Just William" books that I bought in a car boot sale. I know they're kids books, but they're so funny.
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jonesy
from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2002-07-18 12:49 [#00314473]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker
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I've been meaning to check out Don Deliello (or however you spell it). I'm currently reading 'Grits' by Niall Griffiths and its crap compared to 'Sheepshagger'. I want to give up but i'm halfway through and am loathe to put down a book I've started.
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jand
from Braintree (United Kingdom) on 2002-07-18 12:50 [#00314475]
Points: 5975 Status: Moderator | Followup to Ceri JC: #00314460 | Show recordbag
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your mention of Wilde made me dig out his bio last week...tough going to start with but after the first 50 pages I was hooked...makes excellent background reading if you like the plays as it kinda puts em in context...
I think it's by Richard Elleson or something like that...
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corngrower
from the fertile grounds of Iowa, w (United States) on 2003-06-27 18:22 [#00759954]
Points: 4404 Status: Lurker
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I'm currently reading Albert Camus's The Stranger after being recommended by my philosophy professor.
I'm near the end, and I must say, it's one of the most engaging reads I've had in a long time. It is relatively short (less than 150 pgs), but the style Camus uses is very powerful, putting great meaning in each setence instead of over-elaborating. The story itself is great and very morally intriguing, and I find myself relating to the main character very well, thinking that I would share similiar feelings in his sitiuation. I would highly recommend it to anyone looking for an interesting and thought-provoking read.
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deepspace9mm
from filth on 2003-06-27 18:57 [#00760028]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict
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Been vaguely depressed lately, so i'm re-reading my way thru the moomin books by the wonderful mrs tove jansson. so dark and surreal and yet so lovely :)
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Dozier
from United States on 2003-06-27 22:39 [#00760295]
Points: 2080 Status: Lurker
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I finished Nemesis (Isaac Asimov) a few weeks ago, which was good if you like Asimov, though the ending seemed quite weak. In another day I should be finished with Lucifer's Hammer (Larry Niven). It's been pretty darn good, especially if you are intrigued by end of civilization type stories.
Been debating what I'm going to read next. It's either going to be some philosophy (Kierkegaard or Kant) or Mark Twain (Letters From Earth or Roughing It). Any suggestions?
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mappatazee
from ¨y¨z¨| (Burkina Faso) on 2003-06-27 22:52 [#00760298]
Points: 14294 Status: Lurker
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The Stranger was one of the only good books I've read in highschool, I related well to the main character as well.
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Zombiekev
from Ardmore (United States) on 2003-06-27 23:26 [#00760319]
Points: 2857 Status: Lurker
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i've been reading some old steve perry sci-fi novels
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Smyrma
from Beloit, WI (United States) on 2003-06-28 00:40 [#00760350]
Points: 2478 Status: Lurker
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"Tha Doggfather" - Snoop Dogg's autobiography. Highly recommended.
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go gadget
from who cares (United States) on 2003-06-28 02:04 [#00760404]
Points: 159 Status: Lurker
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invisible monsters
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Messageboard index
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