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wot r u reedin?
 

offline Meho Krljic from Beograd (Yugoslavia) on 2002-11-01 05:59 [#00423870]
Points: 6617 Status: Addict | Followup to tolstoyed: #00423866



Well, I haven't read Alchemist, just flipped through it, saw
it for what it was and decided against it. I have, however
read Veronica as one of my colegues left it in the shop I
used to work in and I had a very dull day there (and it's a
short book). It is not as bad as I expected but it's
horrible nevertheless...


 

offline tolstoyed from the ocean on 2002-11-01 06:01 [#00423872]
Points: 50073 Status: Moderator | Followup to Meho Krljic: #00423870



hehehe, all i needed to know
not going to read it now ;)


 

offline Meho Krljic from Beograd (Yugoslavia) on 2002-11-01 06:01 [#00423874]
Points: 6617 Status: Addict | Followup to tolstoyed: #00423867



Serbs are even worse, they almost fought each other to get
books signed by him several years ago in Belgrade and the
book-store staff just threw everybody (including Koelo) out
at 8 p.m. precisely because it was the end of their working
day.


 

offline jonesy from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2002-11-01 06:02 [#00423875]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker



When I was doing some work experience in a junior school
back last year, there was an 8 year old reading it to me.
That told me all I needed to know.

Then again, one was reading Roald Dahl so I should shut the
fuck up.


 

offline tolstoyed from the ocean on 2002-11-01 06:02 [#00423876]
Points: 50073 Status: Moderator



about alchemist-i read read about 75%, just couldnt finish
hehehe
but i was trying


 

offline jonesy from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2002-11-01 06:04 [#00423879]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker



BTW, I started reading Nabakov's Lolita to the girls and
that's when they threw me out. Curse them!


 

offline tolstoyed from the ocean on 2002-11-01 06:04 [#00423880]
Points: 50073 Status: Moderator | Followup to jonesy: #00423879



you should've started with henry miller hehehe


 

offline Meho Krljic from Beograd (Yugoslavia) on 2002-11-01 06:05 [#00423882]
Points: 6617 Status: Addict | Followup to tolstoyed: #00423872



Pity you bought it. For stuff that seriously deals with
"beyond" check Julio Cortasar.


 

offline tolstoyed from the ocean on 2002-11-01 06:06 [#00423884]
Points: 50073 Status: Moderator | Followup to Meho Krljic: #00423882



it was cheap, so it doesnt matter ;)
i'll check cortasar


 

offline jonesy from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2002-11-01 06:08 [#00423887]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker | Followup to tolstoyed: #00423880



I was gonna move onto him next, then Bret Easton Ellis and
Irvine Welsh.


 

offline Meho Krljic from Beograd (Yugoslavia) on 2002-11-01 06:10 [#00423888]
Points: 6617 Status: Addict



Cortasar is da man. He also had impeccable taste in music.


 

offline tolstoyed from the ocean on 2002-11-01 06:11 [#00423890]
Points: 50073 Status: Moderator | Followup to Meho Krljic: #00423882



are cortasars books translated in serbian?


 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2002-11-01 06:11 [#00423891]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker



I'm reading A Fire Upon The Deep by Vernor Vinge (pronounced
VINjee). It's the best sci fi (*) I've ever read and I've
read lotses. It's so original it makes me feel like I'm 12
again discovering old Asimov-edited anthologies of early sci
fi.

The main idea is that there are different physical laws in
different sectors of the galaxy. The further out you get
from the galactic core, the more is possible. We (earth) are
in an area called the Slowness--we can't even go faster than
light and it makes us be kinda stupid. Closer in to the
galactic core is an area of mindlessness where even basic
technology fails. Further out is the Beyond where faster
than light and other neat technological tricks are possible.
And beyond the Beyond is the Transcend, where races go to
sometimes destroy themselves in the process of trying to
become Powers, godlike intelligences beyond our reckoning.
And that's just the most basic premise.

It's just so fucking good, it's uncut literary cocaine for
nerds.

(*) I call it sci fi to annoy Harlan Ellison in case he's
reading this (fat chance).



 

offline tolstoyed from the ocean on 2002-11-01 06:12 [#00423893]
Points: 50073 Status: Moderator



sounds cool-review
The complete collection of short stories by Julio Cortazar -
in progress
When i've read the very first story i knew that i will read
them all. His fantasy and craft leaves me speachless. His
stories make me want to visit all this places and maybe even
spend a year or two there. Read it.



 

offline Meho Krljic from Beograd (Yugoslavia) on 2002-11-01 06:19 [#00423900]
Points: 6617 Status: Addict | Followup to tolstoyed: #00423893



Tolstoyed: yes, his stories are fantastic and there are at
least four collections of his stories in serbian. Er, make
that five, actually, the new one just came out.

Fleetmouse: Sci-Fi is a no-no. SF is the only proper term.
H. Ellison is my spiritual father, I am warning you. I have
read some Winge's stuff before but haven't read that one...


 

offline Inverted Whale from United States Minor Outlying Islands on 2002-11-01 07:40 [#00423952]
Points: 3301 Status: Lurker | Followup to fleetmouse: #00423891



I read "A Fire Upon The Deep" last year and really enjoyed
it. Hopefully there will be more books in that setting.

I just finished "A House for Mr Biswas" by V. S. Naipaul and
next in the pile of books is "The Three Stigmata of Palmer
Eldritch" by P.K. Dick.

I didn't really like "A House for Mr Biswas." It came
recommended by my wife (and a lot of other people, I
suppose) but I could never really get into it.


 

offline Quoth from Sweden on 2002-11-01 07:46 [#00423959]
Points: 3840 Status: Lurker



"This Boy's Life" - Tobias Wolff


 

offline pOgO from behind your belly button fluff on 2002-11-01 08:13 [#00423980]
Points: 12687 Status: Lurker



The Dead Zone - Stephen King


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2002-11-01 08:13 [#00423981]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to pOgO: #00423980 | Show recordbag



Ah, read that a couple of years ago. It's good if you've
read cujo too, set in the same town...


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2002-11-01 08:51 [#00424010]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker



bird: my dad gave me a copy of metamorphasis when i was
fairly young... shall i dig it up? never was able to read
it.

i'm reading 'one river' by wade davis. it's sort of a
non-fiction adventure and loaded with history of indigenous
south america and wade completely understands the principal
life is far more exciting than ficiton, which makes for a
great read.


 

offline bird from New Zealand, but in (Switzerland) on 2002-11-01 11:14 [#00424092]
Points: 394 Status: Lurker | Followup to jupitah: #00424010



yes look it up~


 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2002-11-01 12:35 [#00424144]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker | Followup to Inverted Whale: #00423952



I read "A Fire Upon The Deep" last year and really
enjoyed it. Hopefully there will be more books in that
setting.


There's a new one already, called A Deepness In The Sky or
something. It's listed on Amazon.

I just finished "A House for Mr Biswas" by V. S. Naipaul
and next in the pile of books is "The Three Stigmata of
Palmer
Eldritch" by P.K. Dick.

I didn't really like "A House for Mr Biswas." It came
recommended by my wife (and a lot of other people, I
suppose) but I could never really get into it.


Awww yeah Palmer Eldritch is great. It's very finely
razorbalanced between satire and tragedy.

A good V.S. Naipaul is An Area of Darkness. Boy does he hate
India in a lot of ways. Haven't actually read anything else
by him. I want to read that book where Paul Theroux tears
him a new one.


 

offline zaphod from the metaverse on 2002-11-01 13:06 [#00424170]
Points: 4428 Status: Addict



The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick


 

offline Jarworski from The Grove (United Kingdom) on 2002-11-01 13:15 [#00424174]
Points: 10836 Status: Lurker



Last 5 books:

'Minority Report' - Phillip K Dick
'Maribou Stork Nightmares' - Irvine Welsh
'The Acid House' - Irvine Welsh
Collection 2 - HP Lovecraft (re-read)
'The Regulators' - Richard Bachman (re-read)

Currently reading: 'Ecstacy' - Irvine Welsh

Next 5 to read:

'Filth' - Irvine Welsh
'Porno' - Irvine Welsh
'The Wasp Factory' - Iain Banks
'Congo' - Michael Crichton
'Crime And Punishment' - Dostoyevsky


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2002-11-01 13:40 [#00424203]
Points: 24578 Status: Lurker | Followup to Jarworski: #00424174



I read most of the Philip K Dick novels when I was about
19/20 --- really good, but if you read too much you really
start to have a fucked-up mind ;)

You should read "The Idiot" and "The House of the Dead" by
Dostoyevsky after C+P -- he's just about my favourite author
:)


 

offline HeWhoCannotBeNa from -qp- (Netherlands, The) on 2002-11-01 13:44 [#00424213]
Points: 218 Status: Lurker



Ubik


 

offline X-tomatic from ze war room on 2002-11-01 13:55 [#00424227]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker



"the santaroga barrier", frank herbert


 

offline BILE from São Paulo (Brazil) on 2002-11-01 14:01 [#00424233]
Points: 1769 Status: Regular



"fahrenheit 451" for the 3rd time


 

offline neetta from Finland on 2002-11-01 15:12 [#00424276]
Points: 5924 Status: Regular



the dunwich horror by h p lovecraft


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2002-11-01 15:22 [#00424281]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



the ultimate hitchhiker's guide by Douglas Adams


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2002-11-01 15:34 [#00424287]
Points: 24578 Status: Lurker | Followup to neetta: #00424276



mm I love H P Lovecraft! He's F.A.B.!


 

offline neetta from Finland on 2002-11-01 15:46 [#00424299]
Points: 5924 Status: Regular | Followup to marlowe: #00424287



me too! i can see from your location that too. i'm
re-reading all his stuff now cuz we are having a cthulhu
role playing campaign


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2002-11-01 18:15 [#00424422]
Points: 24578 Status: Lurker | Followup to neetta: #00424299



hey sounds cool :) Jarworski really loves H P Lovecraft
too--I wish there was a kickass movie adaptation of one of
his stories :-/ Most I've seen have been low budget affairs


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2002-11-01 18:20 [#00424424]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



Oi, who said you could have a HP lovecraft discussion w.o
me?

Neetta, whats the cthulu RPG like? Did you know there's a PC
game based onit int he works...


 

offline weatheredstoner from same shit babes. (United States) on 2002-11-01 18:37 [#00424438]
Points: 12585 Status: Lurker



I am currently reading "Speaker for the Dead" by Orson Scott
Card. A wonderfull followup to "Enders Game".

Also Frijtof (sp?) Capra is one smart dude.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2002-11-01 19:08 [#00424457]
Points: 24578 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #00424424



I apologise, Ceri! I had no idea you were Lovecraftian too
:)


 

offline afxNUMB from So.Flo on 2002-11-01 20:35 [#00424552]
Points: 7099 Status: Regular



"White Teeth"



 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2002-11-01 20:39 [#00424555]
Points: 24578 Status: Lurker | Followup to afxNUMB: #00424552



There was a Tv mini-series adaptation of that book here last
month--I watched the first episode and it was quite good.
How is the book?


 

offline afxNUMB from So.Flo on 2002-11-01 20:50 [#00424562]
Points: 7099 Status: Regular | Followup to marlowe: #00424555



No way?!?!!?

The book is great...It's a lot of stories (as you may know)
It's easy reading, and I've only read a few books.

=)


 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2002-11-01 20:51 [#00424565]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker | Followup to neetta: #00424299



Awww mannnnnn I tried to get one of those going but I didn't
know enough Lovecraft fans.

My fave Lovecraft is probably Shadow Over Innsmouth. He
really makes you visualize the narrator's escape from the
hotel and flight through the shadowed streets.

When I first read Lovecraft I insisted on reading it at
night in the near-dark with my back to an open window. Now
that was an experience.


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2002-11-01 20:54 [#00424569]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker



usually i'm reading a number of books at the same
time....for example....a history book and another book just
for fun!

however i am reading a very cool book recommended and
borrowed from my boyfriend

author - John Irving

title - A Son Of The Circus

fascinating book.....i recommend looking it up on amazon if
you wanna know more ..... i'm not even half way though it.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2002-11-01 21:04 [#00424575]
Points: 24578 Status: Lurker | Followup to fleetmouse: #00424565



That's what I did, too, Fleetmouse, when I first read
Lovecraft :)


 

offline keikabi from Sydney (Australia) on 2002-11-01 21:23 [#00424589]
Points: 17 Status: Lurker



I've just finished The Dice Man by Luke Rhinehart and I
really enjoyed it. It deals with breaking down the
personality by offering up your life decisions to a roll of
the dice.

Right now I'm reading The Heart Is Decietful Above All
Things by JT LeRoy. It's quite disturbing and follows on
from his previous book Sarah which is about his life as a
cross dressing hustler.



 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2002-11-01 21:39 [#00424598]
Points: 24578 Status: Lurker | Followup to keikabi: #00424589



Yeah, the Dice Man is a very popular book--I've picked it up
before but couldn't be arsed to read it--I picked up
L'étranger by Camus instead, which was great.


 

offline keikabi from Sydney (Australia) on 2002-11-01 21:46 [#00424603]
Points: 17 Status: Lurker



The Dice Man can be hard reading due to it's convoluted
style. Luke Rhinehart tends to ramble on with psycho babble
for a large part, but once the story hits halfway it really
gets going and becomes pretty amusing.

The book has a real cult following, which isn't hard to
understand when you consider the concept of the book.

Apparently there's a show on the British travel channel
which revolves around two guys who roll the dice to decide
where in the world they'll travel too and what they'll do
when they get there. Shame we don't get it here in
Australia, I reckon it'd be pretty interesting to watch.



 

offline neetta from Finland on 2002-11-02 05:00 [#00424863]
Points: 5924 Status: Regular



lovecrafts books are about the only books that really scare
me.

the RPG is very good, maybe because we have the greatest GM
who really can keep up that lovecraftian mood. also, we try
to avoid all that dice throwing and concentrate on living
our characters.


 

offline _awt_ from Malmö (Sweden) on 2002-11-02 05:10 [#00424865]
Points: 2202 Status: Regular



A pretty good book about basic Kabbalah


 

offline Zombiekev from Ardmore (United States) on 2002-11-02 06:35 [#00424899]
Points: 2857 Status: Lurker



Dune - Frank Herbert


 

offline flea from depths of your mind (New Zealand) on 2002-11-02 08:43 [#00424972]
Points: 9083 Status: Regular



I read about four or five things simultaneously hence take
ages to complete anything..have been blessed with the
attention span the size of a pea...I know mixing metaphors
but anyhoo..
currently

Howl-Allen Ginsberg

Choke-Chuck Palahnuik

Attitude-The New SubversivePolitical Cartoonists..it's a
book about the current crop of radical US cartoonists..like
Peter Kuper etc...

Radical Graphics Radical- A book about Graphic Designers
thatare breaking and yet setting new rules..it features
Designer Republic..

The Designer's Guide to Color Combinations..



 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2002-11-02 08:53 [#00424975]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker | Followup to flea: #00424972



The Designer's Guide to Color Combinations..

Is that the one by those two Japanese chaps? I have volume 5
which seems to me to be the good one. Combo 673 is nice.


 


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