What are you reading PART 700 | xltronic messageboard
 
You are not logged in!

F.A.Q
Log in

Register
  
 
  
 
Now online (3)
recycle
Hyperflake
big
...and 176 guests

Last 5 registered
Oplandisks
nothingstar
N_loop
yipe
foxtrotromeo

Browse members...
  
 
Members 8025
Messages 2615812
Today 16
Topics 127665
  
 
Messageboard index
What are you reading PART 700
 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2006-12-12 15:23 [#02016594]
Points: 24610 Status: Regular



Just picked up Umberto Eco's The Mysterious Flame of
Queen Loana
from my local Waterstone's bookseller. I've
read chapter one of part one; the story concerns an amnesiac
who remembers nothing about himself, but remembers the
contents of every book he's ever read. It's been engrossing
so far.

"A beautiful evocation of a difficult period of Italian
history, full of the flair and erudition for which we love
Eco"
Metro

"Confirms Eco as an outstanding writer of philosophy
dressed as fiction"
Observer

"Another great exhilaration from Eco. Eye-poppingly
fascinating"


These write-ups greatly influenced my decision to purchase
this book.

NEXT!



 

offline dog_belch from Netherlands, The on 2006-12-12 15:32 [#02016597]
Points: 15098 Status: Addict | Show recordbag



"Umberto Eco once again triumphs in reminding everyone
how cleve he is
"

I am reading "Cortos" by Alberto Fuguet, but I couldn't tell
you much about it beyond it's quite entertaining. That and
my luxury volumes of Robert Aickman that I am savouring page
by haunted page.


 

offline ecnadniarb on 2006-12-12 15:33 [#02016598]
Points: 24805 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



The Cheese Lover's Cookbook and Guide: Over 150 Recipes with
Instructions on How to Buy, Store, and Serve All Your
Favorite Cheeses by Paula Lambert.

The plots a bit rubbish. Each chapter seems different from
the last with only the same loose cheesy theme running
through it.


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2006-12-12 15:33 [#02016599]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker



Charles Bukowski: Women

Very entertaining.


 

offline dog_belch from Netherlands, The on 2006-12-12 15:34 [#02016600]
Points: 15098 Status: Addict | Show recordbag



I can't even spell "clever" and I've read both The Name of
the Rose and Foucault's Pendulum, and both were
insufferable.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2006-12-12 15:39 [#02016602]
Points: 24610 Status: Regular | Followup to ecnadniarb: #02016598



I saw a very similar book myself recently; next time you're
browsing at the bookshop, you might like to consider moving
away from the Dairy Product section.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2006-12-12 15:40 [#02016603]
Points: 24610 Status: Regular | Followup to dog_belch: #02016600



I haven't read any Umberto Eco before; I saw Name of the
Rose many moons again and remember liking it. Anyway, I'm
enjoying this book so far, and if I enjoy it for its
remainder I might well pick up another Eco!


 

offline ecnadniarb on 2006-12-12 15:40 [#02016604]
Points: 24805 Status: Lurker | Followup to marlowe: #02016602 | Show recordbag



But I like reading the dairies of people lives :(


 

offline Sclah from Freudian Slipmat on 2006-12-12 15:40 [#02016605]
Points: 3121 Status: Lurker | Followup to DirtyPriest: #02016599



Bukowski rules. I didn't like Women as much as his other
semi-autobiographical novels, though.

Currently reading Richard Ford - Independence Day. It's
pretty good, the main character kind of reminds me of Lester
Burnham in the movie American Beauty.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2006-12-12 15:42 [#02016607]
Points: 24610 Status: Regular | Followup to ecnadniarb: #02016604



In which case, like a farmer passing through a field of
cows, you must tread more carefully through that section,
else you might find yourself enstenched in Cheese Books :'{


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2006-12-12 15:42 [#02016609]
Points: 10672 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



Dean Koontz - Velocity. absolute fucking garbage. really is
shit. im only still reading to find out who the killer
'genius' is. last time i take a book recommendation off of
my housemate. twat.


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2006-12-12 15:43 [#02016610]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to Sclah: #02016605



I only read "post office" before, wich i liked a lot. I was
caught in a crappy job myself, at the time i read it, so it
was perfect. Enjoying "Women" as well.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2006-12-12 15:44 [#02016612]
Points: 24610 Status: Regular | Followup to Indeksical: #02016609



Haha! You didn't pause when you discovered the author was
Dean Koontz? That didn't arouse your suspicions about the
book's quality? :D


 

offline bob from Nottingham (United Kingdom) on 2006-12-12 15:45 [#02016614]
Points: 4669 Status: Lurker



I'm reading:

Earth and Planetary Science Letters Vol. 47 part 1.

It's a real page-turner.


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2006-12-12 15:50 [#02016618]
Points: 10672 Status: Lurker | Followup to marlowe: #02016612 | Show recordbag



id never heard of him before. i dont follow fiction really.
I only actively seek out sci-fi books and most of them are
old. My mate works in a book shop so i let him recommend me
a lot of stuff. the last fiction book i read before this was
Haunted by Palahniuk (?) and i thought that was shit too so
i put it down and read Last Exit to Brooklyn for the third
time.


 

offline cygnus from nowhere and everyplace on 2006-12-12 15:52 [#02016620]
Points: 11920 Status: Regular



just finished altered carbon by richard morgan,
now finishing count zero by william gibson,


Attached picture

 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2006-12-12 15:56 [#02016624]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to Indeksical: #02016618



You should have read "Choke" instead.


 

offline oyvinto on 2006-12-12 15:57 [#02016625]
Points: 8197 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



"Sex, death and flyfishing" by John Gierach


 

offline i_x_ten from arsemuncher on 2006-12-12 16:07 [#02016628]
Points: 10031 Status: Regular



i just read the ruins by scott smith, which was quite a
trashy no brainer but fun, and am about to open warren
fellows' the damage done.


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2006-12-12 16:12 [#02016630]
Points: 10672 Status: Lurker | Followup to DirtyPriest: #02016624 | Show recordbag



ive read choke and i enjoyed it. thats why i picked up
Haunted. it was just really disappointing though. the
structure of the book seemed cool at first but the stories
were mostly crap.


 

offline Cnut from the future on 2006-12-12 21:52 [#02016704]
Points: 526 Status: Regular



princess diaries pt.2


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2006-12-12 22:21 [#02016707]
Points: 10672 Status: Lurker | Followup to Cnut: #02016704 | Show recordbag



is it good?


 

offline optimus prime on 2006-12-12 22:43 [#02016709]
Points: 6447 Status: Lurker



in the final third of the good soldier by ford madox ford.
gets better the more you realise how unique it is.


 

offline roygbivcore from Joyrex.com, of course! on 2006-12-12 22:56 [#02016710]
Points: 22557 Status: Lurker



kurt vonnegut -wampeters, foma and granfalloons

it's a collection of essays and speeches mostly


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2006-12-13 03:48 [#02016752]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to Indeksical: #02016630



Ah, OK. Cool. Then i would reccomend "Survivor". It's really
good as well. I understand your critique.


 

offline Sclah from Freudian Slipmat on 2006-12-13 04:11 [#02016754]
Points: 3121 Status: Lurker



Seconding Survivor, really enjoyed that one. What's his best
novel apart from that one?


 

offline Sclah from Freudian Slipmat on 2006-12-13 04:11 [#02016755]
Points: 3121 Status: Lurker



that one


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2006-12-13 04:18 [#02016756]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to Sclah: #02016755



Choke and Survivor are two excellent books. Read them first,
and if you really love them maybe go on with hmmm....

Invisible monsters.

Then

Lullaby

Then

Stranger than fiction/Nonfiction:
A good read actually. There was one of the bits, that i had
to skip, because i found it to disgusting. For the first
time in any Palahniuk book!

Fight Club:
is probably good, but having seen the movie before i read
it, it coloured my reading of it a lot.


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2006-12-13 04:21 [#02016757]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker



Also, my favourite book of alltime:

Hermann Hesse: Siddhartha

Has anyone read it? It's such a good book.


 

offline Ezkerraldean from the lowest common denominator (United Kingdom) on 2006-12-13 04:33 [#02016760]
Points: 5733 Status: Addict



ocean of sound: david toop

weird book about ambient and early electronic music. found
it at the garden centre down the road before i came to uni.


 

offline Sclah from Freudian Slipmat on 2006-12-13 06:25 [#02016780]
Points: 3121 Status: Lurker



I recommend Haruki Murakami for those of you who haven't
read anything by him. Dance Dance Dance and the Wind-Up Bird
Chronicle are two of the best books I've read.


 

offline Skink from A cesspool in eden on 2006-12-13 06:46 [#02016784]
Points: 7483 Status: Lurker



I have recently read: Haunted - Chuck Palaniuk, Cocaine
nights - JG Ballard and Rip it up and start again - Simon
Reynolds.

Haunted was an excellent read. Palaniuk has a way of reading
that keeps you engrossed, even if what he is talking about
makes you feel sick. JG Ballard writes well. This is the
first book i have read by him. I will find some more. The
way cocaine nights ends is fantastic. Rip it up and start is
a book about post punk 1978 - 1984 and is a fascinating read
if you are a music geek. I have discovered some great bands
thanks to this book. It is written in a way that just flows
nicely and it gives you a balanced view of the most of the
main players in each little scene covered.

Currently reading: Metamorphosis and other stories by Franz
Kafka. I really do enjoy his style. Metamorphosis is only a
short story but it gives you quite a nice scope into a whole
range of human emotion. Well worth reading.


 

offline Sclah from Freudian Slipmat on 2006-12-13 07:34 [#02016793]
Points: 3121 Status: Lurker | Followup to Skink: #02016784



That post punk book sounds mighty interesting, I'll
definately check it out sometime


 

offline Dannn_ from United Kingdom on 2006-12-13 08:10 [#02016801]
Points: 7877 Status: Lurker



I searched up the old Wot R U Readin LOL thread for some
recommendations a few weeks ago and found that I had posted
saying I was reading Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man,
which i realised I never finished, so im reading that again.
I also got Vonnegut - Slaughterhouse Five out of the library
because some people ranted about it. and also a Tom Wolfe
book because I just finished a Hunter Thompson said he was
cool.


 

offline DirtyPriest from Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2006-12-13 14:27 [#02016901]
Points: 5499 Status: Lurker | Followup to Skink: #02016784



Kafka... the one where the protagonist is turned into a bug?


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2006-12-13 17:11 [#02016967]
Points: 24610 Status: Regular



I find Kafka's prose to be almost unreadable; I started to
read his collexion of short stories many moons ago and just
couldn't enjoy it all. I do remember quite enjoying The
Trial, but couldn't get into The Castle.


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2006-12-13 17:19 [#02016969]
Points: 10672 Status: Lurker | Followup to Dannn_: #02016801 | Show recordbag



Slaughterhouse 5 is wikkid.


 

offline dariusgriffin from cool on 2006-12-14 04:20 [#02017164]
Points: 12507 Status: Regular | Followup to marlowe: #02016967



Oh I love Kafka and I love The Castle and the way he writes.
It's incredibly precise in its senseless ramblings and very
funny.


 

offline E-man from Rixensart (Belgium) on 2006-12-14 04:36 [#02017168]
Points: 3000 Status: Regular



i'm reading last month's SoundOnSound
yeah !


 

offline tunemx from Budapest (Hungary) on 2006-12-14 04:38 [#02017169]
Points: 2144 Status: Webmaster | Show recordbag



Altered Carbon that's what I am reading right now.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2006-12-14 06:16 [#02017182]
Points: 24610 Status: Regular | Followup to dariusgriffin: #02017164



It's good that he has an appreciative audience; alas, just
doesn't resonate with me personally


 

offline clint from Silencio... (United Kingdom) on 2006-12-14 07:20 [#02017198]
Points: 3447 Status: Lurker



I am also reading the Portrait of the Artist.

Also have to reread dubliners & ulysses for uni...


 

offline Skink from A cesspool in eden on 2006-12-14 09:21 [#02017209]
Points: 7483 Status: Lurker | Followup to DirtyPriest: #02016901



The story is called metamorphosis.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2006-12-14 09:38 [#02017213]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



The sequel to "Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance",
which is called "Lila".

I'm also reading Gordon Ramsay's autobiography.


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2006-12-14 12:17 [#02017289]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



DMT, the spirit molecule by Rick Strassman. fascinating
stuff.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2006-12-14 16:47 [#02017391]
Points: 24610 Status: Regular



I'm sorely tempted to buy David Hasselhoff's autobiography,
for the comedy value. I picked it up at an ASDA, opened it
at random, and he has just met Sammy Davis Jr (I think), and
Sammy says to the Hoff. "One of my biggest regrets is that I
never got to sing with you." By God, it made me chuckle.


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2006-12-15 01:39 [#02017529]
Points: 21514 Status: Regular



I forget how important reading (non fiction) is. I've been
festering for some time, evidenced by my xlfuckitronic
posts. Reading is almost the only thing that matters. And
genetically I'm stupid as fuck so need all the culture I can
get.

Now, essays here:
LAZY_TITLE


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2006-12-15 01:50 [#02017531]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular



a field guide to the flora of south eastern australia


 

offline Monoid from one source all things depend on 2006-12-15 02:38 [#02017537]
Points: 11010 Status: Lurker



Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - The Gulag Archipelago


Attached picture

 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2006-12-15 05:17 [#02017581]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular



I just finished Evelyn Waugh's 'A Handful of Dust'. It damn
near killed me. "The Loved One' was much more enjoyable. I
picked up JSwift's "Gulliver's Travels" yesterday for a good
second hand price, but I think I'll leave it for a while. I
need something to pick me up after the slow torture that was
'A Handful of Dust'. I am thinking maybe 'The Hobbit'.


 


Messageboard index