What are you reading?
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- betamaxnomates
- Posts: 293
- Joined: Tue Jul 10, 2007 8:04 am
- Location: Tokyo
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Just finished 'The Diving Bell & The Butterfly'. Amazing story - funny, sad, angry, and strangely hopeful as well. His description of the accident that left him paralysed in the penultimate chapter is just breathtaking.
I've since started Don DeLillo's 'Falling Man'. I've found most of DeLillo's recent stuff to be a bit lacking but supposedly this is a return to form. Too early to tell at the minute though.
I've since started Don DeLillo's 'Falling Man'. I've found most of DeLillo's recent stuff to be a bit lacking but supposedly this is a return to form. Too early to tell at the minute though.
I posted earlier in this thread about Half of a Yellow Sun. It got boring to be honest, wouldn't recommend it, though I will finish it. Hate not finishing a book.
Now reading 'Cross' by Jason Patterson. Had never read any Patterson before and so far so good, pretty standard detective fiction format but engaging and fast paced which suits the type of story being told.
Now reading 'Cross' by Jason Patterson. Had never read any Patterson before and so far so good, pretty standard detective fiction format but engaging and fast paced which suits the type of story being told.
Just started 'How to be free' by Tom Hodgkinson. 9 Pages in and the anarchist in me is getting all hot and bothered. It's basically a book describing how you can attempt to live a simplier and freer life, throw off the shackles of anxiety, bureaucracy, debt, government, housework and all those other really bad things.
Just rediscovered Pat Mill's comic strip 'Charley's War' - used to read it as part of Battle when I was a nipper. Reading back I'm amazed that this was aimed at kids, its one of the most poignant anti-war peices I've read for time, and its a comic for 10 year olds. Stands the test of time and I read it cover to cover in one go, couldn't put it down...
Gonna hunt out the other volumes this weekend.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Charleys-War-Ju ... 1840236272
Gonna hunt out the other volumes this weekend.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Charleys-War-Ju ... 1840236272
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- Posts: 4688
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- Location: Manchester
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I just read that a few weeks back after the recommendation of the Richard & Judy book club.forensix (mcr) wrote:just finished again before that the Road - Cormac McCarthydatura wrote:great bookalfie wrote:jack kerouac- on the road is cued up next for reading
Need to check the Border trilogy next.
"At the workplace, you shouldn’t look at problems in a traditional way. There might be better solutions. Dare to be creative," is Wang’ archlord power leveling s advice."
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- Posts: 2011
- Joined: Thu Nov 16, 2006 11:54 pm
- Location: Glasgow - no more hungover bus journeys home!
'After Dark', Haruki Murakami's latest. He's like the Japanese David Lynch, but a novelist rather than a director
http://www.thehungersite.com
ckzdub wrote:no 1 fucking cares about ur oppinion go back to listening to ur soft ass homophobe. garage 2step medatative bullshit
Now reading The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
and
Empire: How Britain made the Modern World by Niall Fergasun, good so far, a modern take on the postivite/negative impacts of Britain's empire
and
Empire: How Britain made the Modern World by Niall Fergasun, good so far, a modern take on the postivite/negative impacts of Britain's empire
I am still reading the Myth Of Sisyphus by Albert Camus and Noise by Jacques Attali.
They're both jolly good but the translation of the Camus seems a bit blunt compared to translations of his fiction that I've read. Noise is excellent, but I'm unsure as to where he's going with all of the Baudrillardian simulacrum hoo ha as I was never a fan of that.
They're both jolly good but the translation of the Camus seems a bit blunt compared to translations of his fiction that I've read. Noise is excellent, but I'm unsure as to where he's going with all of the Baudrillardian simulacrum hoo ha as I was never a fan of that.
Bass Master General
Camus is the man. I read the Fall twice in a row the other week. So much going on in there.stanton wrote:I am still reading the Myth Of Sisyphus by Albert Camus and Noise by Jacques Attali.
They're both jolly good but the translation of the Camus seems a bit blunt compared to translations of his fiction that I've read. Noise is excellent, but I'm unsure as to where he's going with all of the Baudrillardian simulacrum hoo ha as I was never a fan of that.
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