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Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 1:44 pm
by frebentos
badger wrote: might return to my inner geek and read a graphic novel
If youve not read Watchmen or From Hell, I would give them a go...two different styles with Watchmen being my favourite for sheer storytelling and From Hell providing a different perspective on the Jack the Ripper mystery, good thick graphic novel with historical notes at the back....

Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 1:48 pm
by dutty yuppie
Just read "a Sunday by the pool in Kigali" by Gil Courtemanche. It's a story set during the Rwandan genocide and is one of the most moving books I've ever read. Hard to believe the extent of what happened only 13 years ago. Urge you to read it.

Now reading "A Prayer for Owen Meany" by John Irving. It's meant to be a superb book, 100 pages in and I'm yet to see that. I think the decision to put it down may need to be considered soon. If so, I'll move on to War And Peace because I have always intended to read it.

Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 1:57 pm
by LEQ
@ Boomnoise, sorry dude totally forgot about this thread, finished Jpod a while ago now and I agree with your point in that I was a little disappointed to be honest, It was self-indulgent, yet still enjoyable, some of it was really funny and then other parts were just like 'wtf, why is that in there?'. Some of the sub-plots would have been better suited in a cartoon , it was a middle of the road Coupland book I reckon, you won't be disappointed but you won't be raving about it.


Now on the Murakami :)

Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 4:20 pm
by sri
i just started reading there are no accidents ~synchronicity and the stories of our lives by robert h. hopcke. i picked it up at the library and got suckered by the quote on the back, "chances are, if this book has found it's way into your hands, you are supposed to read it" i'm glad i picked it up though. so far, it has been amazing. i have been noticing so many synchronistic events lately and realizing how enigmatic this universe is :D

Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 7:09 pm
by paolo
'London Orbital' by Iain Sinclair. It's like JG Ballard crossed with WG Sebald :J:

Posted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 7:43 pm
by jah pat
Image

Posted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 4:39 am
by product
Image

Image

Posted: Fri Aug 31, 2007 11:13 pm
by "kzy" ras:man
Ive just started to read Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon were in a film called " a cock and bull story" which was loosly based around it andit was awesome!

Posted: Sat Sep 01, 2007 9:15 am
by schamotnik
LEQ wrote:Now on the Murakami :)
which one? have read quite a few .. really love murakami, although I reckon it might not be for everyone..

Posted: Mon Sep 03, 2007 8:33 am
by LEQ
Schamotnik wrote:
LEQ wrote:Now on the Murakami :)
which one? have read quite a few .. really love murakami, although I reckon it might not be for everyone..
The Wind up bird chronicle, I've had it for ages and never got round to starting it, so far it' excellent.

Posted: Mon Sep 03, 2007 9:54 am
by slothrop
Jah Pat wrote:Image
Nice.
Kzy ras:man wrote:Ive just started to read Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne
Ha ha, wicked book. Two centuries ahead of its time.

Posted: Mon Sep 03, 2007 1:21 pm
by dutty yuppie
Swung - Ewan Morrison.

It's a fictional book about an impotent man and his lover who embark across some adventures through the Glasgow swinging scene. 140 pages in and he's only been tossed off.

I bought it on the basis of Irvine Welsh's gushing praise for the book.

I'm hoping itpicks up - by that I mean I hope the characters can endear themselves to me a bit more.

Posted: Mon Sep 03, 2007 2:39 pm
by ufo over easy
paolo wrote:'London Orbital' by Iain Sinclair. It's like JG Ballard crossed with WG Sebald :J:
I've tried so hard to like Iain Sinclair but I just can't...

I thought London Orbital read like 600 pages of short, extremely well written but completely unrelated paragraphs about him and his famous mates pissing about doing nothing for a few months, and taking notes on it.

'so then this one time I met up with my buddy from the klf and we did something arty and then moaned about the state of things for a while and then the next day I had some coffee in an abandoned power station and wandered across some desolate bridge and thought about london for a bit and then there were some ghosts but not real ghosts more like metaphorical ghosts of the city and then I came up with some other metaphors, then I went home'

:D

I just finished Remains of the Day by kazuo ishiguro again - heartbreaking :( I read his latest one, Never Let Me Go recently as well... absolutely fantastic. Hugely recommended.

Posted: Mon Sep 03, 2007 4:25 pm
by paolo
^ Bit harsh I think but I see what you mean! :D

Posted: Mon Sep 03, 2007 11:04 pm
by "kzy" ras:man
Slothrop wrote:
Jah Pat wrote:Image
Nice.
Kzy ras:man wrote:Ive just started to read Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne
Ha ha, wicked book. Two centuries ahead of its time.
haha definatly "a post modern classic before there was any modernism to be written about" :D

Posted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 8:44 am
by ufo over easy
paolo wrote:^ Bit harsh I think but I see what you mean! :D
I completely see why people like him - he has a real talent for evocative prose.. but I just can't help feeling that beneath all the flowery sentences it's quite shallow :)

Posted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 9:38 am
by geiom
'Small Island' by Andrea Levy -

Informative, scary and funny book about Jamaica and England around the time of WW2...

K

Posted: Mon Oct 22, 2007 2:38 pm
by victor liechtenstein
Image

Greatness.

Posted: Mon Oct 22, 2007 2:44 pm
by LEQ
Image

So far, brilliant.

Posted: Mon Oct 22, 2007 2:48 pm
by frebentos
100 years of solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Beautiful prose.