Just about to finish The Count of Monte Cristo. I don't typically read books more than once, but this is #3 for me. Great book that always delivers.
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Just about to finish The Count of Monte Cristo. I don't typically read books more than once, but this is #3 for me. Great book that always delivers.
Just finished Blake Crouch's Dark Matter. It's your basic existential sci-fi relationship thriller. I really enjoyed it.
A Man Called Ove.
A sardonic take on depression, death and holding to a peculiar angle on life.
A Swedish widower of taciturn mien grapples with layoff, old age, suicide and a neighborhood of modern close to the bone life.
Surprisingly uplifting and funny.
Halfway through With The Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa, by E.B. Sledge. Very detailed memoir of his time in the Pacific theater of WW2 as a marine mortar man. I can't put it down.
Just started "What the Dog Knows: Scent, Science, and the Amazing Ways Dogs Perceive the World". I like it so far. Working dogs, cadaver hunting dogs, etc. and how they do it. Combines a lot of things I like. Dogs, science, hiking around in the woods.
Nomad by Matthew Mather - just saw it is free for kindle if you have prime.
Pretty cool science ey read about a catastrophic celestial event about to happen to earth. Heavy on the physics being the enemy as opposed to other beings. Just saw he turned it into four book series, so at least I know what I am reading next.
The Cold Six Thousand, Jame Ellroy. If you are into Noir and political/mob/Kennedy Assassination stories its a wild ride written in an odd style.
His explanation is one of his early books came in too long. He was asked to cut 100 pages. Instead he cut about every 5th word.
Took me a while to get through it, but finished it a few days ago. Overall it's an enjoyable read, but slightly disjointed. There are some real laugh out loud moments, but if you're looking for a book with a real plot look elsewhere.
I just started "Wild" by Cheryl Strayed. I'm kind of going in with a bad attitude about it, but I figure it's probably worth reading. I haven't seen the movie yet, either.
watched this flick The Girl With All The Gifts the other week.
Learned that it was based on the novel of the same name (and actually the author wrote the screenplay concurrently with the book, or so I've heard).
At any rate, picked up a copy of the novel last week.
100 pages in and it's even more intense and page-turning than the film, which was really good.
Just a few minor differences between the film and book so far, but I still have 300 pages to go, so we shall see.
I don't check in often enough to be useful, so it may have already been mentioned: Hillbilly Elegy by JD Vance is a great non-fiction read.
HUE 1968- By Mark Bowden ( Black Hawk Down). Holy shit, great book. Most detailed account of the Battle for Hue, and the Tet Offensive in general. Highly recommend.
Just back from Flordor (why anyone would want to live in that pit is well beyond me) and chewed a bunch of books en route (with my seat moderately back).
Best of that bunch was "The Bad Assed Librarians of Timbuktu".
It really is about some bad assed librarians, but also about Sufis and other tolerant forms of Muslim faith, dispossessed Tuaregs, US and French foreign policy and activity, cultural factions and a long rich history of literacy largely unknown by such honky white boys as myself.
**** (Four flakes recommendation, really, really well done)
interestingly enough, the author of the book, M.R. Carey (aka Mike Carey, best known for his work on the Vertigo comicbooks Lucifer and Hellblazer) wrote the book and the screenplay concurrently. I think I enjoyed the first 2/3 of the book more than the film, but actually enjoyed/appreciated the ending of the film more than the ending of the book.
highly recommend watching the film and reading the book or reading the book and watching the film, especially if you dig post-apocalyptic shit. and the Walking Dead.
Will finish Hidden Life of Trees tonight or tomorrow. Kind of charming, pretty interesting, sort of pedantic but short and I'd say worth reading overall.
Read "Whitey" by O'Neill and Lehr recently. Kind of turgid dead prose for the most part (two authors will do that, they cancel each other out so there's no voice) but meticulously researched and documented.
Kind of painful for me in a way, as a Boston Irish guy I still at some level held onto the myth of Whitey the Robin Hood of Boston crime, pushing the Italians back and helping his people, and it's so clear that he was just an absolute monster piece of shit by halfway through the book that it became a slog. Just blow after blow to that myth.
Whitey was an evil murderous bastard who didn't give one shit and may he rot in hell. With his pious brother Billy by his side. I can't recommend the book, I just told you all you need to know.
Stephen king. 11/23/63
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"Back Over There" by Richard Rubin.
WW1 buffs will love this one. He travels through northeast France visiting many sites of the war, some famous, some quite obscure. His writing style is very engaging.
Love and Other Pranks by Tony Vigorito is amazing.
If philosophical ideas were harpoons , Tony Vigorito could turn every whale in Ahab's ocean into floating pincushions..." —Tom Robbins.
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just started "empire" by gore vidal.
The Reunited States of America.
We need a "3rd Story". Or 4 or 5.
Been reading Jim Harrison for 15 years, but finally got around to Legends of the Fall. Holy shit it's good.
great read
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"Where the Water Goes" by David Owen. Just finished it, great account of the Colorado River and the struggles the West faced/is facing with water. It is exremely easy to read and he breaks water law down into very easy to digest bits and pieces. I'm an earth sciences student at CU currently and still I learned a ton from this book.
Would recommend to anyone, let alone all of us who live on the west coast and are deep in this issue
Thanks, That happens to be referenced multiple times throughout
I just finished Norse Mythology by Neil Gaiman. Apparently he's the same guy that wrote American Gods which is also a TV series. It is basically a retelling of some myths about the Norse Gods. It's a quick read and was interesting.
just finished a bunch of good books-
"Pacific" by simon winchester- I had read "Atlantic" prior, which was great- but it's the history that we all learned.
In the US we don't get as much Pacific history (and speaking of settling the west- prob have rec'd before but Astoria is a great book on the western expansion around early 1800 https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 )
Pacific is also fairly recent so it delves into the current S China sea and greater area power struggles so really a worthwhile read
also Ghengis Khan and the making of the modern world was really good for more history on asia
I'm a fan of Kurlansky ("Salt", "Cod"), and just started one of his older titles, "A Continent of Islands", a history of the Caribbean. Interesting so far, if a bit dated (1992).
read all the kurlansky's too- so good and informative
once I get hooked on an author I usually read all their books (unless they get a really shitty review on one)
Then you would love Daniel Boorstin's masterpieces "The Discoverers", "The Creators", and "The Seekers". Absolutely essential reading for the curious mind.
goody thank you bc I need some new reads. started the Doug Coombs hunting the wild coomba the other night but think that will pass quickly and have had so many good ones in a row that I am on a reading high i need to continue