What are you nerds reading? :D

Recommended Videos

shrekfan246

Not actually a Japanese pop star
May 26, 2011
6,374
0
0
Queen Michael said:
shrekfan246 said:
Queen Michael said:
Hiro Protagonist
I might have to read it just for that name.
Very early on, one character says that it's a stupid name.
"But you'll never forget it," Hiro replies.
Hah.

It was already on my radar because I've been on a cyberpunk bender for the past few months, but I think you just sold it to me.
 

A_Parked_Car

New member
Oct 30, 2009
627
0
0
I am currently reading War Plan Orange: The US Strategy to Defeat Japan, 1897-1945 by Edward S. Miller. It is pretty good so far.
 

Artaneius

New member
Dec 9, 2013
255
0
0
The last book series I read was the Dark Tower Series by Stephen King. The ending made me want to face desk after all of those books.
 

Pinkamena

Stuck in a vortex of sexy horses
Jun 27, 2011
2,371
0
0
I'm like less than 300 pages away from finishing the Dark Tower epic

 

Melon Hunter

Chief Procrastinator
May 18, 2009
914
0
0
I just finished Kill Your Boss by Shane Kuhn (called The Intern's Handbook over in the States). It's a really great read with an interesting concept at its core: a contract killer firm that disguises its assassins as interns to bump off corporate higher-ups. The idea being that interns are pretty much invisible to the paid workers, and managers are more than happy to offload tasks (and thus access and trust) onto them. Right up until the 'intern' finishes them off and vanishes.

It's violent and pretty dark, but also very entertaining. The book is presented as a handbook for new intakes by a retiring assassin, who frames his rules for the job by telling the story of his final assignment to kill a partner in a Manhattan law firm. The narration really nails it: the main character pulls no punches telling you about his amorality and disregard for human life, but also has this very dry sense of humour that works wonders when he inevitably breaks every one of his rules on his final mission. A unique idea and pretty well executed to boot.
 

Ed130 The Vanguard

(Insert witty quote here)
Sep 10, 2008
3,782
0
0
Re-reading By Schism Rent Asunder from the Safehold series by David Webber. Its about a human colony that was hidden from genocidal aliens, only the administrator took the directive of not having any technology that could attract them to the extreme and set up an anti-technological church with himself and the rest of the command crew as 'archangels'. The books deal with an android that re-activated several centuries afterwards that's trying to break the church's hold on the world.
 

Katherine Kerensky

Why, or Why Not?
Mar 27, 2009
7,744
0
0
A Darkling Plain, last book in the Mortal Engines quartet. Couple of dozen pages from the end, I expect I'll cry again. Brilliant little steampunk series.
I have Cloud Atlas standing by and ready to go as soon as I'm done with that book.
 

Phasmal

Sailor Jupiter Woman
Jun 10, 2011
3,676
0
0
Twintix said:
I've been on quite a Discworld binge for the last 2 years. Right now, I'm reading Monstrous Regiment, which is the 28th (I think) book in the series. I really should be farther into the series considering the pace I'm reading them at, but I, for whatever reason, didn't finish Mort for ages.

On the topic of Discworld, I always get giddy when I see that Death makes an appearance in a book. It that weird?

Phasmal said:
Equal Rites is good also, but it's not my favourite Terry Pratchett book.
Did you just start reading Discworld or are you re-reading it? Because if you have read them already, ignore the next bit.

The books really get better as the series goes on. The earlier books, while excellent, were a bit wonky when it came to certain characterizations, as Pratchett was still trying to find a suitable style. Granny Weatherwax from Equal Rites will seem a bit weird to those who are farther into the series. Pratchett has stated somewhere that her characterization wasn't actually complete until Lords And Ladies. (Which I recommend to Hell and back. Such a great book!)
Nah, I started Discworld a long time ago.

Never read them in order, though. I just read them as I came across them.

I started with Wyrd Sisters and it's still one of my favourites. I think that's why I didn't enjoy Equal Rites as much as I could have, because I didn't realise how early on it was.
I must admit I find the earlier books harder to read.

Also, Monstrous Regiment is another of my favourites! I lost my copy so I'm looking to pick up another one.
And I like it when Death turns up too. :)
 

NeutralDrow

New member
Mar 23, 2009
9,097
0
0
I'm making another attempt to read The Silmarillion. I succeeded once around ten years ago (after a few failed attempts because I just lost track of everything), so I'm ripe for this attempt.

So far, it's looking good. I'm up to the part where Feanor is introduced, and I've managed to retain the events that have happened so far.
 

tippy2k2

Beloved Tyrant
Legacy
Mar 15, 2008
14,870
2,349
118
Artaneius said:
The last book series I read was the Dark Tower Series by Stephen King. The ending made me want to face desk after all of those books.
Really? I don't want to get into it since another member in this very thread is about to finish it but I thought the ending was excellent.

It was a...different ending so I suppose I can understand why you would have hated it.

Twintix said:
I've been on quite a Discworld binge for the last 2 years. Right now, I'm reading Monstrous Regiment, which is the 28th (I think) book in the series. I really should be farther into the series considering the pace I'm reading them at, but I, for whatever reason, didn't finish Mort for ages.

On the topic of Discworld, I always get giddy when I see that Death makes an appearance in a book. It that weird?
I read a few of the Discworld books before I decided I didn't like them (LOVED the book where Death had an apprentice but I didn't really care for any of the others I read).

For reference (since I know you're dying to hear my opinion :D)

Color of Magic was alright
Light Fantastic (is that the one with the sentient piece of luggage? Cause if so, I kind of liked it)
Equal Rights was good
Mort was AWESOME!
Wyrd Sisters I did not like

Basically the series was really hit and miss for me and when I ran out of books to read from that series, I just sort of...stopped trying to get them again.
 

one squirrel

New member
Aug 11, 2014
119
0
0
I am currently reading Greg Egan, everything I can get my fingers on. Egan is an australian science fiction writer and computer scientist. If you like hard science fiction, you will love his stories.
I would recommend to start with Axiomatic, a collection of some his short stories. Every single one of them is just amazing.

Wanna read about an assassin, who has to kill his target in an infinite amount of parallel universes simultaneously?

Wanna know how it would be if you could buy an implant, that would change all your ethical values in an instant?

Or maybe you would like to read a tale about a man, who wakes up in someone elses body each morning?

My personal favorite, Into Darkness, makes the meaning of past, present and future so bodily tangible, like I've never seen it anywhere else.

Go buy all of Egan's stuff. Now. You will NOT regret it!
 

Fijiman

I am THE PANTS!
Legacy
Dec 1, 2011
16,509
0
1
I have been reading The Red Knight of Germany by Floyd Gibbons. It's a biography of Manfred Von Richthofen, better known as the Red Baron. Fairly interesting read, if I do say so myself. Granted I've been reading it on and off for the last five months, and I already know the ending, but it's still a good book. I just wish the copy of it I have wasn't falling apart.
 

TheYellowCellPhone

New member
Sep 26, 2009
8,617
0
0
Still working my way through A Song of Ice and Fire series. It's a good series, no doubt, but when there are anywhere from ten to twenty different storylines going on simultaneously and you're only interested in two, and you realize you're going to have to slog through another one hundred pages before you hit the perspective you enjoy the most... it gets a little hard to read.
 

fenrizz

New member
Feb 7, 2009
2,790
0
0
Dealers of Lightning: Xerox PARC and the Dawn of the Computer Age
www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0887309895?pc_redir=1409138676&robot_redir=1 [Amazone link]

As the title suggests it chronicles the innovations of Xerox PARC and it's effect on the computer industry.
It is pretty interesting.
 

Artaneius

New member
Dec 9, 2013
255
0
0
tippy2k2 said:
Artaneius said:
The last book series I read was the Dark Tower Series by Stephen King. The ending made me want to face desk after all of those books.
Really? I don't want to get into it since another member in this very thread is about to finish it but I thought the ending was excellent.

It was a...different ending so I suppose I can understand why you would have hated it.

Twintix said:
I've been on quite a Discworld binge for the last 2 years. Right now, I'm reading Monstrous Regiment, which is the 28th (I think) book in the series. I really should be farther into the series considering the pace I'm reading them at, but I, for whatever reason, didn't finish Mort for ages.

On the topic of Discworld, I always get giddy when I see that Death makes an appearance in a book. It that weird?
I read a few of the Discworld books before I decided I didn't like them (LOVED the book where Death had an apprentice but I didn't really care for any of the others I read).

For reference (since I know you're dying to hear my opinion :D)

Color of Magic was alright
Light Fantastic (is that the one with the sentient piece of luggage? Cause if so, I kind of liked it)
Equal Rights was good
Mort was AWESOME!
Wyrd Sisters I did not like

Basically the series was really hit and miss for me and when I ran out of books to read from that series, I just sort of...stopped trying to get them again.
It wasn't really an ending. Hell, even Stephen King writes a warning before the actual ending to stop reading. Kind of bad when the author tells you to stop reading. :p
 

Twintix

New member
Jun 28, 2014
1,023
0
0
tippy2k2 said:
I read a few of the Discworld books before I decided I didn't like them (LOVED the book where Death had an apprentice but I didn't really care for any of the others I read).

For reference (since I know you're dying to hear my opinion :D)

Color of Magic was alright
Light Fantastic (is that the one with the sentient piece of luggage? Cause if so, I kind of liked it)
Equal Rights was good
Mort was AWESOME!
Wyrd Sisters I did not like

Basically the series was really hit and miss for me and when I ran out of books to read from that series, I just sort of...stopped trying to get them again.
Ah, most of those are really early on, when Pratchett was still figuring out how to write the books. Of the earlier books, Mort and Guards! Guards! are some of the better ones, in my opinion.

If you liked Mort, you could try Reaper Man or Soul Music. They also follow Death. Otherwise, you could try the City Watch books, starting from Guards! Guards!. If you want to try them again, that is.
Phasmal said:
I started with Wyrd Sisters and it's still one of my favourites. I think that's why I didn't enjoy Equal Rites as much as I could have, because I didn't realise how early on it was.
I must admit I find the earlier books harder to read.

Also, Monstrous Regiment is another of my favourites! I lost my copy so I'm looking to pick up another one.
And I like it when Death turns up too. :)
Haha, I pretty much can't read books out of chronological order. I accidentally read Thief of Time before The Truth because they were listed in the reverse order in the book index, and when I found out I was like:


Yeah, the earlier books seem a bit wonky when you've come far. Equal Rites is only the third book in the series. I'm glad that the Granny Weatherwax in the later books is quite different. It somehow suits her better.

Good that I'm not the only one who loves it when Death shows up. I see the letters THAT ARE ALL CAPITAL and I'm like:

 

Phasmal

Sailor Jupiter Woman
Jun 10, 2011
3,676
0
0
Twintix said:
Haha, I pretty much can't read books out of chronological order. I accidentally read Thief of Time before The Truth because they were listed in the reverse order in the book index, and when I found out I was like:


Yeah, the earlier books seem a bit wonky when you've come far. Equal Rites is only the third book in the series. I'm glad that the Granny Weatherwax in the later books is quite different. It somehow suits her better.

Good that I'm not the only one who loves it when Death shows up. I see the letters THAT ARE ALL CAPITAL and I'm like:

Hah. I probably would have read them in order if I had started reading them as an adult, but my dad collected them when I was a kid, so I used to just read the ones I found lying around.

I recommended Monstrous Regiment to my sister as a Discworld you can read as a stand-alone and she kind of freaked out when she saw the number book it was.

I will re-read them all in order at one point. :D
 

tippy2k2

Beloved Tyrant
Legacy
Mar 15, 2008
14,870
2,349
118
Artaneius said:
It wasn't really an ending. Hell, even Stephen King writes a warning before the actual ending to stop reading. Kind of bad when the author tells you to stop reading. :p
I've read multiple King books (specifically The Stand, Under the Dome, and 11/22/63) and the man can write a hell of a story but can't end a story to save his freaking life. Both "The Stand" and "Under the Dome" went Deus Ex Machina to fix the situations while "11/22/63" was stated by him that the ending was someone else's idea...
 

Twintix

New member
Jun 28, 2014
1,023
0
0
Phasmal said:
I recommended Monstrous Regiment to my sister as a Discworld you can read as a stand-alone and she kind of freaked out when she saw the number book it was.

I will re-read them all in order at one point. :D
Yeah, the stand-alones are great for introducing someone who doesn't want to read all the books in order. Of the stand-alones, Small Gods might just be one of the best. At least, in my opinion. We'll see if I change my mind; I haven't gotten all that far into Monstrous Regiment. I like how it ties into The Truth a bit, too.

I can't wait to start reading Going Postal. I got the movie version sometime last spring, but I haven't watched it because I want to read the book first. I've heard that it's apparently the best of the movie versions. I just cross my fingers and hope that reading the book doesn't ruin the movie for me.

LotR was basically ruined for me because I watched the movies first and I got too bored when reading the much slower-paced book. I don't want it to happen to my precious Discworld...