what are you reading right now?

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theklng

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i never really cared for useless threads (and i don't understand why mods don't clean up more often in them), so here's one i consider worthy of posting.

inspired by the 1984 thread, the premise here is to, well, talk about which book or books you're reading right now. feel free to post a small description of it or link to its wiki for easier in depth knowledge, as well as whether it's worth reading or not.

not too long ago, i finished "the fountainhead" by ayn rand, and i'd recommend it. while i won't give away the story (as it might be too revealing), i'll just say that it portrays every character mentioned with great depth, and for a person with interest and analytic skills, it's actually interesting how you can look inside of what people are thinking... through what the author is thinking, that is.

the one i am reading now is the "sequel" to the teachings of don juan (a book i have not read), and explains in the form of a dairy how this one man, presumably american, goes to mexico first to document the life on the yaqui indians, but later to learn different abilities that the yaqui shamans, called sorcerors, teach to those who will listen. while it does revolve quite a bit around a specific drug from a specific cactus, and while the writer acts brash at times, it is still a book worth reading, due to some of the things or new horizons that the book tells about; namely how everything is subjective. as with the former book, if you like a bit of analysis on top of what you read, this is recommended.

PS: to those who would say that this has been posted before: i am indifferent.
 

hellthins

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Feb 18, 2008
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Erf. Ayn Rand.

I've mostly just been rereading some various Lovecraft stories and trying to pinpoint what makes them so horrific. So I can imitate/shamelessly steal what makes his short stories so good for some of my own short stories.
 

crimson5pheonix

It took 6 months to read my title.
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I'm pretty sure this has been done before. But that won't stop me from dropping the Mars trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson. Go read it. Now.
 

Murrah

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I'm reading this post that im typing right now.. and then next, im going to find Ofcourse by readin the post button.
 

MSORPG pl4y3r

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at the moment I'm working through Terry Pratchett's Diskworld sereis but I'v taken a break to read The Northen Lights - Phillip Pullman (I dont think I spelt it right). One book I Recomend alot is "Shades Children" from Gareth Nix an exelent book that kept me so intrested I hardly stoped reading even after I got Red-Eye.
 

theklng

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i'd appreciate if you put more into the threads than just a single line. basically suggestions without at least a bit of detail make me not want to read a book; if you can't explain why it's worth reading, then i don't see why you should mention it.

maybe it's just me being too expectant of people here. oh well, see how it goes.

also it bothers me to no end that people only read the THREAD TITLE and not the post within. come on people, what are you, 13?
 

fix-the-spade

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Feb 25, 2008
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Mountain biking UK,
Computer Arts
2000AD
and
Imagine FX


Magazines and comics for the win!
On the books front I have also been rading H.G.Wells.

Specifically, The Land Ironclads, Argonauts of the air, The Time Machine and The New Accelerator. Fun stuff.
 

PedroSteckecilo

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Feb 7, 2008
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Infernal Devices by Phillip Reeve, great if you like dark post apocalyptic adventure fantasy with a very british edge. Also it's technically a young adults book so the writing is really nice and clean.
 

Avida

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The restaurant at the end of the universe by Douglas Adams and The Scarlett Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Why two? Because reading in 'ye olde English' can get pretty heavy at times, and because once i pick up the guide to the galaxy i just have to read it again.

fix-the-spade said:

Imagine FX
Oh god that magazine crushes me under the weight of inadequacy.
 

crimson5pheonix

It took 6 months to read my title.
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From Publishers Weekly
The first installment in Robinson's ( Blind Geometer ) new trilogy is an action-packed and thoughtful tale of the exploration and settlement of Mars--riven by both personal and ideological conflicts--in the early 21st century. The official leaders of the "first hundred" (initial party of settlers) are American Frank Chalmers and Russian Maya Katarina Toitova, but subgroups break out under the informal guidance of popular favorites like the ebullient Arkady Nikoleyevich Bogdanov, who sets up a base on one of Mars's moons, and the enigmatic Hiroko, who establishes the planet's farm. As the group struggles to secure a foothold on the frigid, barren landscape, friction develops both on Mars and on Earth between those who advocate terraforming, or immediately altering Mars's natural environment to make it more habitable, and those who favor more study of the planet before changes are introduced. The success of the pioneers' venture brings additional settlers to Mars. All too soon, the first hundred find themselves outnumbered by newcomers and caught up in political problems as complex as any found on Earth.
 

SomeBritishDude

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I just finished The Graveyard Book, by Niel Gaiman. Its a very intresting childrens story, about a boy whos raised by ghosts and vampire in a graveyard. It does in about 300 pages what Harry Potter did in a few thousand, in that it follows his life and he and the short storys within the book mature as they go. So where as the early storys when hes 6 is about being ghouls, near the end of the story hes fighting off phycopaths.

I woulnd't say its one of Niels best, not as good as his other children book, Caroline. Its slightly anti-climatic, but its funny, creepy, and kind of fairytale like. Its still way way better than a lot of the crap childrens books have been churning out recently *Looks at Eragon with discust* so if you fancy a good kids book, or just want something to give your children then deffintly pick it up.

EDIT: Oh, also, I know you shouldn't judge a book by its cover, but its got some beautiful art, theres a new picture before each chapter.

[img/]http://www.fidrabooks.co.uk/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/graveyard-book.jpg[/img]

Its by the same guy who did The Edge Chronicals, which Ive never read but they look nice.
 

Avida

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Anyone else waiting for the first person to say twilight *evil grin*
 

Dr Pussymagnet

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Dec 20, 2007
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Holy crap, I inspired another thread? That's a first.

:D

Anyways I'm reading the Repairman Jack novels right now, and they are awesome. And yes, I know that the story in Bloodline is kind of gross after you find out what it's about,

(Seriously, don't click this if you don't want to be kind of grossed out, or if you are planning on reading it, since doing so will pretty much ruin the story completely for you.)
since it involves a dad that has one of his two sons go out and find this woman, rape her, and when her baby grows up to be of legal age, the other son gets her pregnant so when she has her baby it's blood will be full of oDNA, causing it to become some sort of super baby, and when it grows up, will bring about the destruction of mankind.

But anyways, it's still a very good series.
 

jim_doki

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Right now i'm reading the latest issue of total guitar

at home i'm reading a fantastic book called Bad Science by Ben Goldacre, which is about how the media have portrayed scientists for fools while psuedo-scientists have bamboozled the world without actually doing much scientific stuff at all
 

theklng

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jim_doki said:
Right now i'm reading the latest issue of total guitar

at home i'm reading a fantastic book called Bad Science by Ben Goldacre, which is about how the media have portrayed scientists for fools while psuedo-scientists have bamboozled the world without actually doing much scientific stuff at all
care to elaborate?
 

jim_doki

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theklng said:
care to elaborate?
um, ill try...
It's targets start at people who sell natural products like fish oil, and goes into detail about the largest fish oil "experiment" in the world that had no control, no measureable outcome and was essentially a media mockery. It mentions Scientific Faux Pas like Cherry Picking results from studies and how results can get skewed.

If your'e asking about the mag its got trivium on the cover and the tab to Girls, Girls, girls