What book are you reading?

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  • moeaholic
    moeaholic Posts: 535
    aNiMaL wrote:
    I am mid way through a Michael Crichton book called "Airframe." Its pretty good. It's about an quality assurance investigation over an airplane after a suspicious mid air flight incident which killed a few people, and injured a bunch more. Meanwhile, this airplane company is trying to seal a deal with China for some airplanes. It's getting pretty suspenseful.

    Anyhow, I want to finish it so I can start reading my next book; "Scar Tissue" by Anthony Kiedis.

    What book are you reading?

    stephen kings 'cell'. about half way through it, should have it finished in the next day or two.
    "PC Load Letter?! What the fuck does that mean?"
    ~Michael Bolton
  • aNiMaL
    aNiMaL Posts: 7,117
    I just don't find enough time to read....

    But I have jury duty coming up in a week or so.....so that should give me lots of reading time. :)
  • rrivers
    rrivers Posts: 3,698
    the self-loathing of an addict is about the only thing he got right in there, ill give you that. it was the only part worth reading in that whole mess of a novel and certainly the only remotely accurate sentiment.

    Soulsinging,

    I thought of you the other day when I was reading "A Million Little Pieces". In the part I was on, he sits on the couch and watches and episode of "ER" and he goes on this two page rant about how it did not depict drug addiction accurately. I thought it was really funny given what I had read from you about his book!
    "We're fixed good, lamp-wise."
  • FinsburyParkCarrots
    FinsburyParkCarrots Seattle, WA Posts: 12,223
    aNiMaL wrote:
    I just don't find enough time to read....

    But I have jury duty coming up in a week or so.....so that should give me lots of reading time. :)

    Bring in "101 Perfect Murders of the Twentieth Century." That should get some looks. ;)
  • soulsinging
    soulsinging Posts: 13,202
    rrivers wrote:
    Soulsinging,

    I thought of you the other day when I was reading "A Million Little Pieces". In the part I was on, he sits on the couch and watches and episode of "ER" and he goes on this two page rant about how it did not depict drug addiction accurately. I thought it was really funny given what I had read from you about his book!

    hehe, that is kinda funny :)

    right now im reading 'the magician's nephew' by cs lewis. i gave up on 'reading lolita in tehran.' just not my speed. if anyone wants a copy of this book, pm me and ill send it to you.
  • Ali
    Ali Posts: 2,621
    THe Bible.How to say the rosary.
    A whisper and a thrill
    A whisper and a chill
    adv2005

    "Why do I bother?"
    The 11th Commandment.
    "Whatever"

    PETITION TO STOP THE BAN OF SMOKING IN BARS IN THE UNITED STATES....Anyone?
  • Carlos D
    Carlos D Posts: 638
    I'm not very good at just readin one book so I'm reading quite a few at the moment.

    The Pearl
    Grapes Of Wrath
    East Of Eden by John Steinbeck

    The Catcher in The Rye

    The Bible

    To Kill A Mocking Bird
    It may be the devil or it may be the Lord
    But you're gonna have to serve somebody.

    www.bebo.com/pearljam06
  • catefrances
    catefrances Posts: 29,003
    I just finished reading "Wonderland Avenue" by Danny Sugerman. This book was suggested by someone here in the AET for having best description of heroin use in print. I was curious as in the last few years a few former friends have died from OD's. What a fantastic writer this guy was. Definitely suggest it if you are a Doors fan too.

    IGGY POP!! i can not believe that guy is still alive.

    FUNNY PART PAGE 320:
    customs telephoned from los angeles airport to say they had a 'james osterberg' in their custody whom they would not or could not release on account of he looked nothing like the picture of the person that was supposedly him in the passport he carried.

    'oh it's him', i assured them,'he colours his hair once in a while.'

    'that's not the only thing he's gone and coloured,' they informed me. 'he painted his entire torso during the flight from england.'

    i didn't even know he'd been in england and had no time to ponder the surprise. they wanted me to come down, snappy-like, to make a positive identification.

    'i'm on my way.'

    sure enough, he'd used his body as a canvas and covered himself with paint from forehead to toenail in camouflage streaks,black and pinks, an exotic green and day-glo orange. we washed him off and made the identification.
    ********

    guess he was bored on the flight. can you imagine the person who had to sit next to him.
    hear my name
    take a good look
    this could be the day
    hold my hand
    lie beside me
    i just need to say
  • Towsertunes
    Towsertunes Posts: 187
    Heavy Weather.

    P.G. Wodehouse.
    "they don't give a shit Keith Moon is dead,
    is that exactly what I thought I read?"


    How I choose to feel,...Is how I am.
  • mariposa
    mariposa Posts: 2,523
    I just finished reading...Songs of the Doomed by Dr. Hunter S. Thompson and now I'm currently reading Confessions of an Igloo Dweller by James Houston. The latter book is a must read, Houston lived with the Inuit for 14 years and he basically was the one who first introduced Inuit art to the "outside world". It's a very fascinating book about Inuit life, culture and art...
    "All the strength that you might think would disappear, resolving..."
  • eddies grrl
    eddies grrl Posts: 509
    this book will break your heart. just a warning.


    In the same vein as Fall On Your Knees or The Way the Crow Flies by Anne Marie Macdonald (both of which I highly recommend as well), this book, The Little Friend, is a beautiful and breathtaking story of a family living with tragedy. Sounds too sad, I know, but believe me, it's written in such a way that you cannot put it down. The characters are rich and detailed and you KNOW them. And the story is just heartbreaking.

    It's basically about a young girl's quest to solve the murder of her brother when he was nine years old, and she was just a baby. He was killed on Mother's Day, as the whole, big family fussed around to prepare dinner and he played outside. Here's an excerpt: the boy was Robin; Charlotte is his mother:

    "Whenever Robin was going anywhere- to school, to a friend's house- it had always been important to him to say goodbye, in tender and frequently quite prolonged and ceremonious ways. She had a thousand memories of little notes he'd written, kisses blown from a window, his small hand chattering up and down at her from the backseats of departing cars: goodbye! goodbye! When he was a baby he'd learned bye-bye before hello; it was his way of greeting people as well as leaving them. It seemed particularly cruel to Charlotte that there had been no goodbye this time. She had been so distracted that she had no very clear recollection of the last words she'd exchanged with Robin, or even the last time she'd seen him (that day), when what she needed was something concrete, some small fine memory to slip its hand in hers and accompany her- sightless now, stumbling- through this sudden desert of existence which stretched before her from the present moment until the end of life."


    (bold added by me)

    Maybe because I'm a mother of a boy, this passage immediately makes my throat tighten and my eyes well up. What an acute pain to lose a child, and there is something about the way she describes the tenderness felt between a mother and son- especially a sensitive one like hers, or mine- that just makes my chest ache. I'm re-reading this book now- I read it three years ago- and I'm preparing to have my heart broken again and again.
    Life is the riddle
    Of which we're caught in the middle.
    A couple of lucky ones
    Tangled up in too much love
    ~cowboy junkies
  • Whizbang
    Whizbang Posts: 1,314
    Personal Insurance and Risk Management

    there's a snoozer for ya!
    believe it or not, we don't "need" anything. that is only the spoiled brat in us trying to fill some temporary solution to an emptyness that does not exist.

    I have eaten so much gold I crapped excellence - drtyfrnk29

    Life is either a daring adventure or nothing at all!
  • Collin
    Collin Posts: 4,931
    Nesnesitelná lehkost bytí (The unbearable lightness of Being) - Milan Kundera
    THANK YOU, LOSTDAWG!


    naděje umírá poslední
  • aNiMaL wrote:
    I am mid way through a Michael Crichton book called "Airframe." Its pretty good. It's about an quality assurance investigation over an airplane after a suspicious mid air flight incident which killed a few people, and injured a bunch more. Meanwhile, this airplane company is trying to seal a deal with China for some airplanes. It's getting pretty suspenseful.

    Anyhow, I want to finish it so I can start reading my next book; "Scar Tissue" by Anthony Kiedis.

    What book are you reading?
    you should enjoy " Scar Tissue".
  • Edge34
    Edge34 Ottawa Posts: 233
    Just finishing up A Scanner Darkly - Philip K. Dick

    For anyone thinking about reading Scar Tissue, personally i enjoyed the read. Same with Dirt.
    Perferred Angels and Demons to Davinci.
    Loved Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
  • elmer
    elmer Posts: 1,683
    Collin wrote:
    Nesnesitelná lehkost bytí (The unbearable lightness of Being) - Milan Kundera
    this is a stellar classic, read it years back but it still sticks in my mind as one I have to do again, Immortality is another Kundera that blew my mind.
  • elmer
    elmer Posts: 1,683
    Edge34 wrote:
    Just finishing up A Scanner Darkly - Philip K. Dick
    loved it, heard theres a movie coming some time this year......it occured to me while reading that it'd make a great film. Bought Valis soon after I'd finished it but whilst i m yet to taste it, a few flick-thrus seem to suggest a hard to grasp plot...........
  • soulsinging
    soulsinging Posts: 13,202
    Collin wrote:
    Nesnesitelná lehkost bytí (The unbearable lightness of Being) - Milan Kundera

    that is a pretty great book. i read it a while back and nobody captures the emotions and confusion of love and lust like kundera. the book of laughter and forgetting is great as well.

    now im reading 'a prayer for owen meany' by john irving. it's pretty good, but im making slow going of it. i think i like it better than 'the world according to garp' though.
  • Collin
    Collin Posts: 4,931
    that is a pretty great book. i read it a while back and nobody captures the emotions and confusion of love and lust like kundera. the book of laughter and forgetting is great as well.

    now im reading 'a prayer for owen meany' by john irving. it's pretty good, but im making slow going of it. i think i like it better than 'the world according to garp' though.

    Just finished it last night. I'm going to read Žert (The Joke) next, I have to read them for my Czech class. I like Kundera's style. Too bad their are only two books of his on the reading list.

    I'm going to read Karel Čapek's RUR as well, he's the inventor of the word 'robot' in case you were wondering where that word originated from.
    THANK YOU, LOSTDAWG!


    naděje umírá poslední
  • The End of Poverty, Jeffery Sachs (forward by bono, hehe)