What book are you reading?

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Comments

  • catefrances
    catefrances Posts: 29,003
    rcs wrote:
    house of leaves - mark z. danielewski
    Excellent book! On my list to re-read real soon.


    im telling you... reading all the footnotes is trying my patience.. and i dont have much to begin with. its distracting but i was told it was necessary by the person who recommended the book.
    hear my name
    take a good look
    this could be the day
    hold my hand
    lie beside me
    i just need to say
  • uninnocent-
    uninnocent- Posts: 5,959
    i'm currently reading the best laid plans by terry fallis. thus far i'm enjoying it a lot more than i'd expect considering it's a satire of canadian politics.
  • Nastasja
    Nastasja Posts: 9,668
    Atlas Shrugged - Ayn Rand
    You can spend your time alone, re-digesting past regrets,
    Or you can come to terms and realize
    You're the only one who can't forgive yourself
  • rrivers
    rrivers Posts: 3,698
    "Eating the Dinosaur"- Chuck Klosterman
    "We're fixed good, lamp-wise."
  • Byrnzie
    Byrnzie Posts: 21,037
    arthur rimbaud - enid starkie

    You'll need to understand French to get on with that one.

    I recommend the Steinmetz book instead.
  • catefrances
    catefrances Posts: 29,003
    Byrnzie wrote:
    arthur rimbaud - enid starkie

    You'll need to understand French to get on with that one.

    I recommend the Steinmetz book instead.


    and what makes you think i cant? ;) :P 8-)
    hear my name
    take a good look
    this could be the day
    hold my hand
    lie beside me
    i just need to say
  • gabers
    gabers Posts: 2,787
    Hot, flat, and Crowded 2.0 by Thomas Friedman. Brilliant read.

    http://www.amazon.com/Hot-Flat-Crowded- ... 676&sr=1-1
  • smarchee
    smarchee Windsor, Ontario Posts: 14,539
    Conspiracy Of Fools by Kurt Eichenwald

    it's the Enron story written as a fiction
    1998 ~ Barrie
    2003 ~ Toronto
    2005 ~ London, Toronto
    2006 ~ Toronto
    2008 ~ Hartford, Mansfied I,
    2009 ~ Toronto, Chicago I, Chicago II
    2010 ~ Cleveland, Buffalo
    2011 ~ Toronto I, Toronto II, Ottawa, Hamilton
    2013 - London, Pittsburgh, Buffalo
    2014 - Detroit
    2019 - Chicago X 2
  • Byrnzie
    Byrnzie Posts: 21,037
    Vassily Grossman - Everything Flows

    everything.jpg

    Ukrainian war reporter Vasily Grossman was one of the first to describe a Nazi death camp in print, and his 1944 article “The Hell of Treblinka” was used at the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal as evidence of the Holocaust. His postwar career in Soviet Russia was marked by persecution: He was censored by Joseph Stalin’s antisemitic regime, and after he submitted his masterful World War II novel Life and Fate to a publisher in 1960, the KGB confiscated the manuscript, his notes and even his typewriter (the book was later smuggled out of the country and printed in 1974). But this didn’t quiet Grossman, whose indictments of Stalinist Russia were at least as damning as those of George Orwell and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Understandably bitter over the suppression of his work, the author worked on Everything Flows—a shorter, but even more eviscerating, meditation on the monstrous results of the Soviet experiment—until his death from cancer in 1964. This new translation brings his searing vision to light.

    The novel opens as Ivan Grigoryevich, a once-promising intellectual long ago banished to the hell of the Gulag for some long-forgotten transgression, is released following the death of Stalin. As he revisits figures from his past, many of whom lied or ratted out dissidents in order to stay free, Grigoryevich sadly shakes his head at the moral cowardice in the face of the state’s supreme wielding of violence.

    Everything Flows is not a subtle work, but these were unsubtle times. Grossman uses only the surface trappings of a novel in his stark ruminations on 20th-century Russia, particularly Stalin’s systematic destruction of his enemies. His descriptions are intense; at one point, he effectively puts the reader right in the middle of a dying Ukrainian village during the Great Famine in the early 1930s. Fortunately, the KGB couldn’t keep Grossman’s books under wraps forever. His testament stands as a fitting tribute to the millions of voices that were prematurely silenced

    Read more: Everything Flows - Books - Time Out New York http://newyork.timeout.com/arts-culture ... z1Dq2JA7G2
  • Ms. Haiku
    Ms. Haiku Washington DC Posts: 7,371
    Savage Beauty - the Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay. Then onward to Patti Smith's autobiography.
    There is no such thing as leftover pizza. There is now pizza and later pizza. - anonymous
    The risk I took was calculated, but man, am I bad at math - The Mincing Mockingbird
  • covered in bliss
    covered in bliss chi-caw-go Posts: 1,332
    Just finished The Help by Kathryn Stockett. Great read.

    http://www.amazon.com/Help-Kathryn-Stockett/dp/0399155341
  • rrivers
    rrivers Posts: 3,698
    "The Boys of Summer"-Roger Kahn
    "We're fixed good, lamp-wise."
  • I just started reading The Devil in the White City about the serial killer during the Chicago World's Fair. Very interesting as I just moved to the city a few months ago.
  • Nastasja
    Nastasja Posts: 9,668
    Never let me go - Kazuo Ishiguro
    You can spend your time alone, re-digesting past regrets,
    Or you can come to terms and realize
    You're the only one who can't forgive yourself
  • youngster
    youngster Boston Posts: 6,576
    A People's History of the United States- Howard Zinn
    He who forgets will be destined to remember.

    9/29/04 Boston, 6/28/08 Mansfield, 8/23/09 Chicago, 5/15/10 Hartford
    5/17/10 Boston, 10/15/13 Worcester, 10/16/13 Worcester, 10/25/13 Hartford
    8/5/16 Fenway, 8/7/16 Fenway
    EV Solo: 6/16/11 Boston, 6/18/11 Hartford,
  • Kraven
    Kraven Posts: 829
    I just finished Relic by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, the review on the cover said it was better than Jurassic Park :roll: , I call bullshit. It was pretty good, a bit long, and not as suspenseful as I would have hoped.
    32 shows and counting...
  • Gibson72
    Gibson72 Posts: 1,245
    "Life" by Keith Richards
    Just finished "playing with fire" by Theo fluery.

    Both excellent reads
    Gibson1972
  • rrivers
    rrivers Posts: 3,698
    Started "The Thirteenth Tale" last night.
    "We're fixed good, lamp-wise."
  • AELARA
    AELARA Posts: 803
    Started the "Thing of Beauty" today.
    I am mine!
  • Nastasja
    Nastasja Posts: 9,668
    Franz Kafka 'Der Prozess'
    You can spend your time alone, re-digesting past regrets,
    Or you can come to terms and realize
    You're the only one who can't forgive yourself