What book are you reading?
Comments
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will be reading this in a about a week...
Breathing by Brian R. Ward0 -
Just finished this one..... Mutiny: The True Events That Inspired The Hunt For Red October by: Boris Gindin and David Hagberg
Just started....Some Girls by Jillian Lauren.
Still reading ....Together Alone: The Story Of The Finn Brothers0 -
Jeff Murray wrote:Currently reading Stranger Than Fiction by Chuck Palahniuk.
Anyone familiar with Amy Hempel? There is a short story relating to her work in Stranger Than Fiction and kind of got me interested. Curious if anyone has any opinions on her work.
I read some of her stuff after reading that Palahniuk was a fan of hers. I just didn't get her work at all, didn't connect on any level, but that doesn't mean you won't.Journey Begins: 1992-08-15, Montage Mountain Performing Arts Center,
Scranton, Pennsylvania
Journey Ends:0 -
Simone de Beauvoir - Old AgeYou 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 yourself0 -
botany of desire0
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Just finished Tough Guy, autobiography on Bob Probert (NHL Enforcer) good read :thumbup:2005 - London
2009 - Toronto
2010 - Buffalo
2011 - Toronto 1&2
2013 - London, Pittsburgh, Buffalo
2014 - Cincinnati, St. Louis, Detroit
2016 - Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, Ottawa, Toronto 1
2018 - Fenway 1&2
2022 - Hamilton, Toronto
2023 - Chicago 1&2
2024 - Las Vegas 1&20 -
i'm still in the middle of re-reading Anne Rice's Witch Series. I just completed The Witching Hour. Before i continue with the second book, Lasher, I am bouncing back to the vampire series with Memnock the Devil.
The Witching Hour is by far the best book i've ever read, but it takes awhile to get going (it is around 950-1000 pages!)Pick up my debut novel here on amazon: Jonny Bails Floatin (in paperback) (also available on Kindle for $2.99)0 -
The Hero With a Thousand Faces - Joseph Campbell.
Comparative mythology. Fascinating, but a difficult read if you don't have a decent knowledge base of the world's ancient myths.
Next up is either The Doors of Perception - Aldous Huxley or the book about the eight stages of consciousness by Tim Leary.Everything not forbidden is compulsory and eveything not compulsory is forbidden. You are free... free to do what the government says you can do.0 -
he still stands wrote:The Hero With a Thousand Faces - Joseph Campbell.
Comparative mythology. Fascinating, but a difficult read if you don't have a decent knowledge base of the world's ancient myths."The stars are all connected to the brain."0 -
I am reading a murder mystery that an atty in my office wrote and has not yet published (he has written 3 other books). Pretty good so far---has kept my interest anyway.So I'll just lie down and wait for the dream
Where I'm not ugly and you're lookin' at me0 -
ponner1us wrote:Jeff Murray wrote:Currently reading Stranger Than Fiction by Chuck Palahniuk.
Anyone familiar with Amy Hempel? There is a short story relating to her work in Stranger Than Fiction and kind of got me interested. Curious if anyone has any opinions on her work.
I read some of her stuff after reading that Palahniuk was a fan of hers. I just didn't get her work at all, didn't connect on any level, but that doesn't mean you won't.
Thanks! I see where they are publishing most of her short stories in one book. Might give it a shot. Worst case scenario I give it to someone who will like it!If there were no Angels would there be no sin?0 -
Just started Once Were Cops by Ken Bruen. Should be a quick read like his Jack Taylor series was, good stories, just not very thick with fluff so to speak.If there were no Angels would there be no sin?0
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Bossypants - Tina Fey... pretty funny2000: CLT, Greensboro, 2003: MSG 1 & 2, 2008: MSG 1 & 2, 2009: LA 2 & 3, 2011: Vancouver, 2012: Missoula, 2013: Wrigley, Brooklyn 1 & 2, Voodoo, SD, LA 1 & 2, OAK, PDX, Vancouver, SEA, 2014: Cincy, ACL1, Tulsa, Lincoln, Memphis, Moline, St. Paul, MKE, DEN, Bridge 1 & 2, 2015: GCF, Mexico City, 2016: FLL, MIA, TPA, Greenville, Hampton, Columbia, MSG 1 & 2, Bonnaroo, Telluride, Fenway 1 & 2, Wrigley 1 & 2, 2017: ROHF, 2018: Padova, Rome, Prague, Seattle 1 & 2, Missoula, Wrigley 1 2021: SHN, Ohana 2 & 3, 2022: LA 1 & 2, PHX, OAK 1 & 2, Fresno, MSG, BNA, B&B, STL, OKC, DEN, 2023: MSP 1 & 2, CHI 1 & 2, DFW 2, AUS 1 & 2, 2024: Vancouver 1 & 2, LV 1 & 2, SEA 1 & 20
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Miracles of Life: Shanghai To Shepperton - An Autobiography - J.G Ballard0
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cbrunelle783 wrote:number1PJfan wrote:Water for Elephants
That's the only one of hers that's really good. Her latest, Ape House, is dreadful which is too bad b/c bonobo's are cool but the book is awful. I can't wait to see the movie of Water for Elephants.
This is good to know. I enjoyed Water for Elephants and since Ape House is now an affordable paperback I thought I would read it...maybe not...
I just finished The Hunger Games Trilogy and just started To Kill a Mockingbird. I decided that I would read some classics this year, interspersed with the trade fiction.0 -
guitar59 wrote:cbrunelle783 wrote:number1PJfan wrote:Water for Elephants
That's the only one of hers that's really good. Her latest, Ape House, is dreadful which is too bad b/c bonobo's are cool but the book is awful. I can't wait to see the movie of Water for Elephants.
This is good to know. I enjoyed Water for Elephants and since Ape House is now an affordable paperback I thought I would read it...maybe not...
I just finished The Hunger Games Trilogy and just started To Kill a Mockingbird. I decided that I would read some classics this year, interspersed with the trade fiction.
LOVED Water For Elephants. I saw the movie last week. Not a bad adaptation from a book. I am usually very disappointed in movies made from books, but this was pretty good.
I read Ape House and have to agree, not good. If you want to read a really interesting book on bonobos, which are fascinating animals, read Bonobo Handshake by Vanessa Woods. It's non-fiction and and a really great book.
I just finished reading Cutting For Stone by Abraham Verghese. Wonderful story.0 -
number1PJfan wrote:
I just finished reading Cutting For Stone by Abraham Verghese. Wonderful story.
Did you cry all the way through it? I just finished it about a month ago.
I would highly recommend - just finished reading the third volume of Edmund Morris's Teddy Roosevelt biography and it was fantastic. He is a little too in love with his own writing, but that's okay. All 3 books are great.0 -
Enkidu wrote:number1PJfan wrote:
I just finished reading Cutting For Stone by Abraham Verghese. Wonderful story.
Did you cry all the way through it? I just finished it about a month ago.
There were parts that were pretty emotional. It was actually my second time reading it. Read it again for Book Group. I never wanted the book to end. Just fantastic writing.0 -
csblake111 wrote:Enkidu wrote:number1PJfan wrote:
I just finished reading Cutting For Stone by Abraham Verghese. Wonderful story.
Did you cry all the way through it? I just finished it about a month ago.
There were parts that were pretty emotional. It was actually my second time reading it. Read it again for Book Group. I never wanted the book to end. Just fantastic writing.
His other book about working as a doctor somewhere in the south with AIDs patients is supposed to be amazing. My Own Country. I haven't read that though.0
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