Read any good books of late

> 10 years ago
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Silence
Silence
NSW
123 posts
NSW, 123 posts
23 Aug 2012 1:50pm
Brief Interviews with Hideous Men

http://www.amazon.com/Brief-Interviews-Hideous-Foster-Wallace/dp/0316925195

A Song of Ice and Fire (5 books are out for now, the last 2 aren't published yet...)

www.amazon.com/Books-Thrones-Feast-Crows-Swords/dp/0345529057

The Hunger games series (I tought it would have been some kind of twilight-crap, but it's actually quite amazing)

www.barnesandnoble.com/w/hunger-games-suzanne-collins/1100171585


For the 5 books of "A song of Ice and Fire" and "Brief interviews" I have the pdf versions, so if you want to give it a try without draining your wallet let me know xD

shi thouse
shi thouse
WA
1159 posts
WA, 1159 posts
23 Aug 2012 11:55am
Two of my best reads -

1. The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak

2. Cloud Street by Tim Winton (a challenging read given its style of writing but well worth the effort)
evlPanda
evlPanda
NSW
9207 posts
NSW, 9207 posts
23 Aug 2012 2:15pm
Phil27 said...

The wolf of wall street - true rags to riches story of a drug addicted, womanising, party animal and would rip off anybody of their life savings only to blow the money on the most fun things, ever...
Almost sounds made up and pisses on any rock stars face.
The follow up - catching the wolf of wall street is s.hit so don't waste your money. He ended up imprison and lost it all. There, saved you 30 bucks.


American Psycho.

“Everything failed to subdue me. Soon everything seemed dull: another sunrise, the lives of heroes, falling in love, war, the discoveries people made about each other. The only thing that didn't bore me, obviously enough, was how much money Tim Price made, and yet in its obviousness it did. There wasn't a clear, identifiable emotion within me, except for greed and, possibly, total disgust. I had all the characteristics of a human being - flesh, blood, skin, hair - but my depersonalization was so intense, had gone so deep, that the normal ability to feel compassion had been eradicated, the victim of a slow, purposeful erasure. I was simply imitating reality, a rough resemblance of a human being, with only a dim corner of my mind functioning. Something horrible was happening and yet I couldn't figure out why - I couldn't put my finger on it.”
evlPanda
evlPanda
NSW
9207 posts
NSW, 9207 posts
23 Aug 2012 2:17pm
myusernam said...

cormac mccarthy - Blood Meridian will 100 percent blow your hair back


I'll add The Road by same author.

Had a very weird reaction with that where at the end all this testosterone came leaking out of my eyes.
russh
russh
SA
3027 posts
SA, 3027 posts
23 Aug 2012 8:29pm
Paul Kelly - How to make Gravy

If you like his music youll enjoy the stories behind them
myusernam
myusernam
QLD
6160 posts
QLD, 6160 posts
24 Aug 2012 2:31pm
evlPanda said...

myusernam said...

cormac mccarthy - Blood Meridian will 100 percent blow your hair back


I'll add The Road by same author.

Had a very weird reaction with that where at the end all this testosterone came leaking out of my eyes.


the road did that to me too and is awesome (won him the pulitzer)
but Panda, do yourself a favour - blood meridian.
Makes the road look like a kid's bedtime story.
james987
james987
10 posts
10 posts
25 Aug 2012 3:11pm
james987 said...

There are some good novels from many authors, as a filler and never having read a Dickens novel before, I pulled 'Great Expectations' out of our bookshelf thinking it was going to be a laborious exercise but from page one I couldn't put the thing down.

http://wingshinterlandretreat.com/Wedding.html
cisco
cisco
QLD
12365 posts
QLD, 12365 posts
6 Sep 2012 10:08pm
Just finished reading "Pirate Coast" by Richard Zacks.

It is a factual account of The U.S.'s first covert operation on foreign soil during which the U.S. flag was raised on foreign soil for the first time.

It is also when the U.S. Marines started to be known as a force to be reckoned with.

It is also "History" that is not taught in schools. Most history that is taught in schools is concocted fiction that has nothing to do with the way the world was formed.

Just "Dumbing Down" of the next generations.
handline
handline
QLD
27 posts
QLD, 27 posts
6 Sep 2012 10:19pm
wyvern by A.A. Attansio,been around for while,but a good story lasts forever
cisco
cisco
QLD
12365 posts
QLD, 12365 posts
6 Sep 2012 10:54pm
Just started reading "In The Shadow of the Sword" by Tom Holland which is about "The battle for global empire and the end of the ancient world."

This book written by an historian and therefore requiring bibliography, also has a glossary.

It explores the origin of Islam and by default must also explore the origins of the other monotheistic religions of Judeasim and Christianity ( the three of which believe in the God of Abraham ), but must also explore what went before them such as the Persian Empire and the Zoroastrians to make it a valid documentation.

Certainly a lot deeper read than Dan Brown's "Da Vinci Code" which hardly rates better than the novels by Stephen King or J.K. Rowling.

For those that think this is a bit "high highfalutin" for entertaining reading, I suggest you buy the book for your children so they may read some REAL history instead of the lies they are fed at school and realise the threat Islam poses to the way of life they currently enjoy.
Hamsta
Hamsta
505 posts
505 posts
6 Sep 2012 9:39pm
Mapping Human History: Genes, Race and our Common Origins.

Steve Olson traces the origins of modern humans and patterns of migration over 150,000 years. Interesting reading. A heap of end notes.
CapnJack
CapnJack
19 posts
19 posts
7 Sep 2012 8:15am
If you're into eBooks then this may excite for a few dollars.

Two's a Crew

"One of the world's greatest adventures - 9000 nautical miles across six climatic zones, Jack and Jude explore their homeland of Australia, an ancient country, one filled with beauty and dangers, harsh, remote, and still containing mysteries that baffle the greatest minds."
jackandjude.com/books/ebook-2crew/



worrier
worrier
WA
726 posts
WA, 726 posts
7 Sep 2012 9:20am
Just read midnight express again on the kindle.
Read it years ago but still enjoyed it.
W
desertyank
desertyank
1264 posts
1264 posts
8 Sep 2012 4:13pm
'The heroin diaries' by Nicki Sixx

Good page turner, hard to put down, and intense. Glimpse into another life style......
Rexo
Rexo
QLD
25 posts
QLD, 25 posts
8 Sep 2012 9:47pm
myusernam said...

evlPanda said...

myusernam said...

cormac mccarthy - Blood Meridian will 100 percent blow your hair back


I'll add The Road by same author.

Had a very weird reaction with that where at the end all this testosterone came leaking out of my eyes.


the road did that to me too and is awesome (won him the pulitzer)
but Panda, do yourself a favour - blood meridian.
Makes the road look like a kid's bedtime story.



Try cormac mccarthy's other books as well. BRILLIANT.
"The crossing"
"All the pretty horses"
"Cities of the plain"
These three are a trilogy. Don't let the titles put you off, again the road is mild compared to the violence in these, and emotion will take over.

If you have or havn't seen the movie "No country for old men" then do yourself a favour and read the book which the movie is based - "No country for old men", BRILLIANT.

Im told there are more cormac works in progress. Hopefully there as good as his last.
captainkaos
captainkaos
WA
247 posts
WA, 247 posts
8 Sep 2012 11:50pm
Hell at high seas.

Stories of survival at sea. I couldnt put it down.
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