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Books, CAN YOU READ?! |
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Dr Strum |
Oct 16 2012, 09:21 PM
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Can Lead the Nation with a Microphone
Group: Angels
Posts: 5427
Joined: 23-December 05
From: Seattle
Member No.: 1
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I finished The Punishment of Virtue a couple of weeks ago, then read Harvest of Empire by Juan Gonzales. Both are really good, nonfiction. The former was an autobiographical account of Sarah Chayes' time in Afghanistan from October 2001 - 2005, mixed with discussions of historical Afghanistan, Pakistani-relations, the Taliban, tribal life, corruption, etc. The latter was a kind of whirlwind tour of the Americas, focusing on US-Latin American relations (particularly Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America), starting with the beginning of colonization and nationhood, how the nations influenced each other culturally, politically, socially and spending much historical discussion pointing out how the US is to blame for all of its own "immigration problems."
Currently reading The Horse, The Wheel and Language by David W. Anthony. Also still slowly plucking away at Pope's translation of Homer's Illiad (currently on book 6).
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Писатель всегда будет в оппозиции к политике, пока сама политика будет в оппозиции к культуре.
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Dr Strum |
Nov 15 2012, 09:00 PM
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Can Lead the Nation with a Microphone
Group: Angels
Posts: 5427
Joined: 23-December 05
From: Seattle
Member No.: 1
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Didn't get to finish The Horse, The Wheel and Language before the library demanded it back, but I got from it what I wanted at least. Really good if you have an interest in the history of PIE (diachronic linguistics, archaeology, anthropology, etc). I did, however, finish Naked Economics which was okay overall. Definitely reshaped some of my questions on the world, but some of the ideas presented, I felt, unnecessarily minimized other fields' contributions and relevance to the search for the answers. Somewhere around book eleven of Homer's Illiad.
Not doing much reading in general this month due to NANOWRIMO.
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Писатель всегда будет в оппозиции к политике, пока сама политика будет в оппозиции к культуре.
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Dr Strum |
Mar 26 2013, 05:24 PM
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Can Lead the Nation with a Microphone
Group: Angels
Posts: 5427
Joined: 23-December 05
From: Seattle
Member No.: 1
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Well, an update, three months later:
Finished Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed, which was awesome, but I really need to read it again (kind of rushed through it).
I also read Huxley's Brave New World for the first time and lurved it. Been reading from an Edgar Allen Poe collection I picked up at the used bookstore (I first got into reading through Poe - my dad introduced me and from there I picked up Goosebumps and Stephen King).
And just a bit ago I finally finished the Iliad. As my friend warned me, it was a pretty big waste of time. Before continuing on to the Odyssey, I'm probably going to read The Great Gatsby, much more Poe, and I would like to crack open this Shakespeare collection I've had lying around.
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Писатель всегда будет в оппозиции к политике, пока сама политика будет в оппозиции к культуре.
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Rhiannon |
Jul 5 2013, 01:35 AM
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I'm really moved by the chicken bone
Group: Gods
Posts: 2033
Joined: 23-December 05
From: Minnesotablarg
Member No.: 4
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Reading is disappointing again.
I reread the first half of Pnin on an airplane because that's the only place I've ever read the book so it seemed right. I couldn't really focus on it as well this time, though, so I didn't finish it despite both flights being double the length of the two flights I'd initially read it to completion on.
I started the first volume of Sara Yajima's Tales of Rebirth light novels (probably terrible) because waiting until I actually know the majority of the kanji it uses is for people who didn't get bored after learning the first 100 grade 3 kyouiku kanji. It's going okay, I guess. I've managed to read a page a day before deciding I've spent way too much time and stopping. If I keep this up I'll finish the prologue tomorrow! Woo!
Started Brave New World yesterdayish, but it's hard to pay attention to right now so all I've read is the introduction and the first chapter. Actually, reading it was easy until I started chapter 1.
Also been continuing reading Dreamsongs Volume II, and I'm disappointed in it. I mean these Haviland Tuf things are pretty cool, but today I read that Twilight Zone script he wrote and it's just... I don't like reading screenplays, and I don't think it was very good. Next is another screenplay so I decided to check the table of contents to see when I might get to something I'll like more. I see no horror section! That was like the best part of volume I. Even though I probably will like other stuff in this, I feel discouraged now.
And then there's The House by the Churchyard. I'm on chapter 20, which seems really far until I check and remember that this has 99 chapters (UNLESS HE PULLS AN IN A GLASS DARKLY AGAIN AND HAS ONE CHAPTER NUMBER INEXPLICABLY SKIPPED). I can only handle so much learning vocabulary literally nobody uses (like moe) and weird guys acting weird before I get depressed at the complete lack of creepy atmosphere. Man, the back of my copy is even like "FROM THE OUTSET IT HAS SUCH AN ATMOSPHERE OF FOREBODING AND IT IS SUCH A HAUNTING TALE" but nope.
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Rhiannon |
Aug 17 2013, 08:40 PM
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I'm really moved by the chicken bone
Group: Gods
Posts: 2033
Joined: 23-December 05
From: Minnesotablarg
Member No.: 4
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WOW GUYS READING'S OKAY AGAIN PROBABLY BECAUSE OF DEAD IRISH GUYS WHO WOULD HAVE THOUGHT.
I finished The House by the Churchyard. It got much better suddenly around chapter 40, thankfully. Unfortunately, though, I feel like there was too much stuff I missed or didn't understand because I never managed to keep all the characters straight (I mean this in two different ways). I think by the end I only sort of had good ideas of who maybe three characters were, and I had still forgotten important things involving them from earlier in the book. This is the only book that's managed to cause me comprehension problems from not being able to keep track of who everyone is... others like A Game of Thrones caused some problems, but they were resolved before I missed anything other than nonessential details and foreshadowing. Definitely need to reread this to have a real opinion. I guess before I read Finnegans Wake, since that's apparently secretly in love with this book.
I also read through Sarah Manguso's "poetry" collections, Siste Viator and The Captain Lands in Paradise. "Poetry" because I guess people have yelled at her for her poetry being too prosey, and y'know, I don't really know what makes a thing poetry anymore. Siste Viator was really good, and The Captain Lands in Paradise was definitely not as good, but on the other hand it was a lot more humorous. I wasn't expecting it to be as good, anyway, since she wrote it first.
I read Doorways in Dreamsongs Volume II finally. Another screenplay. But it made me feel okay and secure about not liking reading screenplays because I didn't like reading it but at least could recognize that it was good. NOT KNOWING KISS. GOING NOW, KISSING LATER. I read the introduction before the Wild Cards thing, but no more than that. Wild Cards does sound more interesting though, now that I've seen it described as "mosaic novels."
What else... I read a few chapters of Brave New World. Still not into it yet, but it's definitely more interesting now. I've also been reading through these poems in this COMPLETE TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE book I've had since my age was probably still one digit, or close to it. I read through them all before, back when I got it, but I've forgotten everything and definitely didn't get most of these anyways. SOME OF THESE ARE ABOUT SEX I JUST KNOW IT
And today I started reading Le Fanu's A Lost Name because it's the first thing in the last volume of this huge collection of his work and I decided to read the volumes in reverse order because I don't actually have 1 or 3 yet and 2 and 3 include Uncle Silas and The House by the Churchyard, both of which I am totally willing to reread but rereading all those Chapelizod shenanigans so soon would probably literally destroy me. Also it's apparently a "sensation novel" which Wikipedia appears to be telling me is most likely trashy. Either way, someone said "He came into my room at dead of night, like a great cock" and I'm already making speedy progress towards reading the entire first half of the book as if every male is secretly homosexual. JUST LIKE WITH THE HOUSE BY THE CHURCHYARD AND THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY.
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