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-   -   What Are You Reading? (http://www.gothic.net/boards/showthread.php?t=517)

secretboy 12-17-2004 03:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by edible_eye
Quote:

Originally Posted by secretboy
Have you read A Writer's Tale by Richard Laymon?

no, but i take it that's a recommendation. and i accept.

is richard laymon the guy who writes vampire novels, almost exclusively?

He's the British equivalent of Stephen King.

Only made more interesting by the fact that he's American -- just never really got published in America until a few years before he died. He has a few vampire novels, but is mostly known for his straight-up horror. His writing style is really spare -- really...really spare, all action, barely any descriptions.

On Writing is really good because it goes into the nuts and bolts behind publishing, royalties, agents, everything. Just...lots and lots of details.

MrMaelstrom 12-18-2004 02:04 PM

Just read a borrowed "Lion's Game" by some Nelson Demille guy.

Written before 9/11 and chilling for that reason alone. Incredibly funny (in a racist, mysoginist, prejudiced and politically incorrect kind'a way).

edible_eye 12-18-2004 03:48 PM

i just started Trojan Odyssey by clive cussler.

thanx again for the referral, secret.

Granny-like_the_apple 12-18-2004 06:54 PM

I'm finishing Catch-22--soo good

ThwanCondu 12-25-2004 11:40 PM

Titus Alone by Mervyn Peake. He is the greatest author I've ever read in my entire life, I think. I'm not exagerating.
(If you take this as a recommendation, Titus Groan is the first book in his trilogy)

FenrisQueen 12-28-2004 03:21 PM

I've heard a lot of good shit about him, actually, Thwan. When I can get a ride, I'm gonna get some of his stuff from the library.


I'm rereading The Anarchist's Cookbook..just kidding. I'm reading Leaves of grass by the amazing Walt Whitman.

Nike 12-31-2004 05:27 AM

...too much the same time...
lots of E.T. A. Hoffmann books for an exam on horror and fantasy literature ...
then I've read several books of Pindar - in fact all that perseus. tufts is providing to find out that they don't contain the quote I was looking for...
and now I am rereading Ovid's metamorphoses....the songs of Orpheus. love it. Can't get enough of it...

"While he sang all his heart said to the sound
of his sweet lyre, the bloodless ghosts themselves
were weeping, and the anxious Tantalus
stopped clutching at return-flow of the wave,
Ixion's twisting wheel stood wonder-bound;
and Tityus' liver for a while escaped
the vultures, and the listening Belides
forgot their sieve-like bowls and even you,
O Sisyphus! sat idly on your rock!


Then Fame declared that conquered by the song
of Orpheus, for the first and only time
the hard cheeks of the fierce Eumenides
were wet with tears: nor could the royal queen,
nor he who rules the lower world deny
the prayer of Orpheus;"....

To all who are interested in classical literature I can suggest this wonderful helpful site that is providing a lot of classical literature in original version and quite reliable english translations, and for those who want to get even closer to the subject also comments on translations, biographies and essays about the ancient poets etc. etc.:
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/ and here the link that brings you straight to the classical section:
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cache/p...eco-Roman.html

.BatteryPoison. 12-31-2004 07:35 PM

Inside the Aquarium by Victor Suvorov.

All a first-hand account of the man's recruitment, training, and operations as a GRU operative. Unlike most accounts from former CIA operatives, this guy isn't afraid to give training details or go over top secret equipment and gear that "doesn't exist."

S'fucking sweet.

winged_dreams 01-04-2005 09:02 PM

I've been reading a lot of short stories lately. I'm currently reading a book of short stories inspired by the Divine Comedy by Dante. I'm also reading a couple of other books. One is a fantasy and the other is a collection of works by Marquis de Sade.

pitseleh 01-06-2005 05:16 AM

Bury my heart at Wounded Knee, by Dee Brown. Accounts of the fate of Indian tribes when faced with the insatiable greed of the white man. Broken treaties, massacres, and eventually, when all the lands and buffalo herds were gone, the forced relocation to reservations, the final humiliation of the free natives. Absolutely heartbreaking...

Right now I'm about halfway through The Silmarillion. Once again, a story about a beautiful land and its peoples who are gradually ruined by war, treachery and greed.

@(x_x)@ 01-08-2005 03:51 AM

I'm currently reading Wo warst du, Robert? by Hans Magnus Enzelsberger.
I have to read it for German class and I really dislike it. :x
Before we had to read this book, we actually got to read some German critical literature like Der Mann im Strom, which was nice to do because I felt it not only helped my German, but also showed me something of the German culture. This book on the other hand is nothing but a children's book that I feel isn't all that good written.

*sigh*

Oh, well. Only a 100 pages or so to go. :x

Nike 01-08-2005 05:59 AM

Oh my, Hans Magnus Enzensberger...I don't like his stuff either. I have only read his literature-theoretical stuff, I think that was enough.

pitseleh - I have read bury my heart at the Wounded Knee when I was a child, and it has hounted me for years. I think I have just been to young. Another book I want to read again.
the Silmarillion...another beautiful book...loved it. Even though I think it is quite hard to get into it the first maybe 50 pages...

Darkman 01-08-2005 10:55 PM

I'm reading BUNCH! by David R. Bunch. He may be relegated to the science fiction genre but his stories are defiant against labels. If you like Philip K. Dick, & R.A. Lafferty, then Bunch is definitely for you. The stories he wrote are for readers who like to think & are willing to get crucified in his prose. So far, I'm liking his stories a lot. :twisted:

FenrisQueen 01-09-2005 01:15 PM

Absolutely American:Four Years at West Point.


It's where I'd like to go.

winged_dreams 01-11-2005 08:01 PM

I'm reading (*glances at book cover*) Lost Souls by Poppy Z. Brite. I was eager to read her work and now I am!! My fiance's friend let me go through a bunch of books he didn't want and I would up getting at least 25 new books (I was like a kid in a candy store). If only I had a bigger bookshelf!!

2hammeron3 01-12-2005 06:44 PM

Right now im devouring the collective works of edgar allen poe, im currently reading Metzengerstein.

spoonjigglesatan 01-12-2005 08:43 PM

i am reading bill bryson's the lost continent
this prison where i live edited by siobhan dowd
and dow mossman's the stones of summer

the stones of summer is like wading through resin. it gets me high, but man is it sticky.

winged_dreams 02-01-2005 10:52 PM

I'm reading Foundation right now. I'm sort of annoyed at myself for not reading it sooner. Also, I've been reading The 120 Days of Sodom and I'll probably start reading another book soon. I really need to stop doing that.

gingerbreadwench 02-02-2005 12:29 AM

I just finished Eats, Shoots & Leaves by Lynne Truss. Mmmm... grammar.

Darkman 02-06-2005 01:21 AM

I'm reading two books at once, Approaching Oblivion & Strange Wine both by Harlan Ellison. Then afterwards, Haunted Castles by Ray Russell.

winged_dreams 02-07-2005 07:52 AM

I'm reading The Witching Hour by Anne Rice. I bought it at a library near me and I found an "I love my planet" bookmark in it which was pretty cool.

Deadhymn 02-07-2005 08:39 AM

finishing up my yearly re-read of the LoTR's with the intent of starting on some Laymon shortly thereafter.

secretboy 02-07-2005 08:03 PM

Finished:

The Butcher Boy, by Patrick McCabe: It ruled.
The Upright Man, by Michael Marshall. It ruled, too.
The Trial, by Franz Kafka. It ruled, but the translation sucked ass.


Currently reading:
Kafka on the Shore, by Haruki Murakami. It's rulin.
A Prayer for the Dying, by Stewart O'Nan. It's...okay. It might get brilliant, though.
The Straw Men, by Michael Marshall, of which the Upright Man is the sequel to. It's rockin' like Dokken.

Also reading The Bone Collector by Jeffrey Deaver. The man can write a fast-paced thriller, let me tell you. It leaves me breathless. It ain't brilliant, and sure ain't lyrical writing...it just moves faster than a trashy prom dress spilled with wine coolers.

Luelinus 02-08-2005 01:54 PM

I'm currently reading Exquisite Corpse by Poppy Z Brite, and I'm going to read Hogfather (Terry Pratchett) again soon, I think.

edible_eye 02-08-2005 02:03 PM

i was reading 'the deceivers' - an historical novel concerning tactical deception during world war 2, but i lost it. so, i've gotta find a new book to read.

akhira 02-10-2005 08:51 PM

Yup Tstone's right again. Stay away from Dan Brown.

Just read "The Da Vinci Code". Scholarly guy chasing after the holy grail with a ..hold your breath for cliche.. beautiful brilliant cryptologist. For a guy having done a lot of research on art & secret societies.. he can't even get his professional titles right. I mean symbologist? It's iconographer ya fucktard. ONce gain the author vastly understimates the vaerage readers, intelligence. With a few codes that can be broken so easliy and don't need a roundabout way ofsolving things.

skoteinh 02-11-2005 07:15 AM

Die Geschichten Jaacobs by Thomas Mann - in Greek, not German!

I guess the english title would be something like "Jacob's Stories"

ThwanCondu 02-11-2005 11:45 PM

Luelinus, EC is so great, and Terry Pratchett is the man.

I'm reading The Vampire Lestat. Feel like such a fucking loser for giving into Anne Rice, but it's my black soul, you know? :roll:
I'm also read Life, the Universe and Everything by Douglas Adams. That's the third Hitch Hiker's book. Fucking genius.

akhira 02-14-2005 12:26 AM

I'm reading a Ninja spoof Manuel. :?

a_S 02-26-2005 10:45 AM

I'm reading "Intermediate Algebra: Graphs and functions".... man... I don't understand half of it :?

Jane13 02-26-2005 10:52 AM

Algebra sucks :x I'm currently reading The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Sense and Sensibility. I live in such a hick town. The Lybrarian pronounced it "No- tar Daim", like the name of a town in these here parts. I t just suprised me when the librarian said it 0.o

TeapotScar 02-26-2005 12:38 PM

I'm reading "Le Mariage de Figaro" and "Candide". Come to think of it, I'm not reading anything in English right now. Odd.

ice 02-26-2005 05:01 PM

I just finished The Idiot by Dostoyevski, and now I'm re-reading Spies Beneath Berlin (because I stopped about 1/3 through and lost my place).

drgnlvr 02-26-2005 05:10 PM

I just finished reading "Hottest Blood". It's an anthology of erotic horror.

Interesting genre. :?

Jane13 02-26-2005 06:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TeapotScar
I'm reading "Le Mariage de Figaro" and "Candide". Come to think of it, I'm not reading anything in English right now. Odd.

I liked Candide, but I read it in English. I'm such a cheater.

winged_dreams 03-02-2005 10:12 PM

I've read some of those books although it was a long time ago. I enjoy them quite a bit. Wasn't Ruth the dragon that was small and white?

I'm still trying to finish The Witching Hour by Anne Rice. It's long and I enjoy it but I don't find that much time to read.

drgnlvr 03-03-2005 02:45 AM

I'm getting my first taste of William Gibson! I'm reading "Pattern Recognition".

Nike 03-03-2005 12:31 PM

I did my last exams for my literature studies yesterday...I hope I have passed them...so here are some of my recent reads...nice stuff
everything by E.T.H. Hoffmann - I enjoyed it. everything.
some of Dürrenmatt's shorter stories, like "The tunnel" was good, too.
Meyrinck - The Golem - also a nice one.
...reread some Kafka stuff, Grillparzer, Goethe's ballads, Bürger(love it. Exspecially Lenore. wonderful ballad. I never thought I would ever like ballads so much)...Shelley (both of them), Walpole,Redcliff, M. Lewis, Poe...
and some theoretics:
E. Burke: Reflections on the Revolution in France
Novalis: Die Christenheit oder Europa
Schubert: Nachtseiten der Naturwissenschaft
E. Young: Nightthoughts - this one was very interesting

There were some more. I'm pretty tired now. reading so many books often enough hat you are remembering the details is somewhat exhausting. But it was fun, too.

Solumina 03-15-2005 06:43 PM

Ovid's Metamorphoses, I really love it but some of it is a bitch to translate

pitseleh 03-16-2005 12:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by drgnlvr
I'm getting my first taste of William Gibson! I'm reading "Pattern Recognition".

Hey, that's the book I'm reading too! I've read Neuromancer and Count Zero before, and I loooved those. Inbetween I'm also reading Knut Hamsun's tragic love story Victoria.

drgnlvr 03-16-2005 01:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pitseleh
Quote:

Originally Posted by drgnlvr
I'm getting my first taste of William Gibson! I'm reading "Pattern Recognition".

Hey, that's the book I'm reading too! I've read Neuromancer and Count Zero before, and I loooved those. Inbetween I'm also reading Knut Hamsun's tragic love story Victoria.

Have you gotten very far into it? I got sidetracked, and hadn't gotten past chapter one, yet.

I was wondering if it's as good as I hear the other two are.

pitseleh 03-16-2005 01:54 AM

Gotten far into Pattern Recognition, you mean? I've only just started it, about to begin on chapter 3. So far, so good, but it's more Glamorama than Count Zero, to put it like that. Just surface, no real action yet.

edible_eye 03-16-2005 06:23 AM

1984 by george orwell. i think i read it in high school - don't really remember it, though. winston's a whiny, oblivious shit-head. i hope he'll be vaporized.

tstone - i'm both ecstatic and repulsed at the prospect of reading d.t. 7. i both want and don't want it to end. good for you for taking the plunge.

Jane13 03-16-2005 10:57 AM

I finished reading Brian Fraud and Alan Lee's "Fairies". I grew up reading a pop-up book by them, but this was an incredible collaboration of stories and myths with absolutely incredible illustration. If you've never read it, read it.

Now I'm reading "The Inferno" by Dante.

Nike 03-16-2005 12:46 PM

heh, Jane, that book is always on my table. The illustration work in it belongs to my all time favourites. No. Actually it is my all time favourite, I think. It has a wonderful combination of a good sense of humor, tragic myths, and both beautiful and funny illustration.
Check the other books illustrated by Lee, too, such as the Mabinogion, Tolkiens Rings, The Hobbit, his Lord of the Rings illustrations, and so on if you like his work...I love everything done by Alan Lee, but the combination with Froud's work is making "Fairies" so very special in my eyes...


( no worries, I'm done with my praise now :D )

Jane13 03-16-2005 12:54 PM

Awesome! I heard he also helped design fairy and goblin images and such for the movies Lord of The Rings(all three), The Dark Chrystal, Labrynth, and Merlin ^.^

Nike 03-16-2005 12:59 PM

Alan Lee and John Howe are responsible for quite everything that happened in the LotR movies. The two of them were the chiek graphic directors. In my opinion that's why the movie turned out so good. They didn't only make the monsters and other character concepts, but also all the architecture and environment stuff, they really did great work there .... I enjoyed the dokus on the LotR extended version DVDs... If you go through Alan Lee's illustrated Lord of the Rings books, you'll find a lot of parallels in the movies...ah...btw. the LotR conceptart books are great, too.....

hah, I've lied again. My praise hasn't been over so soon :D


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