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Thread: Random Reading Thoughts: War, what is it good for?

  1. #421
    The Pirate Guy crazyfists3600's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: Texas
    Posts: 12,241
    Quote Originally Posted by Ceilidh-ann View Post
    I'm currently reading Life of Pi and am enjoying it thoroughly. It's far more readable and charming than something so jam-packed with theological discussions has any right to be.
    UGH, I fucking loved this book. It was remarkable and possibly my favorite read of 2012.

  2. #422
    What kind of bird are YOU? Feel the Soul's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: Hogwarts
    Posts: 3,376
    I just finished The Hobbit, which I've never actually read before. I loved that Bilbo finally returns home and has to be like, "Wait, guys! I'm not dead!" That was sort of hilarious.

    I'm also trying to power through a couple Nicholas Sparks books that I borrowed from my sister forever ago (ergh), but to cleanse my palate I'm also reading Great Expectations. Yay!

  3. #423
    Administrator Artimus's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 11,799
    Quote Originally Posted by Bean View Post
    Yeah, supposedly by the end of the year! Thomas Cromwell for everyone!
    Big role to land. Emmy?!

  4. #424
    Tickle, tickle Thomas's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 13,121
    Just finished Julian Barnes's The Sense of an Ending. A great little novel about the decieving nature of remembrance.

  5. #425
    Christmas Time, You're So Fine! Bean's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 6,049
    Quote Originally Posted by Artimus View Post
    Big role to land. Emmy?!
    I'm not entirely sure who I would cast in the role. He's like a classier version of Al Swearengen, though, so Emmy may be waiting. (Not that Ian McShane ever got one! )

  6. #426
    Christmas Time, You're So Fine! Bean's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 6,049
    I finished Bring Up the Bodies last night and it was fan-fucking-tastic. But now I have no idea what to read next.

  7. #427
    Senior Member Ceilidh-ann's Avatar
    Join Date: Mar 2008
    Location: Scotland
    Posts: 1,531
    Quote Originally Posted by crazyfists3600 View Post
    UGH, I fucking loved this book. It was remarkable and possibly my favorite read of 2012.
    Yep, really enjoyed it. That ending is a killer!

    The ALA announced all their award winners for children's & young adult literature today. I was pleasantly surprised by how non-safe they played it (no John Green for the Printz! I'm in the serious minority of YA readers who finds him sort of insufferable). I'm not very curious about "Aristotle & Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe", which walked away with three big awards. Katherine Applegate (the Animorphs lady) won the Newbery Medal, the wonderful "Seraphina" by Rachel Hartman won the William C. Morris award (best debut) and my favourite YA of 2012, "Gone Gone Gone" by Hannah Moskowitz won a Stonewall Honour award. Basically, I'm very happy to have a reminder of why I read and review YA novels amidst all the sexist vampire crap and terrible romances.

  8. #428
    Womp it up! flibber's Avatar
    Join Date: Jan 2008
    Location: Nowhereland
    Posts: 2,765
    My mom's friend wrote one of the Caldecott Honor books. Can't imagine how excited she is.

  9. #429
    Senior Member jjj's Avatar
    Join Date: Oct 2009
    Posts: 2,155
    I found Seraphina to ride a steadily downward slope of quality. But the concept is interesting, so maybe the sequel will be less dull and eyeroll-inducing. I agree that the John Green book is NOT that great, but he already won for his better book Looking for Alaska.

    I've been on a serious re-read kick of Animorphs and Everworld and for the most part they still hold up wonderfully, so I was tickled to see that Applegate won the top award. I was also inspired to read winner The One and Only Ivan, and it's really, really good. It's definitely geared towards a younger audience but captures humanity and universal themes quite well, the writing is quite pretty, and it evoked many emotions in me - I nearly (or maybe did) teared up a bit at a couple of points. Applegate does not coddle or talk down to her audience at all (obviously, given that Animorphs involves slugs enslaving through body snatching and genocide-ing the species they don't need).

    I'm up to 5 books from 2012 that I liked enough to recommend: The One and Only Ivan/Katherine Applegate
    I've Got Your Number/Sophie Kinsella
    Gone Girl/Gillian Flynn
    Days of Blood and Starlight/Laini Taylor
    Cold Days/Jim Butcher

    Ang Lee - The only 2x Bafta/DGA/Oscar-Winning Director!
    Meryl on Oscars: Y’see these little babies? These are my best f***ing friends
    and they never let me down. Try to get ‘em away from me and I’ll eat you alive.

  10. #430
    Senior Member Ceilidh-ann's Avatar
    Join Date: Mar 2008
    Location: Scotland
    Posts: 1,531
    I really need to read Laini Taylor's work. She's one of the few hugely hyped YA authors who all my friends and co-bloggers adore.

    My current reading choice is Nothing to Envy: Real Lives in North Korea by Barbara Demick. It's equal parts fascinating and horrifying, but also a very humanising portrait of a secretive country.

  11. #431
    Mmember Mmelissa's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 1,169
    Finished Dead Souls. Sort of disappointing to read something that started out so strong (the first book is incredibly solid) and then just sort of dissolves because the work was destroyed. I also was not prepared for all the anti-semitism.

  12. #432
    I'm ten chapters into 'On the Road' and I can't say I'm remotely enthralled, though it is an easy read. Does it get better?

  13. #433
    Wine & Rum... Stéphane's Avatar
    Join Date: Jul 2012
    Posts: 1,037
    Quote Originally Posted by Ruairidh View Post
    I'm ten chapters into 'On the Road' and I can't say I'm remotely enthralled, though it is an easy read. Does it get better?
    I cried.

  14. #434
    Wine & Rum... Stéphane's Avatar
    Join Date: Jul 2012
    Posts: 1,037
    Quote Originally Posted by Bean View Post
    I finished Bring Up the Bodies last night and it was fan-fucking-tastic. But now I have no idea what to read next.
    OMG! I just started Wolf Hall.

  15. #435
    Christmas Time, You're So Fine! Bean's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 6,049
    Quote Originally Posted by Stéphane View Post
    OMG! I just started Wolf Hall.
    Ugh, if I could go back in time 5 weeks and read those two books for the 1st time again I totally would!

  16. #436
    Quote Originally Posted by Stéphane View Post
    I cried.
    Wait, did I come across a right fool? Like, I don't mean to disparage a classic but I expected it to be a lot more engaging.

  17. #437
    Wine & Rum... Stéphane's Avatar
    Join Date: Jul 2012
    Posts: 1,037
    Quote Originally Posted by Ruairidh View Post
    Wait, did I come across a right fool? Like, I don't mean to disparage a classic but I expected it to be a lot more engaging.
    I cried man tears at the end of that book.

  18. #438
    Richard Parker's Lifeboat ladylurks's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: California
    Posts: 5,050
    Quote Originally Posted by Ruairidh View Post
    Wait, did I come across a right fool? Like, I don't mean to disparage a classic but I expected it to be a lot more engaging.
    It's not to everybody's taste these days. But there's a poetry in the language and the crazy downward spiral of it all that I really love.

  19. #439
    Senior Member
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 2,391
    In March, the poet/translator Anne Carson (long regarded as one of Canada's finest writers, despite not being as well known abroad as Atwood, Munro, Ondaatje, Gallant, etc) is publishing Red Doc>, a sequel to her most famous book, Autobiography of Red. So I decided to read the latter again. Even though I'm not a huge poetry person, I think Carson is excellent, and I've always admired Autobiography, a novel in verse that is a loose modern retelling of the myth of Geryon and Heracles. But I loved it even more this time. Carson's writing is innovative and academic, but it also hits you at gut level; it's full of sensuous and startling imagery. I'm tempted to call it the best work of queer literature in the last quarter century. (It's at least up there with Angels in America.) I can't wait for the new book.

    Also, Zadie Smith has a new short story in the latest New Yorker. It's a treat, as Smith doesn't write much short fiction, and a double treat, since it's not behind the paywall. I just read it this morning, and I thought it was quite excellent: cleverly structured (liked how the chapters are like scores of a badminton game and how she changes perspective), but not overdoing it, with a beautiful sense of character and place. Stories of this kind can easily be heavy-handed, but Smith's execution is nicely understated. She should write more short stories. She also does an interesting, insightful interview about the story for the magazine, which is worth reading too.

  20. #440
    pressure of a name
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 1,235
    I'm nearly done with End of Your Life Book club. This can be a cute sad tearjerker starring Meryl lol
    “Perhaps when we find ourselves wanting everything, it is because we are dangerously close to wanting nothing.”

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