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01-16-2018, 05:42 PM
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Safety glasses off, motherfuckers
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Sarasota, FL
Gender: Bender
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Re: What are you reading?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vivisectus
I found a really good sci-fantasy novel:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/...e-fifth-season
Written by NK Jemisin. A writer to watch, I reckon.
A Sci-fantasy novel that explores themes like racism, slavery, oppression and identity. It is pretty gritty stuff, full of deeply damaged characters and anti-heroes. I love how she uses world-building to tell a complex, layered story: this is not fantasy just for fantasy's sake, sci-fantasy is a form that has a function in these books. And then it is a damn good sci-fantasy romp at the same time.
Highly recommended.
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This and Jemisin's other novels have been on my intended reading list for awhile, but I reckon she's long jumped off the "writers to watch" list, considering she already has two Hugos and several other major awards to her name. While she might not be a household name yet, her work has definitely made enough of a splash that she might already be her generation's Octavia Butler and Ursula K. Le Guin all in one. She'll probably be the next sci-fi writer I read. To be fair, though, I think your post may have made her stuff seem even more urgent to read, along with this post by Abigail Nussbaum - who also won a Hugo last year, incidentally (so now I can boast of personally knowing both an Oscar winner and a Hugo winner, though admittedly I know the Hugo winner only via the Internets).
Anyway, if you need more sci-fi reading material, Nussbaum's list seems as good a place to start as any. I've read Robinson before (though not that specific work) and he's incredibly realistic and detailed - arguably for better and for worse, but he's a good enough storyteller and writer that the arguable pacing flaws with his work don't bother me much. I'm familiar with most of the other works/authors on her list mainly by reputation, but those reputations are generally good, for whatever that's worth.
My reading has crashed to a halt thanks to my disorders. I restarted Pratchett and Gaiman's Good Omens (which I've already read like four times; it's one of the wisest commentaries on the human condition I've ever read) after watching a very good documentary on Gaiman, and in preparation for this year's Amazon Prime adaptation, but even that has stalled. I think my condition is improving in some respects, but some days are better for me than others.
__________________
Cēterum cēnseō factiōnem Rēpūblicānam dēlendam esse īgnī ferrōque.
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01-17-2018, 08:22 AM
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Astroid the Foine Loine between a Poirate and a Farrrmer
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Join Date: Feb 2011
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
Quote:
My reading has crashed to a halt thanks to my disorders.
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Damn! I hope that gets better soon The Man.
Quote:
I reckon she's long jumped off the "writers to watch" list, considering she already has two Hugos and several other major awards to her name.
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True. I guess what I mean is "This writer has done interesting shit, and is bound to do some more!"
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01-18-2018, 06:24 AM
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Safety glasses off, motherfuckers
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Sarasota, FL
Gender: Bender
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Re: What are you reading?
Thanks. Some days I'm better than others. I actually managed to read about 70 pages today, so maybe I'm getting better again.
I also just read that David Simon is adapting Philip Roth's The Plot Against America into a six-part miniseries, so I guess that'll be next on my reading list. The Wire is undoubtedly the best television show I've ever seen, and if anyone can do justice to Roth's novel and its alarming parallels to the current age, it's Simon.
__________________
Cēterum cēnseō factiōnem Rēpūblicānam dēlendam esse īgnī ferrōque.
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01-18-2018, 07:32 AM
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Shitpost Sommelier
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Re: What are you reading?
I picked up Octavia Butler - Kindred
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Peering from the top of Mount Stupid
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01-19-2018, 10:17 PM
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Fishy mokey
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Furrin parts
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Re: What are you reading?
A Brief History of Seven Killings by Marlon James. It is a historical novel based on an assassination attempt on Bob Marley in his house in Kingston in 1976, two weeks before a national election and the day before a planned 'peace concert' by Marley to protest the election violence.
Gangs were recruited by the 2 political parties to intimidate voters. The gang in Copenhagen City (an area in West Kingston) led by Papa-lo and his second in command Josey Wales (everyone has a nickname in Jamaica) is JLP (Jamaican Labour Party, actually a conservative party), while the gang in Eight Lanes (Central Kingston) led by Shotta Sheriff is PNP (Progressive National Party, which is social democratic but flirting with Cuba). The CIA is arming and training the pro-JLP gangs in order for them to win the elections against the incumbent PNP, though the CIA bureau chief doesn't seem to know about that.
There are a lot of characters who all get to tell part of the story, some of them gangsters, some of them Americans like the CIA bureau chief and a reporter from Rolling Stone, some of them (Jamaican) civilians and even the ghost of a politician. It helps to have some background info about Jamaican and/or at least a bit of the patois I suppose, but it's not strictly necessary. And at some point the story will move to New York as Josey Wales will move his operations there.
So far me really bloodcloth like it.
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01-19-2018, 11:05 PM
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Adequately Crumbulent
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Cascadia
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kamilah Hauptmann
I picked up Octavia Butler - Kindred
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I read this last year and really liked it.
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01-20-2018, 07:40 PM
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rude, crude, lewd, and unsophisticated
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Puddle City, Cascadia
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
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01-22-2018, 06:10 PM
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Adequately Crumbulent
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Cascadia
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
This is really good so far.
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01-24-2018, 08:17 PM
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A fellow sophisticate
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Cowtown, Kansas
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
Working Nights: Health & Safety Guide, because, you see, I have exactly three more night shifts to work. That's it, three. I hope I never work another night shift. I'm not saying it won't happen though, because I might get a job as Senior Batman or something like that.
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Sleep - the most beautiful experience in life - except drink.--W.C. Fields
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01-29-2018, 03:57 PM
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ChuckF's sock
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Join Date: Dec 2016
Gender: Female
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Re: What are you reading?
I'm reading this piece of poo right now. I am checking on my neighbour's cat while she is on holiday and it was on her bookshelf. So whenever I go over to hang out with "John", I read a chapter or two.
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#jeSuisLimoncello
..
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01-30-2018, 05:18 AM
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rude, crude, lewd, and unsophisticated
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Puddle City, Cascadia
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
Um...Has anybody stumbled across this:
The Resurrectionist: The Lost Work of Dr. Spencer Black
I'm curious, because it looks right up Yb's dark alley.
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02-08-2018, 06:10 AM
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Shitpost Sommelier
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Re: What are you reading?
__________________
Peering from the top of Mount Stupid
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02-08-2018, 10:23 AM
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Solipsist
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Kolmannessa kerroksessa
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
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02-16-2018, 07:22 AM
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Forum Killer
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Re: What are you reading?
I grabbed a book nearly at random at the bookstore a few months ago, "the city of the iron fish", trying to force myself to read something outside my comfort zone. My inner RNG chose well in picking something uncomfortable and it took me this long to finish.
Now that I have, the frustrating thing is the unifying theme of the book - "there is no meaning" - makes it damned difficult/pointless to discuss. It could be taken as a symbol for so many dozens of things but by fiat, theme, and content, it's not, just what it is. It's simultaneously the most obtuse and most subtle thing I've read.
It's also barely a fantasy novel at all, until you discover what's happening.
It's also pretty bleak, following the decline and turmoil of a depressed young man in a civilization of people who haven't had a vacation in living memory.
And now that it's over, I will say, I don't regret reading it. It was a bold idea, interesting setting, and concluded in a way I wouldn't have predicted. I also don't think I'll read it again.
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02-20-2018, 11:11 AM
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A fellow sophisticate
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Cowtown, Kansas
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
We are but a few months from moving to a house located across the street from a library. I can't fucking wait.
__________________
Sleep - the most beautiful experience in life - except drink.--W.C. Fields
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02-20-2018, 04:28 PM
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Fishy mokey
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Furrin parts
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Re: What are you reading?
I just finished Culture and Imperialism by Edward Said which is about how culture (mainly literature) helped to normalize imperialism and to a large extent still does (for the US empire). He treats only the British, French and US empires and shows how the empire permeates books like Great Expectations by Dickens and Mansfield Park by Jane Austen or books by Albert Camus (L' étranger, La Peste). It's a very interesting book and Said avoids the blame game and shows how formerly marginalized cultures or minorities in the West have now produced their own literature where they retake their land/culture back.
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02-21-2018, 09:50 PM
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Fishy mokey
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Furrin parts
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Re: What are you reading?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Watser?
A Brief History of Seven Killings by Marlon James. It is a historical novel based on an assassination attempt on Bob Marley in his house in Kingston in 1976, two weeks before a national election and the day before a planned 'peace concert' by Marley to protest the election violence.
Gangs were recruited by the 2 political parties to intimidate voters. The gang in Copenhagen City (an area in West Kingston) led by Papa-lo and his second in command Josey Wales (everyone has a nickname in Jamaica) is JLP (Jamaican Labour Party, actually a conservative party), while the gang in Eight Lanes (Central Kingston) led by Shotta Sheriff is PNP (Progressive National Party, which is social democratic but flirting with Cuba). The CIA is arming and training the pro-JLP gangs in order for them to win the elections against the incumbent PNP, though the CIA bureau chief doesn't seem to know about that.
There are a lot of characters who all get to tell part of the story, some of them gangsters, some of them Americans like the CIA bureau chief and a reporter from Rolling Stone, some of them (Jamaican) civilians and even the ghost of a politician. It helps to have some background info about Jamaican and/or at least a bit of the patois I suppose, but it's not strictly necessary. And at some point the story will move to New York as Josey Wales will move his operations there.
So far me really bloodcloth like it.
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This book (I finished it a couple of weeks ago and it is really very good), has given me a new light on this song:
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02-27-2018, 03:10 AM
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happy now, Mussolini?
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Join Date: May 2006
Location: location, location
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Re: What are you reading?
Rhode Island An Inventory of Historic Engineering and Industrial Sites, from the US Dept. of the Interior's Historic American Engineering Record.
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03-18-2018, 01:34 AM
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Shitpost Sommelier
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Re: What are you reading?
__________________
Peering from the top of Mount Stupid
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09-29-2018, 01:16 AM
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Hound
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Join Date: Feb 2016
Location: The Dog House
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
You Wouldn't Know Me from Adam by Col. Stoopnagle. In it we meet Adam Flansgrans, the Adam you wouldn't know people from, Janet Banet, Phoebe B. Beebe, the man who didn't touch the chocolates 'untouched by human hands' and many more
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09-29-2018, 03:45 PM
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Admin
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Ypsilanti, Mi
Gender: Male
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Re: What are you reading?
Last week I read White Fragility, by Robin Diangelo. I thought I knew as much as I needed to know about racism but I learned a lot -- especially about internalized white supremacy. It's subtitled "Why It's So Hard for White People to Talk about Racism" which makes it sound like the target audience is people of color, but I think white liberals need to read it most.
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09-30-2018, 04:10 AM
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happy now, Mussolini?
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Join Date: May 2006
Location: location, location
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Re: What are you reading?
Here's a podcast that interviews author Andrew Lipman, if anyone's interested.
Went to a seminar reading of an early chapter from this book at MHS 5 years ago and talked to Drew about some history shit after the seminar. Was p. interesting seminar and chat-after. The book isn't bad either, for a Bancroft winner.
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08-21-2020, 08:10 AM
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California Sober
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Silicon Valley
Gender: Bender
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Re: What are you reading?
I'm reading Game of Thrones again, because why read something I haven't read 5 times before?
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08-22-2020, 12:28 AM
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Flyover Hillbilly
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Juggalonia
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Re: What are you reading?
I'm steeling myself and otherwise fixin' to get ready to dive into A Republic, If You Can Keep It by Neil Gorsuch. Wish me luck, and in the event I am never heard from again, may the Good Lord bless and keep you all.
__________________
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." ~ Louis D. Brandeis
"Psychos do not explode when sunlight hits them, I don't give a fuck how crazy they are." ~ S. Gecko
"What the fuck is a German muffin?" ~ R. Swanson
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08-22-2020, 12:48 AM
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Crafty Agitator
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Minneapolis MN
Gender: Female
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Re: What are you reading?
I discovered the Murderbot Diaries series by Martha Wells and am really enjoying them.
And Capital and Ideology by Picketty. I go back and forth between the two.
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