View Full Version : Recommended Reads
Innominatus
05-24-2004, 01:12 PM
So, what're some good summertime reads?
Classics, oddities, nonfiction or otherwise, they're all good.
Couple I've read lately, to get the list started:
Catapult by Jim Paul.
Two guys in San Francisco with kinetic sculptor-tendencies get drunk one night, hatch the idea that it might be fun to build a giant catapult, and actually follow through once sober. They take it up to an old artillery battery on Mt. Tamalpais, and fling enough objects to the point of pissing off the Park Service. Light reading at best, but amusing. Good for whiling away airport layovers.
Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson.
Recommended to me with a couple years ago by a fellow Mag/minion, I finally got around to this one. Clocks in at almost a thousand pages, but so entertaining I stopped eating and sleeping for two days straight just so I could finish it off in one sitting. Great stuff think WWII espionage, codebreaking, wacky British explorer/Allen Quartermain-type jungle stuff, and sprinkle it liberally with submarines, computer nerds and Silicon Valley startups. Sex, explosions, math geek code, yup, yup it's all there. Techy enough to keep the nerds engaged, yet moves at an easy thriller-novel clip. Sort of a cross between Clive Cussler and that weird guy from the movie Pi.
The Unfair Advantage by Mark Donohue
Autobiography of racing legend Donohue, who wrote this just before his fatal crash at the Osterreichring during the 1975 Austrian GP. Written in the dry, matter-of-fact tone one would expect of a Brown-educated mechanical engineer. Full of great halcyon-era anecdotes, like taking two cars, acid-dipping one until it was well below legal weight, sending a heavy, legal car through the tech inspection, and then swapping numbers so as to use the acid-dipped cheater to qualify both cars. A must for road racing fans. All else will find it a handy cure for insomnia.
Some that I'm in the middle of:
Flatland by Edwin Abbott Abbott (so nice, they named him twice, evidently).
An utterly bizarre, charming religio-mathematic parable about caste society ca. Victorian England. A riot.
Ficciones - Collected Short Works Jorge Luis Borges.
Good for reading while bent double on the pooper. "The Circular Ruins" blows my mind and makes me see stars every time I read it (or maybe that's just oxygen-shortage from poopin').
Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon.
There's a dent in the wall opposite my couch from when I hurled this one across the room one Scotch-sodden night. Four attempts at reading it so far, and still it makes my head hurt. Just can't seem to get into this one. I'm probably gonna pull a Guy Montag on it pretty soon and torch it.
Worlds in Collision by Immanuel Velikovsky
Still on Page 1. A notorious book that is out of print and banned from many libraries should be pretty entertaining, I hope. Supposedly it attempts to refute the conventional Western science viewpoint altogether, by debunking conventional myths of religion, astronomy, history and the modern scientific method.
Playboy, June 2004
For the articles, naturally.
What're some good reads you've read lately?
Bring 'em on...
Buster Highmen
05-24-2004, 01:38 PM
Pynchon and Borges rool.
Palace Walk and The Harafish by Naguib Mahfouz. 1988 Nobel Laureate in Literature provides a fly on the wall view of mideast culture. Interesting for at least some of us honky, cracker types.
non grata
05-24-2004, 01:44 PM
definitely agree with Cryptonomicon. have you heard anything about Quicksilver? i'm not convinced looking just at the synopsis.
- Confederacy of Dunces by by John Kennedy Toole: one and only breakthrough tragic comic novel by this author who committed suicide. great "old timey" feel to his approach to humor with a very adult attitude.
- Snow Leopard by Peter Matthiessen: zen/tao and spirituality combined with immersive narrative of the himayalan landscape and cultural fabric.
- The Long Walk by Slavomir Rawicz: amazing tale of survival and an unfathomable trek of thousands of miles in hostile conditions, created by man and nature.
- Hobo by Eddy Joe Cotton: light reading, great "hobo prose."
- Hiroshima Bugi: Atomu 57: takes a while to get used but the novel is set in demi-kabuki which takes on an interesting cadence.
- books by Haruki Murakami: surreal japanese pulp. almost so austere that you have to re-read many passages. very "quiet" reading is the best i can describe it.
CantDog
05-24-2004, 02:01 PM
The unfair advantage is one of my favorite car reads, read it for the first time last year.
I'm reading Hayduke Lives! the sequel to the Monkey Wrench Gang by Edward Abbey. If you havent read any of Abbey's stuff, do yourself a favor and pick up some of his stuff. Absolutely fantastic. Funny, insightful, clever...and it reads really really fast. I love his stuff. My friend turned me on to him, she's such a big fan she named her dog after the author.
I'm reading Stephen King's Gunslinger Chronicles, and just finished book 4. There are 8 books to the series, and each are long(some over 700 pages). If you like watching the slow development of a story and characters, check this one out. Its kinda a cross of a western and a science fiction book.
I just finished Kind of Blue: The making of the landmark recording, which chronicles the making of Miles Davis' masterpiece. Lots of cool pictures, great quotes, and insightful facts about Miles during the 1950s.
I'm also reading John Coltrane and the Jazz Revolution of the 1960s, which is a social look at jazz of the 60s, specifically Coltranes. The writer Kofsky has been accused of putting too much emphasis on racism, but its an interesting read nonetheless.
Buster Highmen
05-24-2004, 02:11 PM
A Buttician, eh? Go harass Larry Singleton and John Hoffman. Tell 'em the Deer Lodgician sent ya.
cj001f
05-24-2004, 02:14 PM
I've read Quiksilver and The Confusion - both are decent, but not nearly as good as earlier Neal Stephenson like Snow Crash and Young Lady's Illustrated Primer
non grata
05-24-2004, 02:18 PM
Originally posted by cj001f
I've read Quiksilver and The Confusion - both are decent, but not nearly as good as earlier Neal Stephenson like Snow Crash and Young Lady's Illustrated Primer
i've tried my best to get through Diamond Age but couldn't bring myself to finishing it. my track record with liking an author's earlier works when i have read his/her newer work has not been good.
CaddyDaddy77
05-24-2004, 02:54 PM
Haven't been reading much with the move, but keep a few around just to keep my head fresh.
Einstein's Dreams by Alan Lightman
It's an exploration of some of his ideas of time, seperated into different chapters by each theory. Synopsis of Einstein's Dreams (http://www.english.uwosh.edu/einstein/synopsis.html)
Also read Roald Dahl's Omnibus, definitely not along the lines of most of the works he's famous for, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, James and the Giant Peach, etc., it's a collection of shorts for adults. Lots of grisly stories, and some pretty twisted lines, great read, I think I'm on my third go-around on it.
Cantdog, I'm looking to pick up Wolves of the Callaha (sp?) next, not typically a big fan of King, but I've been reading this series off and on for years, good story, so many twists, it keeps you interested.
Woodsy
05-24-2004, 03:51 PM
Originally posted by CantDog
My friend turned me on to him, she's such a big fan she named her dog after the author.
.
she named her dog Cactus Ed?!?
brilliance in time, Moab's changes from 84 til now make me puke; cant believe what he saw.
so much good Abbey
best book I have read recently Amsterdam- Ian McEwen
Travels with Charlie -Steinbeck is entertaining me while traveling a lot myself.
CantDog
05-24-2004, 03:58 PM
naw Woodsy, just edward. Some of my favorite quotes comes from Abbey's books, this one in particular:
"How long'd you go to that school?
"Two weeks. It was a long grind."
"Not long enough, seems like. What branch of higher learning did they teach you there anyhow?"
"They taught all the branches-but none of the roots."
Also two of my favorite books are On the Road and Roughing It, I always take one of em when I travel.
I just finished The wizard and the glass Caddy, and ordered a copy of Wolves of Calla. The series is damn good, I'm glad I've got 3 more books to read...but I dont want it to end.
The AD
05-24-2004, 05:09 PM
Originally posted by non grata
- Confederacy of Dunces by by John Kennedy Toole
This is what I thought of immediately when I read the title of this thread. Absolutely hilarious book.
The Caine Mutiny by Herman Wouk is a great read. Great characters and study of human emotion under extremely trying conditions.
Rabbit series by John Updike. There are four book, each written about ten years apart. Start with Rabbit, Run the first in the series written in 1960.
half-fast
05-25-2004, 08:10 AM
indian country-phillip caputo
yogachik
05-25-2004, 05:00 PM
I'm always reading. Never not reading.
Newer books to recommend are
Life of Pi by Yann Martel
The Known World by Edward P Jones (an incredible book about blacks in the 1840s who owned slaves, a powerful book).
I always love
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov, probably my #1 favorite book, ever.
The White Hotel by D. M. Thomas - an odd journey into freudianism
Chimera by John Barth a play on Scheherezade of the Thousand and One Nights
I realize as I type these all-time favorites that my taste in books has a running theme...
I never finished Life of Pi. Way to slow for me.
Final Forest is a good, quick read on the Spotted Owl/Old Growth debate. A little dated, but covers the topic pretty well.
CantDog
05-26-2004, 08:59 PM
For a class I've been reading lots of Immanuel Kant(who is a crappy writer) so I took a break from it and read Twilight of the Idols and the Antichrist by Nietzsche, to sort of counter Kant's Christian driven ideas. Some parts are downright ridiculous, but many are quite elegant, especially the short section on "How the 'Real World' Became a Myth". Its pretty easy reading as far as translated german and philosophy goes.
I read The Dialogues and Natural History of Religion by David Hume earlier this spring and really enjoyed that as well. David Hume was a phenomenal writer, and his ideas are really thought provoking, I've noticed I've been thinking more critically since reading it, which is about as much as you can hope from a book.
My mom sent me a copy of A Pirate of Exquisite Mind: Explorer, Naturalist, and Buccaneer: The Life of William Dampier by Diana & Michael Preston. She heard about it on NPR and so far its good, I'm a big nonfiction fan.
Steven S. Dallas
05-27-2004, 05:53 AM
Originally posted by yogachik
I always love Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov, probably my #1 favorite book, ever.
Light of my life! Fire of my loins!
Cosmic Bandito
05-27-2004, 08:14 AM
Lemony Snickets! I cant believe someone started dropping Kant and Nietzsche as recommended reads.
My list of books to enjoy on the beach with a gin and tonic
Youth in Revolt C.D. Payne
Positively Fifth Street James McManus
In Search of Captain Zero Allan Weisbecker
The Sportswriter Richard Ford
A Fans Notes Frederik Exley
God: A Biography - Jack Miles (For those of you looking for a good slog)
The Intelligent Investor - Benjamin Graham (If the warm milk didn't put you to sleep)
Flat Stanley - Jeff Brown
The AD
05-27-2004, 09:07 AM
Originally posted by Cosmic Bandito
The Sportswriter Richard Ford
...
Flat Stanley - Jeff Brown
The Sportswriter really rubbed me the wrong way! I slogged through both that and Independence Day and it was like pulling teeth. I'm a real glutton for punishment!
Flat Stanley, though, now that's a classic.
I saw Positively Fifth Street at Costco a few weeks ago and was intrigued by the blurb in the back. Might have to pick that one up.
Woodsy
06-08-2004, 10:09 AM
now into Atonement by McKewan.
damn the man can write
non grata
06-08-2004, 10:20 AM
reading hst's "proud highway" and bandito's recommended read, "in search of captain zero" and am thoroughly enjoying both.
i'm also trying to slog through "staying alive in avalanche terrain."
can anyone else recommend any books involving personal struggles with nature and the self akin to "capt zero", "snow leopard" and "Into the Wild" ?
The AD
06-08-2004, 10:32 AM
Originally posted by non grata
can anyone else recommend any books involving personal struggles with nature and the self akin to "capt zero", "snow leopard" and "Into the Wild" ?
OK, it isn't anything like the books you mentioned, but it's a hilarious read: A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson. The basic premise is a middle-aged, overweight writer decides to hike the AT with an old buddy. They aren't exactly successful, but Bryson is a funny writer and there's lots of good and interesting information sprinkled throughout. His other books are also good.
CaddyDaddy77
07-01-2004, 09:50 AM
Originally posted by non grata
- Hobo by Eddy Joe Cotton: light reading, great "hobo prose."
Stumbled across it at Barnes and Noble on the discount pile the other day, I figured for $4 I couldn't go all that wrong.
I stayed up till two last night finishing it up. Guy has a great style in his writing, nice easy flow, and strings together a story as if it were days not months. The timeline with the pictures in front is pretty interesting, to go back to and see the what and where of each one. Also the terminology is great, I liked the different terms for travelers depending ontheir condition and pride, or lack thereof.
It was also cool to visualize the trainyards that you have traveled past and imaging the story that's running on those rails, Denver, Grand Junction, etc.
Two thumbs, good stuff.
Ubersheist
07-01-2004, 01:18 PM
Originally posted by non grata
reading hst's "proud highway" and bandito's recommended read, "in search of captain zero" and am thoroughly enjoying both.
i'm also trying to slog through "staying alive in avalanche terrain."
can anyone else recommend any books involving personal struggles with nature and the self akin to "capt zero", "snow leopard" and "Into the Wild" ?
As Cantdog eluded to, pick up some Edward Abbey. I suggest his non-fiction over his fiction - Desert Solitaire or Down the River are my favorites. Also, Jon Krakaur's (sp?) latest is different, but still a very, very interesting read (Under the Banner of Heaven). An older classic is Never Cry Wolf by Farley Mowat. Excellent book!
I just started Haruki Murakami's The Chase of the White Sheep - strange, but very interesting so far. I'm also reading a collection of short stories published by Vintage Books called Vintage Stories of Amnesia . Good stuff so far.
non grata
07-01-2004, 02:05 PM
"Hobo" does have a cool flow... it's got all you want out from an american epic without the beatnik pretense of "On the Road." have you read "Proud Highway", caddy?
although i haven't read "Wild Sheep Chase", "The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle" would have to rank up there among his more twisted and ulterior novels. i'm planning on picking up his short stories also... i'm guessing since his lit is pretty loaded, reading bits and pieces of him would be a bit easier to absorb.
it's difficult to distill all the weird shit that happens in his fiction. at first glance most characters and occurances seem to be in the garden variety fucked up vein, but there are reasons for his eccentricity. the cool thing is that even if you want to disregard the all-important "deeper meaning" in his writing, it's fine. they stand alone as just strange pieces of fiction.
i took at look at that krakauer book's synopsis a while ago and it kinda looks like a thriller. as much as i enjoyed "Into the Wild" and "Into Thin Air", i don't see myself picking up "Banner." i'm just looking for another cheesy "Into... Blah Blah." as a writer, i wish he placed his obviously seething subjectivity into "Into Thin Air." but maybe that's HST's influence on me and how journalistic ventures should really shed its objective pretense. "Iceland" is something i may pick up only because i like the country.
i'm definitely down on getting some abbey. thx for the recommendations.
vinzclortho
07-01-2004, 02:18 PM
Really fun quick read for me recently was "Bringing Down the House" about the MIT kids that made oodles of cash in Vegas.
and some of my all time Fav's are "The Grapes of Wrath"...one chapter...14 I think it is, really speaks to me, "To have and have not" by Hemingway, great story telling.
Ubersheist
07-02-2004, 11:35 AM
Originally posted by non grata
i took at look at that krakauer book's synopsis a while ago and it kinda looks like a thriller. as much as i enjoyed "Into the Wild" and "Into Thin Air", i don't see myself picking up "Banner." <snipped> as a writer, i wish he placed his obviously seething subjectivity into "Into Thin Air."
"Under..." is definately NOT a thriller. While it does have it's juicy parts (lots of blood, polygamy), it's basically a study of fundamental Mormonism history and theology, and the extremists it produces. It's highly subjective, and doesn't jive with many, many mainstream (Latter-Day Saints) Mormons. Absolutely rivetting. However, I want to pick up another book or two about Mormonism. Krakaur's book is so subjective, that I'd really like to get another view.
non grata
07-02-2004, 11:59 AM
well i stand corrected (or properly informed), i'll check it out.
CaddyDaddy77
07-02-2004, 04:25 PM
Originally posted by non grata
"Hobo" does have a cool flow... it's got all you want out from an american epic without the beatnik pretense of "On the Road." have you read "Proud Highway", caddy?
i took at look at that krakauer book's synopsis a while ago and it kinda looks like a thriller. as much as i enjoyed "Into the Wild" and "Into Thin Air", i don't see myself picking up "Banner." i'm just looking for another cheesy "Into... Blah Blah." as a writer, i wish he placed his obviously seething subjectivity into "Into Thin Air." but maybe that's HST's influence on me and how journalistic ventures should really shed its objective pretense. "Iceland" is something i may pick up only because i like the country.
i'm definitely down on getting some abbey. thx for the recommendations.
Haven't read Proud Highway and it's been a few years since I've read On the Road. Great book, I think I tried to read it when I was about 14 and didn't really get it and revisited it a couple years later and it was better, I think I was in my 20's before I really appreciated it.
Like Abbby quite a bit. Really fun reading due to the fact that lots of his subject locations are places I've been. He has a great way at looking at situations from a different angle, a new approach.
As Uber mentioned Down the River is a great one, as well as Confessions of a Barbarian as well.
I even looked into bidding on the guys Caddy, nice one too. never saw for how much it went for, but that would be a cool ride in so many ways.
http://www.abbeyweb.net/doc.htm?ID=75
good quote of his,
The silence - meaning here not the total absence of sounds, for the river and its canyons are bright with a native music - but rather the total absence of confusion and clamor,that would be the problem.
and one more
Men have never loved one another much, for reasons we can readily understand: Man is not a lovable animal.
cool Abbey site, http://www.abbeyweb.net
Alkasquawlik
07-04-2004, 04:07 PM
Here is a quick synopsis of my latest reads.
the curious incident of the dog in the night-time by Mark Haddon. It's a murder mystery told through the eyes of an autistic child. Light, quick reading but at the same time is a kewl mind quirker.
Holy Blood Holy Grail by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln. The controversial book of the early 80's that pretty much is the complete and total inspiration for Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code. Slow in parts, but interesting none-the-less.
The Metamorphoses by Ovid. Hands down my favorite story of all time. If you didn't read it in college or highschool you should now. Nearly every line of dialouge is intertwined with symbolism. Murders, conspiracies, religious symbolism and many many more complex themes are toyed with throughout the book. A bit of basic greek history and greek god knowledge is required in order to fully enjoy the greatness of this book.
satori
07-05-2004, 08:34 PM
Originally posted by non grata
although i haven't read "Wild Sheep Chase", "The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle" would have to rank up there among his more twisted and ulterior novels. i'm planning on picking up his short stories also... i'm guessing since his lit is pretty loaded, reading bits and pieces of him would be a bit easier to absorb.
it's difficult to distill all the weird shit that happens in his fiction. at first glance most characters and occurances seem to be in the garden variety fucked up vein, but there are reasons for his eccentricity. the cool thing is that even if you want to disregard the all-important "deeper meaning" in his writing, it's fine. they stand alone as just strange pieces of fiction.
Murakami is probably the most well-known author outside Japan but I wouldnt say hes the best. Read most of his books and enjoyed Dance Dance Dance, A Wild Sheep Chase, and South of the Border, West of the Sun the best.
If you enjoy Asian authors try any of these:
Alex Kerr: Dogs and Demons (changed my perspective on Japan)
Mishima: Golden Pavilion (my fav), Spring Snow, Death in Midsummer is the English translation I think (short stories)
Kawabata: Snow Country(the depth of this book is scary), Beauty and Sadness
Kazuo Ishiguro. An Artist of the Floating World.
Junichi Saga. Confessions of a Yakuza.
Soseki Natsumi. Botchan, I am a Cat
Miyuki Miyabe: All She Was Worth
Gao Xingjian: Soul Mountain
???????: Shanghai Baby - Must Read! I wish I was the German
For the cycling enthusiast:
Travis Hugh Culley: The Immortal Class - Wicked Read!
Been Living in Asia for way too long...
CaddyDaddy77
07-06-2004, 12:51 PM
Originally posted by satori
Mishima: Golden Pavilion (my fav), Spring Snow, Death in Midsummer is the English translation I think (short stories)
The Golden Pavillion is a fantastic book. If you haven't already go rent Mishima:A Life in Four Chapters.
It goes through the Golden Pavillion, Kyoko's House (sp?) and Run away Horses, then goes into a fictional tale of the last day of his life. From what I gather sounds like he was a very talented but tormented person. Great film.
satori
07-06-2004, 06:12 PM
Caddydaddy,
Thats the video bout Mishimas life yeah? If so, I saw that back in college - had different themes from his books up to his suicide if I remember correctly. cool flick. I like the Chinese film Raise the Red Lantern which I saw around the same time as Mishimas film. Youd probably enjoy that. A very funny Japanese film is Tompopo - sure you could rent that one too.
watersnowdirt
07-07-2004, 12:37 AM
Originally posted by Woodsy
now into Atonement by McKewan.
damn the man can write
LOVED Atonement. Check out Enduring Love by him as well - also great.
Re-reading 100 Years of Solitude right now. Unreal. So amazing.
About half way through each of - Under the Banner of Heaven, Middlesex, and White Teeth. Keep picking up Fury by Salman Rushdie but it's just not grabbing me.
Arty50
07-07-2004, 12:57 AM
Hey, I just stubled on this thread. Sweeeeet!!! I've been looking for new stuff to read. I blew through a whole bunch of books on my Mexican trip.
Recommendations:
"Shibumi" by Trevanian - labeled as a mystery, but more of a thriller; great writer, wrote the Eiger Sanction
"Unbearable Lightness of Being" - a classic and I finally just read it; do yourself a favor and read it now
Originally posted by watersnowdirt
About half way through each of - Under the Banner of Heaven, Middlesex, and White Teeth. Keep picking up Fury by Salman Rushdie but it's just not grabbing me.
Cue Twilight Zone theme. Just read Banner of Heaven. Middlesex is in the cue. White Teeth, eh? Ok, I guess they don't come in threes. :D
CaddyDaddy77
07-08-2004, 10:34 AM
Originally posted by satori
Caddydaddy,
Thats the video bout Mishimas life yeah? If so, I saw that back in college - had different themes from his books up to his suicide if I remember correctly. cool flick. I like the Chinese film Raise the Red Lantern which I saw around the same time as Mishimas film. Youd probably enjoy that. A very funny Japanese film is Tompopo - sure you could rent that one too.
That's the same one your thinking of, an apppreviated version of the stories, but good enought to get the point across.
Couldn't find either one of those films on netflix, I'll have to look around a bit.
Just picked up Killing Dragons:The Conquest of the Alps, by Fergus Fleming. Same guy that wrote Barrow's Boys, which someone had recommended in another thread a while back.
A bit dry but pretty interesting. I'm about a 100 pages in or so and most of it has been about the exploration of Mt. Blanc and the surrounding area. Lots of small stories of the first guy to climb such and such peak, the theories of glacier movement, etc.
Like I said, a bit dry but soem cool info.
Learning a few definitions of terms that are fairly commonplace is cool. Alps were apparently the name of high grazing areas, not the name of the peaks, that the explorers assumed when they asked local peoples. The alpes as the locals called them were merely the rich fields in the high mountain pastures.
I think I remember someone saying they were named for a person, any truth to that?
Theodore
08-01-2005, 05:38 PM
Thought I'd bring this back... Just finished A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson. I really enjoyed it, and think the crowd this board attracts would like it too. Its kinda nerdy, but very informative. Really good at putting things into perspective IMO.
tonghands
08-01-2005, 11:32 PM
recent reads: The Dogs of Winter, Kem Nunn. Best surfing novel ever. Think Hemmingway writing a thriller about surfing a couple hundred miles north of San Francisco and you wouldn't be far off.
The Forgotten Soldier, Guy Sajer. Absolutely horrifying memoir of a French guy who ended up fighting for the Germans on the eastern front in WWII. The saddest book I've ever read.
iggyskier
08-03-2005, 11:24 AM
I'm not religious in any sense, but I just finished an extremely interesting book on religion if anyone has any interest...
The Sacred and Profane - Mircea Eliade
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