Page 14 of 35 FirstFirst ... 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 ... LastLast
Results 326 to 350 of 867
  1. #326
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    SoOre
    Posts
    748
    Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson.
    I love my family. Kids are the best.
    http://www.praxisskis.com

  2. #327
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    1,500
    I read Elon Musk's biography over the holidays and it was great. Really shows his passion to...change the world, and the way we work. Incredible.

    https://www.amazon.com/Elon-Musk-Spa...ords=elon+musk

    Has anyone used GoodReads before? I've been playing with it a little bit lately.

  3. #328
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    YetiMan
    Posts
    13,370
    recent favorites:

    Down by The River by Charles Bowden, which is a work of journalism centered around the murder of a DEA agent's brother, but branching out into the whole of the US/Mexican drug war and the borderlands as a region.

    Surviving Survival by Laurence Gonzales. A blend of storytelling and neuroscience focusing on describing useful and detrimental approaches to handling post traumatic stress.

  4. #329
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Location
    Talkeetna
    Posts
    1,921
    Know its been out for a bit, but Dead Wake by Larrsen was an interesting read about the Lusitania, U boats, and Churchill's rationale.
    Did the last unsatisfied fat soccer mom you took to your mom's basement call you a fascist? -irul&ublo
    Don't Taze me bro.

  5. #330
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    The Cone of Uncertainty
    Posts
    49,306
    I'm finding the early parts of Bill Bryson's newest one, "The Road To Little Dribbling" to be a bit of a slog, somewhat surprisingly. Usually it's the second half that gets boring, they usually start out funny.

  6. #331
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    WI
    Posts
    4,398
    Quote Originally Posted by buildakicker View Post
    Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson.
    I'm really enjoying that series. The books are long and there were a few times that I wish the author moved on, but overall I think they move well and the story is engaging. Hoping that 3rd book comes out this year.


  7. #332
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    SoOre
    Posts
    748
    Quote Originally Posted by Grange View Post
    I'm really enjoying that series. The books are long and there were a few times that I wish the author moved on, but overall I think they move well and the story is engaging. Hoping that 3rd book comes out this year.
    I read they are making a movie out of that series.

    Ever read L.E. Modesitt jr? I just order a couple books. An older friend of mine told me about him.
    I love my family. Kids are the best.
    http://www.praxisskis.com

  8. #333
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    I-70 West
    Posts
    4,684
    Backpacking with the Saints

    If you like spiritual reading, it's pretty good. Author's adventures hiking in the West and Ozarks and each chapter tells of a different outing and a different person (all faiths covered) and what they preached.

  9. #334
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    WI
    Posts
    4,398
    Quote Originally Posted by buildakicker View Post
    I read they are making a movie out of that series.

    Ever read L.E. Modesitt jr? I just order a couple books. An older friend of mine told me about him.
    I don't think I've read any of his book though I do look for recommendations.

    That's interesting news about Stormlight Archive. I hope they do it justice as the source material is huge.

    Lately I've been working my way through the Star Wars Canon books. I recently finished Catalyst, and have to say I was underwhelmed. It provides good backstory, but I was bored through much of it. I'm working on Tarkin now, and while better than Catalyst it is not as good and the most recent Aftermath book.

    I'm also working my way through some books that I got free through Kindle and then bought the audible version for about $2. I recently listened to Monster Hunter International, which was quite entertaining. It kind of reminded me of the Dresden series, which I love.


  10. #335
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    44.9 degrees North, 93.1 degrees West
    Posts
    531
    I'm nearly at the end of Indifferent Stars Above by Daniel James Brown. He also wrote Boys in the Boat, so he has cred. It's especially interesting if you have ever spent time around Truckee. Haunting story that was well researched and written.

  11. #336
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Missoula
    Posts
    2,104
    Quote Originally Posted by b-bear View Post
    and Beast in the Garden was a pg turner for me- about Mtn lions making their comeback in the West- focused on Boulder CO. scared the hell out of me but also learned a ton
    https://www.amazon.com/Beast-Garden-...+in+the+garden
    Just read beast in the garden because I saw this. And guess what just happened- dog eaten in my parent's neighborhood. I guess they should have reported that cougar on the sidewalk a few weeks ago...


    Got on a timothy egan kick recently. The big burn, lasso the old west, and worst hard time. They all kind of have a similar theme

  12. #337
    Join Date
    Dec 2015
    Posts
    16,337
    Quote Originally Posted by jamal View Post
    Just read beast in the garden because I saw this. And guess what just happened- dog eaten in my parent's neighborhood. I guess they should have reported that cougar on the sidewalk a few weeks ago...
    hey spoiler alert!

  13. #338
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    The Cone of Uncertainty
    Posts
    49,306
    Guess we don't have to read that one.

  14. #339
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Central OR
    Posts
    5,963
    Quote Originally Posted by Cravenmorhead View Post
    Barbarian Days of Surfing was my favorite book of the year. Great surfing stoke; story arc of surfing dirtbag/traveler eventually gets old.
    Very good read; I don't keep books, so if anyone wants my copy, it's yours for the price of a decent sixer.

  15. #340
    Join Date
    Dec 2016
    Posts
    1,820
    Quote Originally Posted by buildakicker View Post
    Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson.
    I love Sanderson, but I haven't been able to get into Way of Kings. I've tried a few times and haven't been able to get past the first couple chapters.

    Does it pick up at some point?

  16. #341
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    SoOre
    Posts
    748
    Quote Originally Posted by TheSilverSurfer View Post
    I love Sanderson, but I haven't been able to get into Way of Kings. I've tried a few times and haven't been able to get past the first couple chapters.

    Does it pick up at some point?
    Hmmmmm, yes. I feel like I had that same starting drag... I read it a couple years ago. I just remembered at the end I was so excited for the next book.... Alas... It's not all written yet.
    I love my family. Kids are the best.
    http://www.praxisskis.com

  17. #342
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    WI
    Posts
    4,398
    The third book in the Stormlight Archive, Oathbringer, is due out this November according to Brandon Sanderson's website and apparently has a novella for this series included in Arcanum Unbounded which is a collection of short fiction stories from his other series.

    As far as does Way of Kings pick up, well for me it did. I was starting to get bored in parts such as Kaladin's struggles with Bridge Four, but once it started picking up it kept going. To me this is typical of the way Brandon Sanderson writes. He builds and builds and then goes big at the end. Book Two, Words of Radiance, starts to tie the main characters from the first book together.

    If your having a hard time with these books (they are long) try the audio version. I find it easier to get through a difficult book by listening to the audio version rather than reading it. I don't think I could have gotten through The Wheel of Time series from book 5 or so through 10 without the audio versions.

    I have the unabridged Audible versions of both Way of Kings and Words of Radiance. The narrators are the same one's that have done other Brandon Sanderson books and the Wheel of Time series.


  18. #343
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    33,556
    The Tooth Divide: Beauty, Class and the Story of Dentistry

    Politicians, journalists and researchers have a long-running problem when it comes to talking about class. The definitions we use are myriad and not always overlapping. Is the boundary of the middle class a college degree, a certain level of income? Perhaps a certain type of job: a teacher or a doctor versus a coal miner or factory worker? We might be missing a still more useful — and more personal — indicator, however.

    This is the premise, though not so bluntly stated, of Mary Otto’s new book, “Teeth: The Story of Beauty, Inequality, and the Struggle for Oral Health in America.” The dividing line between the classes might be starkest between those who spend thousands of dollars on a gleaming smile and those who suffer and even die from preventable tooth decay.

    If the idea of death from tooth decay is shocking, it might be because we so rarely talk about the condition of our teeth as a serious health issue. Instead, we think of our teeth as the ultimate personal responsibility. We fear the dentist because we fear judgment as well as pain; we are used to the implication that if we have a tooth problem, if our teeth are decaying or crooked or yellow, it is because we have failed, and failed at something so intimate that it means we ourselves are failures.

    Otto’s book begins and ends with the story of Deamonte Driver, a 12-year-old Maryland boy who died of an infection caused by one decaying tooth, and the system that failed him. In pointing out the flaws in that system, Otto takes us back through the history of dentistry and shows us how the dental profession evolved, separately from the rest of health care, into a mostly private industry that revolves almost entirely around one’s ability to pay. In other words, all of the problems with health care in America exist in the dental system, but exponentially more so.

    On the high end of the $110 billion-a-year dental industry, there are veneers for $1,000 each, “gum contouring” and more than $1 billion per year spent on tooth whitening products. A dentist tells Otto that members of his profession “once exclusively focused upon fillings and extractions, are nowadays considered providers of beauty.” And thanks to decades of deregulation, allowing medical advertising and then medical credit cards, they are doing well at it — according to a 2010 study, dentists make more per hour than doctors.
    Quote Originally Posted by Downbound Train View Post
    And there will come a day when our ancestors look back...........

  19. #344
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    E >>> W
    Posts
    3,653
    Quote Originally Posted by PNWbrit View Post
    The Tooth Divide: Beauty, Class and the Story of Dentistry

    Politicians, journalists and researchers have a long-running problem when it comes to talking about class. The definitions we use are myriad and not always overlapping. Is the boundary of the middle class a college degree, a certain level of income? Perhaps a certain type of job: a teacher or a doctor versus a coal miner or factory worker? We might be missing a still more useful — and more personal — indicator, however.

    This is the premise, though not so bluntly stated, of Mary Otto’s new book, “Teeth: The Story of Beauty, Inequality, and the Struggle for Oral Health in America.” The dividing line between the classes might be starkest between those who spend thousands of dollars on a gleaming smile and those who suffer and even die from preventable tooth decay.

    If the idea of death from tooth decay is shocking, it might be because we so rarely talk about the condition of our teeth as a serious health issue. Instead, we think of our teeth as the ultimate personal responsibility. We fear the dentist because we fear judgment as well as pain; we are used to the implication that if we have a tooth problem, if our teeth are decaying or crooked or yellow, it is because we have failed, and failed at something so intimate that it means we ourselves are failures.

    Otto’s book begins and ends with the story of Deamonte Driver, a 12-year-old Maryland boy who died of an infection caused by one decaying tooth, and the system that failed him. In pointing out the flaws in that system, Otto takes us back through the history of dentistry and shows us how the dental profession evolved, separately from the rest of health care, into a mostly private industry that revolves almost entirely around one’s ability to pay. In other words, all of the problems with health care in America exist in the dental system, but exponentially more so.

    On the high end of the $110 billion-a-year dental industry, there are veneers for $1,000 each, “gum contouring” and more than $1 billion per year spent on tooth whitening products. A dentist tells Otto that members of his profession “once exclusively focused upon fillings and extractions, are nowadays considered providers of beauty.” And thanks to decades of deregulation, allowing medical advertising and then medical credit cards, they are doing well at it — according to a 2010 study, dentists make more per hour than doctors.
    Did they mention the guy from Poughkeepsie? I believe he revolutionized anesthesia for dental surgery? His ex home on the hill is now a park for my local touring.
    Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Natures peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own freshness into you, and the storms their energy, while cares will drop away from you like the leaves of Autumn. - John Muir

    "How long can it last? For fuck sake this isn't heroin -
    suck it up princess" - XXX on getting off mj

    “This is infinity here,” he said. “It could be infinity. We don’t really don’t know. But it could be. It has to be something — but it could be infinity, right?” - Trump, on the vastness of space, man

  20. #345
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Epping, NH
    Posts
    497
    Drive, by Daniel Pink.

    All about rethinking motivation in the work place.

  21. #346
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Truckee, CA
    Posts
    8,802
    I've recently been plowing through 2 series:

    1. The Hap and Leonard series by Joe R. Lansdale.
    If you're not into starting at the beginning (and you really don't need to, imho), I would suggest RUMBLE TUMBLE, which has been my favorite of the seven I've read thus far. It's light-hearted, violent, PoMo pulp with quick dialogue and a tongue-in-cheek undertone. Also check CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS and VANILLA RIDE.

    2. The Burke series by Andrew Vachss
    While starting at the beginning with the first novel, Flood, is a good idea, similar to the Hap/Leonard novels, you can pretty much start anywhere. My favorites of the 15 I've read have been: HARD CANDY, BLOSSOM, DOWN IN THE ZERO, FOOTSTEPS OF THE HAWK, SAFE HOUSE, and DEAD AND GONE, and DOWN HERE.

    As for stand-alone novels...

    I've just started THE AMAZING ADVENTURES OF KAVALIER AND CLAY by Michael Chabon. I'm only 200 pages in, but am digging it, even though it's a bit dense (i.e wordy), but the story is intriguing, especially if you are a comic book nerd (or just a semi-geek with a passable knowledge of the Golden and Silver Age eras of comic books).

    AS SHE CLIMBED ACROSS THE TABLE by Jonathan Lethem is an interesting sci-fi/love triangle yarn involving particle physics.

    A buddy loaned me PATIENT ZERO, by Jonathan Maberry which was a quick read. It's in the sci-fi/military vein and reminded me of a super-updated James Bond-type story complete with gadgetry, evil villains bent on world domination, and zombies. Supposed to be coming out as a film soon, too.
    "Man, we killin' elephants in the back yard..."

    https://www.blizzard-tecnica.com/us/en

  22. #347
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Central OR
    Posts
    5,963
    Just finished book three of "The Cemetery of Forgotten Books" series by Carlos Ruiz Zafon. A bit flowery and dramatic at times, but worth the journey. All three books, while they can be read alone or in any order, fit together like a massive, intricate puzzle, revealing different facets of characters and their motivations. Great shit. The final volume comes out in English in 2018; I can hardly wait. Recommended.

  23. #348
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Bellevue
    Posts
    7,449
    Quote Originally Posted by Flyoverland Captive View Post
    Just finished book three of "The Cemetery of Forgotten Books" series by Carlos Ruiz Zafon. A bit flowery and dramatic at times, but worth the journey. All three books, while they can be read alone or in any order, fit together like a massive, intricate puzzle, revealing different facets of characters and their motivations. Great shit. The final volume comes out in English in 2018; I can hardly wait. Recommended.
    I was just talking with someone about Shadow of the wind tonight. I enjoyed all three, good recommendation

  24. #349
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Between a rock and a soft place. Aberdare and The Brecon Beacons, Wales
    Posts
    3,214
    Cove by Cynan Jones

    Short but very sweet



    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cove-Cynan-...words=the+cove

    If you like that, then The Dig should be next.

  25. #350
    Join Date
    Dec 2016
    Posts
    1
    Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy
    The Sisters Brothers by Patrick Dewitt

    Both westerns. Good western books and movies are my favorite genre. Everyone knows of Blood Meridian, it is serious and gnarly...scalping, hoss prostitutes, forced army work in mexico. The Sisters Brothers is hilarious and intense. Great read. I regard both of these titles as must reads.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •