Results 776 to 800 of 833
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03-28-2023, 02:40 PM #776
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03-28-2023, 03:00 PM #777
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About 75 pages into “A Forest Journey - The Role of Trees in The Fate of Civilization” by John Perkins. Well researched, thought provoking and incredibly informative. I’ll never think about trees the same way again. Apologies if it has been mentioned before.
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04-13-2023, 09:36 PM #778"All God does is watch us and kill us when we get boring. We must never, ever be boring."
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04-13-2023, 09:46 PM #779
As a McCarthy fan (ATPH is probably my "favorite" piece of fiction), I just couldn't dig the Passenger. It was good, not great. Hard to articulate but with his books, you're either feasting or working. This one felt more like work to me.
Sent from my SM-S918U1 using Tapatalk"All God does is watch us and kill us when we get boring. We must never, ever be boring."
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04-26-2023, 11:50 AM #780
My wife just picked this up for me:
I have some reading to finish before I get to it. Grann’s writing is excellent, so I’m looking forward to diving in.
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04-26-2023, 12:13 PM #781
I just heard a radio interview with David Grann about this book and it sounded excellent
skid luxury
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04-26-2023, 12:20 PM #782
Thank you for this, just added to my reading list.
Sent from my iPhone using TGR ForumsSamuel L. Jackson as Jules Winnfield: Oh, I'm sorry. Did I break your concentration?
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05-04-2023, 10:38 AM #783
I’m usually not one for either non-fiction or memoirs, but I just “stumbled “ upon this excerpt from actor Brian Cox’s Putting the Rabbit in the Hat and I gotta say, I rather enjoyed his easy flowing, no-bullshit, having a pint at the local and shooting the breeze manner.
Might have to snag a copy if I come across one at the local bookstore…
https://www.gq.com/story/brian-cox-memoir-excerptLast edited by dookeyXXX; 05-04-2023 at 11:04 AM.
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05-04-2023, 10:55 AM #784
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05-23-2023, 06:36 PM #785
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05-23-2023, 09:47 PM #786
Who made "greed good, workers powerless, and the market all-powerful while weaponizing nostalgia, lifting up an oligarchy that [serves] only its own interests, and [left] the huge majority of Americans with dwindling economic prospects and hope."
Written by the sister of the brother who kidnapped Freddy Heineken
Laughs on every page and guaranteed to piss off the partisan right
Captivating essays culled from The New Yorker
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05-24-2023, 12:30 PM #787
THE GETAWAY - Jim Thompson
Knocked this pulp classic out in a day.
It’s an interesting chase/pursuit yarn with a lot of psychological underpinnings and a strange shift in themes and tone during the third act.
I subsequently watched both the 1972 and 1994 film adaptations after finishing the book. Not sure what screenwriter Walter Hill was thinking or what kind of pressure he was given by the producers, but the films toss away all the tension and weird subtext of the source material, dumbed down and drastically changed key characters, and then added in all kinds of unnecessary action sequences. I found both films underwhelming, however, they actually made me like the novel much more in retrospect.
If you dig a good, pulpy action story with noir sensibilities and interesting philosophical undertones, this is a good one.
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05-24-2023, 12:59 PM #788
I don't know, I absolutely loved McCarthy's latest. I would characterize it as haunting in the best way possible. More a meditation on grief than anything else.
Reading Calvino's Invisible Cities right now, and it's an absolute treat.
"Marco Polo describes a bridge, stone by stone.
'But which is the stone that supports the bridge?' Kublai Khan asks.
'The bridge is not supported by one stone or another,' Marco answers, 'but by the line of the arch that they form.'
Kublai Khan remains silent, reflecting. Then he adds: 'Why do you speak to me of the stones? It is only the arch that matters to me.'
Polo answers: 'Without stones there is no arch.'"
Blurs the line between philosophy, prose, and poetry.
Sent from my Pixel 6 Pro using Tapatalk
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05-24-2023, 09:47 PM #789
Time for a new book - any suggestions?
I’ll have to check out Passenger. Is it a good narrative or hard to get into?
The Road was one of my absolute favorite reads along with the border trilogy. I crushed the road during a big coastal storm one day.Last edited by jackattack; 05-26-2023 at 09:53 AM.
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06-05-2023, 11:25 AM #790
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06-06-2023, 12:31 PM #791
This two volume collection delivers a whip cracking yarn about hobos, Satan, and the titular mythical mountain.
In addition to the engaging story ( which is the dog’s nuts) there are cool auxiliary essays about hobo life, the origin of the modern depiction of Satan, and other related historical footnotes. You’ll also pick up plenty of cool 1940s-era slang, too!
All of it is delivered in a wonderfully kinetic cartoon style and a frenzied pace which makes for a super entertaining and visually arresting read.
Highly recommended.
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06-07-2023, 09:34 AM #792
Wow.
This book is heavy.
I totally understand why the German bureaucracy banned it upon release as it champions free thought and rails against blind nationalism. This is easily the most harrowing coming-of-age-story ever committed to the page.
I have no idea why it took me so long to get around to reading it nor why it wasn’t part of my HS reading curriculum.
Last year I saw the NF produced film version and was stunned. Then I watched the original 1930 Hollywood film. Figured I should finally read the book.
Glad I did, but damn…!
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06-07-2023, 07:41 PM #793
Time for a new book - any suggestions?
I’m reading “The Guns of August” right now also about WWI. I feel like we learned a ton about WWII in school but a lot less about the 1st WW.
I’m really liking it and the understanding I have gained of the causes and players of WWI.
I read the “The Proud Tower” which is the first in the series and was tedious. I thought I needed to read that first based on reviews but I believe it is unnecessary. I was hoping The Guns of August would be better and it’s much better.
I’ll do All Quiet next as I usually like to go down the rabbit hole once I start learning about something and of course I have heard it referenced for years so thanks for the reminder and nice to have my next book already lined upskid luxury
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06-07-2023, 09:57 PM #794
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06-08-2023, 01:59 PM #795
I was prompted to snatch up this book after seeing the trailer to the M. Night film adaptation numerous times.
I ripped through it in a day.
I’m not 100% sold on the ending, though my copy contains “liner notes” from the author which explain his choice for the ending and after reading those it sits with me slightly better.
At any rate, Paul Tremblay nicely tweaks a number of horror genres/tropes—“The Cabin in the Woods,” “Home Invasion,” and “Doomsday,” amongst others. There are some clunky moments (a scene involving an SUV) and a few unresolved elements that still nag me post-reading, but they are rather small and insignificant in the grand scheme of the overarching story, plus I feel they are meant to convey a sense of mystery.
Overall, this is a taut and well paced thriller.
RIYL
Vintage (1980s era) Stephen King
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06-08-2023, 03:10 PM #796
Somehow I’m missing my favorite WWI book: Unknown Soldiers by Neil Hanson. I might have loaned it to someone. It’s a REALLY good book that covers a lot of the western front experiences.
https://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/31/b...e=articleShare
This history focuses just on 1914, but it’s fascinating because that battle was huge and very mobile. And it tends to be overlooked by the later trench warfare.
I don’t read many novels these days, but these are very affecting.
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06-08-2023, 06:56 PM #797
Thanks for posting those up Evasive MT.
Funny side note that if you look at the # of forum members that have viewed this thread it is only 78 (although many more views I assume by frequenters to this thread and non registered lurkers)
I know that "reading comprehension" has always been a burn here but it's interesting to see which of our fellow posters don't read books. They should probably read more booksskid luxury
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06-08-2023, 08:20 PM #798
I enjoyed “A Soldier of the Great war” some decent climbing writing. Robert Graves “Goodbye to all that” (nonfiction) is pretty classic, for other insight Siegfried Sassoon or Rupert Brooke (Rupert was a really popular poet) Sassoon’s “memoirs of a fox hunting man” is an insight into Edwardian England and its death. In period “the four horseman of the apocalypse “ was popular.Was there ever a great French novel of WW1?
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06-08-2023, 08:35 PM #799
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06-08-2023, 08:53 PM #800
Read that book in freshman year of highschool. Still recall some of it... the gnarly scenes like brutal amputations, never-ending shelling and mustard gas, the horses screaming and tripping over their own guts... nightmare shit.... and also the beautiful descriptions of the seasons changing amidst the fray.
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