What are you reading right now?

245

Comments

  • jarkofjarkof Regular
    edited July 2010
    I kinda feel a bit nerdy but Inkheart.
  • SteppenwolfSteppenwolf Acolyte
    edited July 2010
    I just read Naked Lunch, and I'm hungry for more avant garde beatnik, most likely being On the Road or something of that kin.

    Right now: Nature-via-nurture, Open veins of Latin America, and John Donne's poetry.
  • DirtySanchezDirtySanchez Regular
    edited July 2010
    The Qur'an . its some enlightening stuff in some ways.
  • ImaginariumImaginarium Regular
    edited July 2010
    I'm reading Chaos by James Gleick, and also a few volumes on mathematics. brain f00d.
  • StephenPBarrettStephenPBarrett Adviser
    edited July 2010
    Rant - An Oral Biography of Buster "Rant" Casey

    Good book but I'm a Palanuik fan.

    I'm reading "Paths Not Taken" from the Nightside series. Its okay. I'm ready to get back to serious stuff though.

    Next is "The Lesser Key of Solomon" and "The Greater Key of Solomon"
  • FONFON Regular
    edited August 2010
    Trainspotting.
  • Name's TakenName's Taken Acolyte
    edited August 2010
    bout to start reading the bourne supremacy
  • edited August 2010
    Just read Flowers for Algernon again and man it's depressing.
  • FemaraFemara Semo-Regulars
    edited August 2010
    The Master and Margarita
  • FONFON Regular
    edited August 2010
    kaloosa wrote: »
    I was reading Pride & Prejudice and Zombies.....really fucking boring in my opinion. I had to put it to the side for later reading when I can put more time into it.

    Found it boring as fuck too.

    Currently reading Heaven's Net Is Wide...Prequel to Tales of the Otori series which I liked. This one started out ok, but its degrading into too much forbidden love bullshit.

    Picked up The Brothers Karamazov (Fyodor Dostoyevsky), Night Shift (Stephen King) and some Aldous Huxley books today though...Might try getting through those instead...

    Or Don Quixote which sits half-read on my bedside table. Hilarious book, but for some reason I want to save it for when I'm travelling.
  • FONFON Regular
    edited August 2010
    Heaven's Net Is Wide turned out ok. Not as good as the rest of the series...

    Now onto The Brothers Karamazov.
  • xlf3xlf3 Semo-Regulars
    edited September 2010
    Bone by Bone by Bone so far good.

    Just recently got done reading Speak. It was okay 7/10
  • MorningsideMorningside Regular
    edited September 2010
    Opuscula Magica vol. 1 by Andrew Chumbley
  • TruthWielderTruthWielder Regular
    edited September 2010
    FON wrote: »
    Heaven's Net Is Wide turned out ok. Not as good as the rest of the series...

    Now onto The Brothers Karamazov.

    Tales of the Otori, excellent series I gotta say.
  • SlartibartfastSlartibartfast Global Moderator -__-
    edited September 2010
    I've about 70% read Anna Karenina. It's an excellent book.

    I've always liked Tolstoy.
  • StephenPBarrettStephenPBarrett Adviser
    edited September 2010
    I'm now reading "The Wars of Gods and Men" by Zecharia Sitchin. It reads like a textbook.
  • bornkillerbornkiller Administrator In your girlfriends snatch
    edited September 2010
    ???.....This thread.
  • FONFON Regular
    edited September 2010
    Junky - William S. Burrough's

    After a recommendation from the 'Burrough's' thread...Not bad so far.
  • DirtySanchezDirtySanchez Regular
    edited September 2010
    I just started Physics of the Impossible:by Michio Kaku. It's very interesting so far. It's all about how stuff like time travel parallel universes and stuff is scientifically possible.
  • fanglekaifanglekai Regular
    edited September 2010
    Finished Hannibal. I'm going to keep reading Ovid's Metamorphoses.
  • DirtySanchezDirtySanchez Regular
    edited September 2010
    fanglekai wrote: »
    Finished Hannibal. I'm going to keep reading Ovid's Metamorphoses.

    How was Hannibal? I just got done reading Red Dragon not that long ago and it was pretty good.
  • fanglekaifanglekai Regular
    edited September 2010
    Hannibal was probably the best of the bunch. I find it hilarious how easily upset people are. The book caused sooooo much controversy. There are only a few scenes that were unpleasant. The book is well-written, has a great story and lots of time with Hannibal. I really liked Hannibal Rising too, but it's a different sort of story.
  • DirtySanchezDirtySanchez Regular
    edited September 2010
    fanglekai wrote: »
    Hannibal was probably the best of the bunch. I find it hilarious how easily upset people are. The book caused sooooo much controversy. There are only a few scenes that were unpleasant. The book is well-written, has a great story and lots of time with Hannibal. I really liked Hannibal Rising too, but it's a different sort of story.

    Sweet Ill have to check it out. I love gruesome books and movies so unpleasantness isn't an issue. All the Hannibal movies are among my favorites and I just got into reading the books. Is it necessary to read Silence of the lambs before Hannibal?
  • fanglekaifanglekai Regular
    edited September 2010
    You should read Silence. It's very good.
  • jamie madroxjamie madrox Sith Lord
    edited September 2010
    Just started "A Scanner Darkly"
  • DirtySanchezDirtySanchez Regular
    edited September 2010
    Just started "A Scanner Darkly"

    I really liked the movie. Never knew it was a book.
  • FONFON Regular
    edited September 2010
    The Master And Margarita - Mikhail Bulgakov

    Oh yeah, Junky was good. Though I'm not sure how good it would be if you weren't a drug user...I liked the blurb on the back about 'seeking to turn self-destruction into art'.
  • jamie madroxjamie madrox Sith Lord
    edited September 2010
    I really liked the movie. Never knew it was a book.

    Yeah, the book was published in 1977. I watched the movie, looked it up and found out it was a book fisrt. So I went and torrented the book.
  • PsychonauticalPsychonautical Acolyte
    edited October 2010
    Reading The Master and Margarita again.

    Crazy cat.
  • FONFON Regular
    edited October 2010
    Reading The Master and Margarita again.

    Crazy cat.

    Bunch of lunatics :D ...Faggot made me lol.

    I definitely need to read this book again. Especially the bits on Pontius Pilate
  • PsychonauticalPsychonautical Acolyte
    edited October 2010
    FON wrote: »
    Bunch of lunatics :D ...Faggot made me lol.

    I definitely need to read this book again. Especially the bits on Pontius Pilate

    Yeah, that part was profound.

    Azazello was an excellent character though, Bulgakov is so damn descriptive without being long winded.
  • kaloosakaloosa Regular
    edited October 2010
    Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep - Philip K. Dick

    Basis for "Blade Runner"
  • DaSkipperDaSkipper Regular
    edited October 2010
    I, Lucifer by Glen Duncan.

    Google said it's having a movie made of it, it will NOT be better than the book cause the book itself is quite controversial and funny while doing it and the american film industry won't have that.
  • FONFON Regular
    edited October 2010
    Finished Heart Of Darkness by Joseph Conrad...Enjoyed it a lot, though it was quite heavy reading for such a short book. Conrad manages to say so much with so little words I would need to go reread sentences every now and then.

    Now going through some articles in The Great Shark Hunt by Hunter S. Thompson as some light reading prior to starting The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles or The House Of The Dead by Fyodor Dostoyevsky...After a recommendation in 'the brothers karamazov' thread I can't make up my mind :mad:
  • Sarahlov3lySarahlov3ly Regular
    edited November 2010
    currently reading the catcher in the rye. ~not a big fan
  • SHANE14SHANE14 Regular
    edited November 2010
    the silmarillion. I've finally gotten around to reading it.
    I havn't been reading much for damn months. Now I've got a few lined up
  • RemadERemadE Global Moderator
    edited November 2010
    The Road by Cormack McCarthy

    And the odd history book for my course, like "The Hitler Myth" by Ian Kershaw ans some obscure book on the Crusades.
  • DirtySanchezDirtySanchez Regular
    edited November 2010
    The Life and Death of Lenin.
  • NegrophobeNegrophobe Regular
    edited November 2010
    Imperium, by Francis Parker Yockey.
  • edited November 2010
    Glenn-Beck-Broke-Book-241x300.jpg

    EDIT: Nobody got mad :(
  • DirtySanchezDirtySanchez Regular
    edited November 2010
    Negrophobe wrote: »
    Imperium, by Francis Parker Yockey.

    Thats a pretty good book man. I read it years ago so Ive forgotten some of it but it isn't light reading. What I remember mainly is George Rockwell being opposed to him. Anyway I don't agree with Yockey on a lot but he was a brilliant philosopher in regards to race, history and America.
  • FONFON Regular
    edited January 2011
    Naked Lunch - Burroughs

    Hard to think something so depraved was published in 1959
  • GallowsGallows Regular
    edited January 2011
    "The Selfish Gene" by Dawkins.
  • GrinchGrinch Regular
    edited January 2011
    Recently finished "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde."

    jekyll-and-hyde.jpg

    To say the least, Robert Louis Stevenson has made the list.
  • RemadERemadE Global Moderator
    edited January 2011
    For fun - "Creepers" by David Morrell
    For Uni - The Christian Heritage in the Holy Land, various Authors and Editors
  • DaSkipperDaSkipper Regular
    edited January 2011
    Currently reading three books at once cause I get different moods.

    My Booky Wook (Russel Brand's memoirs)
    The Quran (I'm interested)
    Return From Tomorrow (Story about how some guy made it back from death after 10 minutes, real story)

    Next I'll be re-reading The Alchemist.
  • DirtySanchezDirtySanchez Regular
    edited January 2011
    The Bolivian Diary of Che Guevara. It's a great read so far about the last campaign he lead.
  • edited January 2011
    The Family Arsenal.
    Hood, a renegade American diplomat, envisions a new urban order through the opium fog of his room. His sometimes bedmate, Mayo, has stolen a Flemish painting and is negotiating for publicity with "The Times". Murf the bomb-maker leaves his mark in red whilst his girlfriend Brodie bombs Euston.
  • MeloncholyMeloncholy Regular
    edited January 2011
    Steppenwolf by Hermann Hesse.

    The next book on my shelf waiting to be read is The Old Man and the Sea, which I've wanted to read for a long while.
  • RolfRolf Regular
    edited January 2011
    Il Principe, once again, states Rolf.
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