BOOK THREAD! PART DEUX

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Canai

Diamond Member
Oct 4, 2006
8,016
1
0
I'm re-reading Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. It's my travel book, and I'm just about as far away from home as I could be.
 
May 31, 2001
15,326
1
0
Originally posted by: Canai
I'm re-reading Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. It's my travel book, and I'm just about as far away from home as I could be.

Be sure to say "Hello" to Eccentrica Gallumbits for me.
 

NTB

Diamond Member
Mar 26, 2001
5,179
0
0
Originally posted by: ShotgunSteven
Originally posted by: NTB
Currently reading The Elegant Universe. Also have The Fabric of the Universe and Warped Passages to read. Got all three as a 3-for-2 deal @ B&N. Anybody that doesn't believe the old cliché that truth is stranger than fiction ought to pick one of these up

Nathan

I picked up those exact same titles during that exact same sale a few weeks ago.

Went back last weekend and picked up a few more using the same deal : The Singularity is Near, The Selfish Gene, and Field Notes from a Catastrophe.

Nathan
 

TehMac

Diamond Member
Aug 18, 2006
9,979
3
71
Originally posted by: Descartes
Rereading Milton Friedman's Capitalism and Freedom
Collapse by Jared Diamond

Need to read both of those. :thumbsup:

Guns Germs and Steel is another one. Read it partially, but he really seemed to go all over the place. He talked about some guy having sex with sheep--rather odd really.
 

TehMac

Diamond Member
Aug 18, 2006
9,979
3
71
Originally posted by: pontifex
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by J.K. Rowling

I really like the Harry Potter books, I don't want to put them down.

It's amazing how different some of the things are in the movies compared to the books.

Lord of the Rings is soooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo much better.


And Hobbit pwns anything 2x J.K. Rowling comes up.

C.S. Lewis' Out of the Silent Plane, Perelandra, and one book...damn I forgot the name of it, pwn pwn.

It's pretty retarded J.K. Rowling called him a sexist. She was saying that because she ripped all his and Tolkien's ideas, and wanted to smear him so all the kiddies wouldn't think so. :roll:
 

dainthomas

Lifer
Dec 7, 2004
14,611
3,456
136
Runes of the Earth by Stephen Donaldson

It's 10 years later and now Covenant's kid is a bad guy. I bought it not knowing it was the first of four and the other three aren't written yet. I hate that.

 

ognabor

Senior member
Jun 6, 2007
389
0
0
The Good Guy - Koontz.

Waiting for GRRM to finish Dance.

Waiting......................................................................................

also, a book i would highly recommend -

Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal - by Christopher Moore.

really good story, laugh-out-loud funny, very intelligently written.
 

Uppsala9496

Diamond Member
Nov 2, 2001
5,272
19
81
Darkness by L.E. Modesitt, Jr.

I need something to hold me over until September when The Boneshunters by Steven Erikson comes out.
 

Xecuter

Golden Member
Aug 17, 2004
1,596
0
76
Ghost Wars - The secret history of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the soviet invasion to September 10, 2001.

Written by Steve Coll
 

everman

Lifer
Nov 5, 2002
11,288
1
0

Originally posted by: Descartes
Rereading Milton Friedman's Capitalism and Freedom
Collapse by Jared Diamond


Collapse is very interesting, about 1/3 through it now.

Also reading various stories by H.P. Lovecraft, The Brethren, and a few other books.
 

SoulAssassin

Diamond Member
Feb 1, 2001
6,135
2
0
Read it several times already (it's very short) but...God's Debris.

Available as a free (as in beer) and legal (as in she's 18) ebook here. It's only about a 100 short pages, should be able to read it in < 1 hour. Well worth the time.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God's_Debris

http://www.amazon.com/Gods-Deb...tt-Adams/dp/0740721909

Scott Adams, creator of the popular comic strip "Dilbert," has written a modern-day parable about a young man and an unlikely mentor. God's Debris starts with a young deliveryman trying to hand over a package to a man with a San Francisco address. But delivering the package to this old man proves to be as difficult as trying to understand the meaning of God.

"It's for you," the old man tells the narrator, gesturing to the package.

"What's in the package?" the narrator asks.

"It's the answer to your question."

"I wasn't expecting any answers,"

the deliveryman admits. About this time, the narrator begins to realize that he's not dealing with a feeble-minded old man; he's dealing with a situation that could alter his life. The sincerity and metaphysical complexity of this fable will surprise those who expect comedy, but Adams is following a tradition set by such writers as Dan Millman (Way of the Peaceful Warrior) and Richard Bach (Illusions). As in many parables that have come before, the deliveryman learns the meaning of life from an illusive mentor who seems to arise from a wrinkle in time. The cleverness of the God's Debris concept is original and bound to leave readers pondering some altered definitions of God, the universe, and just about everything else. --Gail Hudson

Book Description
Andrews McMeel Publishing and Scott Adams, creator of the Dilbert comic strips and #1 best-selling author of Dilbert humor books, have agreed to publish Mr. Adams' new project called God's Debris: A Thought Experiment. God's Debris is Scott's first non-Dilbert, non-humor effort. The author describes the book as "a thought experiment wrapped in a story. It's designed to make your brain spin around inside your skull." Some content of the book is nonfiction because the opinions and philosophies of the characters might have lasting impact on the reader. Others believe it is fiction because the characters don't exist.

Imagine that you meet a very old man who -- you eventually realize -- knows literally everything. Imagine that he explains for you the great mysteries of life: quantum physics, evolution, God, gravity, light, psychic phenomenon, and probability -- in a way so simple, so novel and so compelling that it all fits together and makes perfect sense. What does it feel like to suddenly understand everything? God's Debris isn't the final answer to the Big Questions. But it might be the most compelling vision of reality you will ever read. The thought experiment is this: Try to figure out what's wrong with the old man's explanation of reality. Share the book with your smart friends then discuss it later while enjoying a beverage.

The book was initially offered to the public as an e-book, and the book has since become the #1 best-selling e-book on the planet. Because of the e-book offering, the Internet is buzzing with comments from the book's fans.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
96,113
15,761
126
Originally posted by: Canai
I'm re-reading Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. It's my travel book, and I'm just about as far away from home as I could be.

Just don't ask the computer to make Tea.
 
May 31, 2001
15,326
1
0
Title: Childhood's End
Author: Arthur C. Clarke
Genre: Science Fiction

Comments: I have had this book for some time, and it was buried upon my shelves since I purchased it a year or two ago during a buying binge at a used book store. I finally dug it out and read it for a book club meeting last week.

It was definitely not what I was expecting. The leaps of decades that took place between events in the book is something that you don't see modern authors do. With every leap that occurred, I was left wondering if that was the last one. As I neared the end of the book, I began to wonder how it was all going to be wrapped up, but Clarke pulled it off.

My only qualm was with there being no more children born once the chosen, for lack of a better term, had joined in the mass conciousness. I think the author was using that as a tool so that when the children left Earth, they wouldn't be comitting mass-murder upon the human species when they did. If he were to write it for today's audiences, perhaps he would have had them do just that, to further communicate how truly alien they had become in comparison to their human origins.

I also liked the somewhat Jungian explanation as to how the knowledge of the Overlords had become embedded in the human psyche.

An excellent conceptual science fiction book with a great story. A short read, but definitely a worthwhile one.
 
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