What book(s) are you reading right now?

Page 42 - Seeking answers? Join the AnandTech community: where nearly half-a-million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.

boomerang

Lifer
Jun 19, 2000
18,890
642
126
My current Kindle book is The Passage by Justin Cronin. I'm not quite halfway through and it's been getting harder to put down.
I really like his writing style. I've read The Passage, The Twelve and am hoping the library gets The City of Mirrors to complete the trilogy. Liking his writing, I also read Mary and O'Neil and will probably read The Summer Guest at some point.

Edit: Just checked and The City of Mirrors is mine for the next 21 days.
 
Last edited:

clamum

Lifer
Feb 13, 2003
26,255
403
126
Due to (repeated) recommendations from a co-worker buddy, I just finished Ready Player One by Ernest Cline. It was as good as he said it was; man I couldn't put it down. It's about a teenager trying to find the Easter egg hidden in this MMORPG/virtual reality system. I'd wager that the author is a pretty legit video game geek himself and maybe has some sysadmin and/or developer experience because the descriptions of computer systems are accurate and actually I'll think we'll see something like the OASIS in the near future too. Just a matter of time, IMO. Spielberg has the potential to make a sweet movie with this; I'm hoping he pulls it off.

Anyway it's great. I started reading his second book, Armada, a couple days ago and while I like it a lot it hasn't grabbed me like Ready Player One did. It's still pretty good and I'd recommend it as well. This one also involves video games, in not quite such a central role, but I don't really wanna give away any plot.

With "Armada" I'm also re-reading Inferno: The World at War, 1939-1945 by Hastings. Excellent stuff; Hastings is definitely my favorite historian to read.
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
38,548
349
126
Just finished The Devil's Chessboard by David Talbot.

It's a non-fiction history of the Dulles brothers.

Excellent stuff. Aware vaguely of us bringing over Nazis after WWII? It won't be so vague after this.

Example of the kind of people they were: Dominican Republic had a brutal dictator. Of course the US allied with him.

A young man from there who had experience with the dictator spoke out about what was happening. He fled to the US, and became a professor at a college in New York City. His Ph.D was revealing the dictator's brutality.

The dictator tried to pay off the professor - he refused. So, he had the CIA have the man kidnapped on the streets of New York, and renditioned to the dictator, where he was beaten tortured and lowered into boiling water.

Then the American pilot who had flown him saw the victim's photo in the newspaper and threatened to reveal that - and he was murdered.

Talbot tells very important history, putting a lot of the CIA history in context. It's important history for Americans to know.

He also makes his case for Dulles being behind JFK's assassination. There's way too much plausible, and new evidence, but no smoking gun.

It's pretty remarkable for the history of how Dulles basically ignored and even worked against the president when he wanted to - the book shows Dulles betrayed every president he worked for.

It also gives an idea about the huge power of the rich, wealthy, powerful, the Wall Street types, who have a lot of influence over government (for example, pushing their minion Nixon on Eisenhower).
 

JujuFish

Lifer
Feb 3, 2005
11,031
752
136

Squisher

Lifer
Aug 17, 2000
21,207
66
91
These are the two most recent sci-fi books I've read. I enjoyed both, but The Three-Body Problem was clearly superior. Ready Player One was a fun nostalgia trip, but not as well written.
I'm having a problem with the pacing of Three-Body Problem. Everyone seems to get it but me.
 

Crono

Lifer
Aug 8, 2001
23,720
1,501
136
Right now I'm wrapping up Now I Know: The Revealing Stories Behind The World's Most Interesting Facts, which is a good collection of excerpt-sized stories around random facts from the modern world and history.

Before that, I finished What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions, which was written by Randall Munroe (of xkcd fame). It takes a casual but scientific approach to answering random, fan submitted "what if?" scenarios of varying absurdity. If you like xkcd it's an easy read, and it has a healthy sprinkling of xkcd-style stick figure panels throughout.

I've been meaning to get back into reading more, so I'm getting a Kindle this weekend and buying a bunch of books I have bookmarked.
 
Last edited:

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
38,548
349
126
I got What if hoping for better, but was almost immediately disappointed and put it aside.

Some books that are somewhat similar can include things like the origins of common phrases.
 

msi1337

Diamond Member
Apr 16, 2003
7,818
67
101
currently reading Darrill Gibson's Security + study guide. Test is scheduled for May 28th
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
38,548
349
126
Sinclair Lewis' "It Can't Happen Here". It's amazing how relevant the content still is.

It is still relevant.

Really, the main things that have changed since then make the problem *worse* - except the great innovation of the internet that lets the public have discussion that didn't exist then.

But now we have a far more powerful, engaged 'wealthy class' with a huge propaganda operation that didn't exist then. The motives haven't changed.
 

Pheran

Diamond Member
Apr 26, 2001
5,849
48
91
I read through all of William Hertling's 4-book Singularity series, which starts off when a very thinly-veiled version of Google accidentally turns GMail into an AI. This is some really cool SF with tons of references that modern Internet/computer users will really appreciate.

I'm now reading T.W. Piperbrook's Contamination series, which is an interesting twist on the zombie apocalypse genre, though it does suffer from a few plausibility issues. It's easy to try though, because you can get Kindle books 0-3 for free from my link!
 

clamum

Lifer
Feb 13, 2003
26,255
403
126

Victory Was Beyond Their Grasp: With the 272nd Volks-Grenadier Division from the Huertgen Forest to the Heart of the Reich
on my phone via Kindle app. It's ok but definitely has a lot of minute details about the unit. I was hoping for more of something along the lines of what Hastings writes with a lot more personal anecdotes and quotes from individual soldiers. This one is quite dry and tedious. Kind of losing interest in it. So I've started re-reading...

D-Day by Stephen Ambrose. Great stuff.
 

clamum

Lifer
Feb 13, 2003
26,255
403
126
I finally started reading our very own XMan's A Place Outside the Wild that I bought back in October after he first posted about it. I forgot about it for a while but was wanting to read some (apocalyptic) fiction recently and saw it in my Kindle library. I'm maybe 50% or so of the way through it so far and am really liking it. I've read a decent amount of end-of-the-world type fiction and this is definitely at the top. Great writing.

Just started listening to Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides's Trap? by Graham Allison after clicking through TV channels a week or so ago and seeing some book show on CSPAN2. They had Allison in a kind of question and answer session with a group of people and he seemed like a smart, down to Earth guy so I'm really looking forward to the book.
 

GagHalfrunt

Lifer
Apr 19, 2001
25,297
2,001
126
Currently reading "Wiseguys" by Nicholas Pileggi. It's the non-fiction story of mobster Henry Hill that was turned into the movie "Goodfellas".
 

Perknose

Forum Director & Omnipotent Overlord
Forum Director
Oct 9, 1999
46,266
9,335
146
I keep taking books out of the library, or even buying them, and then not reading them, or reading but a few pages or chapters before going back to arguing with my fellow blowhards on P&N, or indulging in a lustful bout of vigorous self-abuse. I have the latter under control. No hair on my knuckles, no sir.

I took this book out, A Horse Walks into a Bar by David Grossman and had to return it to the library before I had even so much as cracked it open. I just took it out again. Fellow pilgrims of the written word, I shall redeem myself yet.

It won England's Man Booker prize. So there. I fart in your general direction, sci-fi sluts. j/k

What would impel me to take it out twice? I'll just leave this here:

Editorial Reviews
Review
“David Grossman has attempted an ambitious high-wire act of a novel, and he’s pulled it off spectacularly. A Horse Walks into a Bar shines a spotlight on the effects of grief, without any hint of sentimentality. The central character is challenging and flawed, but completely compelling. We were bowled over by Grossman’s willingness to take emotional as well as stylistic risks: every sentence counts, every word matters in this supreme example of the writer’s craft.” —Judges’ Citation, Man Booker International Prize, 2017

“Astounding . . . [A] magnificently comic and sucker-punch-tragic excursion into brilliance . . . He has left a trail of blood and sweat on the page that only a true master—a Lenny Bruce, a Franz Kafka—could dream of replicating.” —Gary Shteyngart, The New York Times Book Review (front cover)

“Urgent . . . Mesmerizing . . . A novel as beautiful as it is unusual . . . Grossman takes a lot of risks in A Horse Walks into a Bar, and every one of them pays off spectacularly well . . . It’s nearly impossible to put down.” —Michael Schaub, NPR

“Blistering . . . Concise . . . Grossman masterfully weaves several complex strands of narrative [and] translator Jessica Cohen turns the performance into fluent, American-style patter.” —Ken Kalfus, The Washington Post

“Accomplished and audacious . . . An Israeli offspring of Philip Roth’s Portnoy’s Complaint and Dostoyevsky’s Notes from the Underground [that is] laced with loss and leave-taking . . . Grossman has once more proved himself as one of Israel’s finest literary alchemists.” —Benjamin Balint, Haaretz

“I have never read a book like this, or even thought that one could exist . . . A hard, fast, and bumpy ride through the deserts of Israel and the soul.” —Rafael Alvarez, Washington Independent Review of Books

“Arresting . . . Entertaining.” —Paul Wilner, San Francisco Chronicle

“Grossman brings real humanity to this heart-wrenching and well-written novel, offering insight into one man’s psychological makeup and how society has damaged him. An excellent translation; highly recommended.” —Lisa Rohrbaugh, Library Journal


Praise from the UK


“Grossman has transcended genre, or rather, he has descended deep into the vaults beneath . . . This isn’t just a book about Israel: it’s about people and societies horribly malfunctioning. Sometimes we can only apprehend these truths through story—and Grossman has become a master of the truth-telling tale . . . These are important questions at this moment in history, a time of trickery and lies. This is a novel for our new Age of Offence—offence easily taken and endlessly performed.” —Ian Sansom, The Guardian

“A polemic of unusual power . . . Shocking, raw, and eloquent. . . Grossman has pushed down deep into the wounded heart of a despairing man . . . A Horse Walks into a Bar is unlike anything Grossman has yet done. —Eileen Battersby, The Irish Times

“Grossman’s latest offering is a short, shocking masterpiece . . . in which absurdity and humour are used to probe the darkest corners of the human condition . . . It is a tale of nerve-shredding psychological and spiritual torture, the kind of story that is so dark that the only defence against it is darker laughter.” —Adam Lively, The Sunday Times (London)

“It takes an author of Mr. Grossman’s stature to channel not a failed stand-up but a shockingly effective one . . . This book feels far removed from Falling out of Time . . . Both books, however, circle around dramatic acts of mourning: the first as lyric tragedy, the second as pitch-black comedy.” —Jonathan Cape, The Economist

Praise from Europe

"Literature at its highest, and most enchanting." —Il Mattino (Italy)

"Grossman has written a beautiful and hypnotizing book, on the friction between tragedy—both personal and collective—and life, which must go on." —Il Messaggero (Italy)

"A psychological, intimate chamber drama whose choreography and eloquence captivate and pain the reader in equal measure . . . By the end, the book not only radiates humanity but demands it as well." —Leipziger Volkszeitung (Germany)

"A magnificent book about the different levels of being that we carry within ourselves." —Le Monde (France)

"Resonant of Dostoyevsky and Kafka . . . The novel is not about one man alone; its significance lies in the exposure of the failings of humanity. We knew that stand-up comedy is inflammatory, but we didn't know that it can reveal the flames of hell." —Transfuge (France)
 

Pulsar

Diamond Member
Mar 3, 2003
5,225
306
126
I just finished Benedict Jacka's Verus Series. Excellent sudo-magical/detective books.
 

thebestMAX

Diamond Member
Sep 14, 2000
7,487
121
106
Philipp Meyer's New York Times best-selling and Pulitzer Prize finalist novel, "The Son"

Liked the TV show so I decided to try the book. Interesting read and writing style, might be hard to follow for some as it jumps around in time like the TV adaptation.
 

clamum

Lifer
Feb 13, 2003
26,255
403
126
So our very own XMan's "A Place Outside the Wild" was great. Definitely check it out if you like end-of-the-world and/or zombie-type fiction! And even if that's not your usual thing, give it a shot; maybe you'll find something new you like.

I'm currently going through the Song of Ice and Fire series on audiobook (at the end of the first book now). I loves it. I'll probably get through them and then re-read the series for the third time before GRRM releases the sixth book. :-/

Reading Killing the Bismarck: Destroying the Pride of Hitler's Fleet now on Kindle. I happened across a couple short videos on the operation from YouTube, from the Extra Credit channel, and I got hooked on it. I knew some of the history already but was even more interested so had to pick up a book on it. The book's decent so far though I enjoyed those videos more, lol.

Before this on Kindle I read The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt (Book 1) which was fan-fricking-tastic. Man I couldn't get enough of it. I'll definitely have to pick up the subsequent books (this one goes from his birth until McKinley's assassination). It's a long book but I was bummed it ended, haha.
 
sale-70-410-exam    | Exam-200-125-pdf    | we-sale-70-410-exam    | hot-sale-70-410-exam    | Latest-exam-700-603-Dumps    | Dumps-98-363-exams-date    | Certs-200-125-date    | Dumps-300-075-exams-date    | hot-sale-book-C8010-726-book    | Hot-Sale-200-310-Exam    | Exam-Description-200-310-dumps?    | hot-sale-book-200-125-book    | Latest-Updated-300-209-Exam    | Dumps-210-260-exams-date    | Download-200-125-Exam-PDF    | Exam-Description-300-101-dumps    | Certs-300-101-date    | Hot-Sale-300-075-Exam    | Latest-exam-200-125-Dumps    | Exam-Description-200-125-dumps    | Latest-Updated-300-075-Exam    | hot-sale-book-210-260-book    | Dumps-200-901-exams-date    | Certs-200-901-date    | Latest-exam-1Z0-062-Dumps    | Hot-Sale-1Z0-062-Exam    | Certs-CSSLP-date    | 100%-Pass-70-383-Exams    | Latest-JN0-360-real-exam-questions    | 100%-Pass-4A0-100-Real-Exam-Questions    | Dumps-300-135-exams-date    | Passed-200-105-Tech-Exams    | Latest-Updated-200-310-Exam    | Download-300-070-Exam-PDF    | Hot-Sale-JN0-360-Exam    | 100%-Pass-JN0-360-Exams    | 100%-Pass-JN0-360-Real-Exam-Questions    | Dumps-JN0-360-exams-date    | Exam-Description-1Z0-876-dumps    | Latest-exam-1Z0-876-Dumps    | Dumps-HPE0-Y53-exams-date    | 2017-Latest-HPE0-Y53-Exam    | 100%-Pass-HPE0-Y53-Real-Exam-Questions    | Pass-4A0-100-Exam    | Latest-4A0-100-Questions    | Dumps-98-365-exams-date    | 2017-Latest-98-365-Exam    | 100%-Pass-VCS-254-Exams    | 2017-Latest-VCS-273-Exam    | Dumps-200-355-exams-date    | 2017-Latest-300-320-Exam    | Pass-300-101-Exam    | 100%-Pass-300-115-Exams    |
http://www.portvapes.co.uk/    | http://www.portvapes.co.uk/    |