Important: Read Books

roaches

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Jun 24, 2002
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I feel like many members of this board could benefit from picking up a book every now and again.

So, non-readers or sporadic readers or I-only-read-books-because-I-have-to readers, tell me your favorite book or the kind of book you feel you would want to read, and I'll make a recommendation.
 
Important: Read

Some good books i read

1. to kill a mockingbird
2. of mice and men
3. the outsiders

a book that none of you would read, but i have

1. the 10 offenses by Pat Robertson
 
Important: Read

my favorite: on the road by Jack Kerouac

good ones i've read so far this year: diary by chuch palahniuk
dopefiend: donald goines
confessions of an economic hitman: john perkins
rotten to the core/crime,sex, and corruption in johnny appleseed's hometown: martin d yant
scam: rev. jesse lee peterson
 
Important: Read

Snowman:

Truman Capote's In Cold Blood. It's a journalism-written-as-a-novel account of the murder of a family in Kansas in the late '50s. Mr. Capote was an editor of To Kill a Mockingbird, and many people have suspected that that includes working as a ghostwriter.

PuffnScruff:

George Pelecanos's Right as Rain. A private investigator is hired to investigate the shooting of a black cop by a white cop, allegedly in self-defense, by the black cop's mother. The white cop, who is understandably upset about being seen as another one of those racist cops, joins in the investigation. This book's characterization of Washington, D.C. should appeal to the part of you that likes Goines.

The Covenant with Black America. This is a collection of essays assembled by Tavis Smiley. It has a pretty wide range - everything from sustaining farmer's markets to the pay gap between janitors and security guards. I disagreed with some of the content of the book, but it's a good read and beats the hell out of Michael Eric Dyson.

Sonof2pac:

Jonathon Strange and Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke. The book's about the rediscovery of magic after hundreds of years in Britain during the Napoleonic wars. Going back to J.K. Rowling after this is kind of like going back to Spaghetti O's after you've finally managed to master your own lasagna recipe. Some people still like Chef Boyardee, though, so hey.

Saint33:

Swan Song by Robert McCammon. Anyone who's read Stephen King and doesn't love this book doesn't do so because he or she hasn't read it. It's about a nuclear holocaust. It's very long, but it's quick reading. I can't really say much more about it, to be honest - I'm not all that into this genre.
 
Important: Read

roaches said:
Sonof2pac:

Jonathon Strange and Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke. The book's about the rediscovery of magic after hundreds of years in Britain during the Napoleonic wars. Going back to J.K. Rowling after this is kind of like going back to Spaghetti O's after you've finally managed to master your own lasagna recipe. Some people still like Chef Boyardee, though, so hey.

thanks for the recommendation... i'll check my local library or even amazon... lately i've been bored being at work 40 hours a week and seeing that i can't find a party back in my hometown... it'll give me something to do until college starts back up :horny:
 
Important: Read

Snowman said:
Some good books i read

1. to kill a mockingbird
2. of mice and men
3. the outsiders

a book that none of you would read, but i have

1. the 10 offenses by Pat Robertson

those 3 books were the some of the books i was obliged to read in high school. i dont think i liked any of them 3.

from what i read lately (cause i dont read much, no time) harry potter and the goblet of fire, da vinci code, angels & demons.
 
Important: Read

roaches said:
tell me your favorite book or the kind of book you feel you would want to read, and I'll make a recommendation.

wow i just realized what this thread is about... i thought we were just recommending books to each other... i was joking about the harry potter magic bullshit...

ok here we go.... i liked the movie skeleton key... are there any books like that... kind of scary and good twist endings and themes like that???
 
Important: Read

I have a problem with reading. I use to read alot when i was younger but it seems that the more that i grow the more the i leave reading (books atleast). Sometimes i try to force my self to read but after reading few pages I lose my concentration or i feel lazy. I really want to start reading again but it dosnt seem that it will ever happen again :(
 
Important: Read

arabic187 said:
I have a problem with reading. I use to read alot when i was younger but it seems that the more that i grow the more the i leave reading (books atleast). Sometimes i try to force my self to read but after reading few pages I lose my concentration or i feel lazy. I really want to start reading again but it dosnt seem that it will ever happen again :(

I feel the same way. I cannot get my self to read anything just cause it's "good story", etc. The only books I read are for school...
 
Important: Read

I started reading Sixty Stories by Donald Barthelme yesterday. Anyone who's interested in experimental/post-modern fiction and doesn't feel like reading a 700+ page novel could do a lot worse than to start here.

Also, I'm still working my way through Ulysses. I'm pretty sure James Joyce was a robot.
happy.gif
 
Important: Read

So, non-readers or sporadic readers or I-only-read-books-because-I-have-to readers, tell me your favorite book or the kind of book you feel you would want to read, and I'll make a recommendation.

i honestly haven't read a book out of my own will for about 2 years, what with school and such - i have enough texts and textbooks and notes and articles to read. i wish i had enough time to read more.

i like biographys and non-fiction.. my favorite book ever is Marlon Brando's biography by Peter Manso. the last book i read out of my own will was probably the Muhammid Ali biography and that was good too.

go ahead and recommend if you have anything in mind.
 
Important: Read

Sorry. Been busy for the past few days (I'm lying).

from what i read lately (cause i dont read much, no time) harry potter and the goblet of fire, da vinci code, angels & demons.
I hate Dan Brown's work. I really do. I've come close to saying unforgivable things to an old roommate who read The Da Vinci Code and almost left his girlfriend stranded at a bookstore when she decided to buy him Angels and Demons and The Deception Point.

I turn into a huge asshole when it comes to Dan Brown, and I'm not sure why.

I've found friends who are avid readers and do have taste guiltily reading one of his books and agreeing that it's crap. They can't explain why they're still reading it, though. I decide that these people are retarded, and so my first recommendation for the Dan Brown reader is

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon. This book is about (and narrated by) an autistic British kid who is trying to find out who killed his neighbor's dog. It's a riot.

I also look at Dan Brown's work as damaging society. Books like this are evil and should be burned. So naturally, I have to recommend Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, which almost any product of the American educational system is probably already aware of. If you aren't - it's about a future where people stay at home in fireproof houses and live through their TVs, and firemen burn all books.

Finally, I decide that people can just flat out do better. Being an asshole to people who read bad books does nothing but make them want to avoid your company when it comes to books. If you want to do better, I recommend Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson. There's a bad sex scene here and there, and only one of the characters is really fleshed out, but there's suspense, drama, intrigue, and so on. There's Nazi gold, cracking military codes, and so on. It's a great summer read, actually.

ok here we go.... i liked the movie skeleton key... are there any books like that... kind of scary and good twist endings and themes like that???
Like I said above, I'm not too into getting scared. Some Anne Rice (the stuff about vampires, not Jesus) might fit your needs. Chuck Palahniuk (Fight Club) has also been turning out some horror novels lately, and he's usually good for a twist.

Sometimes i try to force my self to read but after reading few pages I lose my concentration or i feel lazy. I really want to start reading again but it dosnt seem that it will ever happen again
The trick is to find something interesting. Things you can do:

1. This might sound patronizing (I hope not, given the number of adutl Harry Potter readers out there) but try starting with some books geared towards younger readers. The His Dark Materials trilogy is very good - I'd recommend it to anyone of any age. It's geared towards younger readers, but it doesn't dumb itself down. Actually, a Dan Brown fan might like it too, as it does go into religious conspiracies.

2. Go for something with a lot of pictures, aka graphic novels. The canon of the genre is Alan Moore's The Watchmen. Almost anything Alan Moore has done, actually, is gold. V for Vendetta is another great one (much better than the movie). If you're not into superheroes, From Hell and A History of Violence are also great. There's really a wide variety.

3. Short stories and books. If you can decipher the use of vernacular, Irvine Welsh's The Acid House is great. Michael Chabon and Dave Eggers have also assembled some good collections by multiple authors - the variety should even things out.

Also, I'm still working my way through Ulysses. I'm pretty sure James Joyce was a robot.
I didn't find Ulysses to be as impossible as its advertised to be. I've been struggling through Infinite Jest for months now, though. Everytime I pick it up, I tear through the pages, but when I put it down I have no desire to pick it back up again. The fucking footnotes are killing me.

go ahead and recommend if you have anything in mind.
But I love biographies or something based on a true story.
As far as biographies go, my favorite is Malcolm X's autobiography. The last good one I read is American Prometheus, a biography of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb. The first few chapters alone are priceless - who gets so depressed about being a virgin that they try to kill?

Some of my favorite non-fiction books are about sports, but I don't know how much an Australian would care about American football or baseball. I'd suggest anything by Gay Talese. He's one of the great journalists of our time. The Gay Talese Reader is a good collection of his magazine articles. Honor Thy Father is about the Bonanno Mafia family, and Fame and Obscurity is a collection of articles about people like Joe DiMaggio, Frank Sinatra, etc.
 
Important: Read

I started reading again recently (I used to read a lot but school ruined it for me), I've finished 1 trilogy and got 3 more lined up. They're all by R.A. Salvatore.
 

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