Summer reading (BOOK THREAD - KRACUS BEWARE)
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Funny, that's what I've been reading for the last week and a half. :icon32:HM-PuFFNSTuFF wrote:currently rereading Sherlock Holmes the complete novels and stories. I doubt I'll reread all of it though.
It's been so long since I've read any of them, they're just as good as the first time.
I've also been reading Catch-22 forever, since it's just toilet material. I'm almost done with it though, so I'll have to go back to Calvin and Hobbs, or retire Sherlock Holmes to the tank and take up something else.
I've heard good things about Freakanomics, I might give that a read after hearing what everybody's had to say here. :icon14:
Just haven't had much time to read lately with everything that's going on.

So far I'm really hating Far seer by Robert J. Sawyer but I got a lot of Astounding science fiction pulps from the 40's and 50's with interesting early SF. Real rich english language stories are harder to find in this day and age where internet ebonics has changed communication so much.
Oh and..
I THINK ALL OF YOU SHOULD READ "HEGEMONY OR SURVIVAL" BY NOAM CHOMSKY
IT'S FULL OF REALLY COOL STUFF AND ITS ALL THE TRUTH.
Oh and..
I THINK ALL OF YOU SHOULD READ "HEGEMONY OR SURVIVAL" BY NOAM CHOMSKY
IT'S FULL OF REALLY COOL STUFF AND ITS ALL THE TRUTH.

Reading the new palaniuk " Haunted" - Some of the best short stories I ever read. WOW++
Planning on reading books by:
Dr joe Dispenza
Ramtha
I'm looking for a classic to read,
I'm thinking of
the 3 musketeers
or
the Epic of Gilgamesh.
Also hoping to sneak in a re-read of Breakfast of Champions....
(that flick " I
huckabies " got me thinking of it for some reason..must be the humour.
I'd like a good book on the Knights templar or the Illuminati if anyoines got one to recommend.
Planning on reading books by:
Dr joe Dispenza
Ramtha
I'm looking for a classic to read,
I'm thinking of
the 3 musketeers
or
the Epic of Gilgamesh.
Also hoping to sneak in a re-read of Breakfast of Champions....
(that flick " I

I'd like a good book on the Knights templar or the Illuminati if anyoines got one to recommend.
karamazov is one of my favorite books of all time. The long debate between the atheist brother and the monk about the merits of religion (the story of Christ coming back during the Inquisition...) is one of the most brilliant and moving pieces of writing ever. I have that section of the book dogeared, with numerous passages highlighted, scribbled on, notes in the margin, etc....absolutely fantastic book, but very heavy.-Replicant- wrote:I just finished Freakenomics. Great book, reminded me a lot of Blink and The Tipping Point in its social analysis. Highly recommended.
Just starting The Brothers Karamazov by Dosteovsky.
7zark7 wrote:Reading the new palaniuk " Haunted" - Some of the best short stories I ever read. WOW++
Planning on reading books by:
Dr joe Dispenza
Ramtha
I'm looking for a classic to read,
I'm thinking of
the 3 musketeers
or
the Epic of Gilgamesh.
Also hoping to sneak in a re-read of Breakfast of Champions....
(that flick " Ihuckabies " got me thinking of it for some reason..must be the humour.
I'd like a good book on the Knights templar or the Illuminati if anyoines got one to recommend.
Musketeers is great. So is the original Man in the Iron mask *but seeing leofucking dicaprio bastardize the movie ruined it*
And if you are talking Dumas, you can't forget Count of Monte Cristo.
Another great read regarding that period of time (rougly) - the Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy. About an underground railroad for aristocrats during Robespierre's Reign of Terror. I'd really recommend it Zark. Fast paced and good.
Stupid question - but is that a pro- or anti-Intelligent Design collection, or simply a collection of essays on all aspects?Hannibal wrote:The in-depth Kantian summer. Critique of Pure Reason, plus the collection on Intelligent Design that just arrived (Pennock, "Intelligent Design Creationism and Its Critics: Philosophical, Theological, and Scientific Perspectives).
Currently reading American Psycho, liking it so far, probably be done in the next few days.
I've got a stack of others to choose from after that:
A Brief History of Time
Playing the Moldovans at Tennis
Stupid White Men
Trigger Happy
McCarthy's Bar
Down and Out In Paris and London
Angels and Demons
War Diaries 1939-1945 - Field Marshall Lord Alanbrooke
I'll be having a look at some programming/computing books that I've not fully read too, including:
Design Patterns
C++: How to Program
Explorer's Guid to the Semantic Web
Teach Yourself J2EE in 21 Days
and maybe..... Database Systems
I've got a stack of others to choose from after that:
A Brief History of Time
Playing the Moldovans at Tennis
Stupid White Men
Trigger Happy
McCarthy's Bar
Down and Out In Paris and London
Angels and Demons
War Diaries 1939-1945 - Field Marshall Lord Alanbrooke
I'll be having a look at some programming/computing books that I've not fully read too, including:
Design Patterns
C++: How to Program
Explorer's Guid to the Semantic Web
Teach Yourself J2EE in 21 Days
and maybe..... Database Systems
Iscourge34 wrote:Battlefield Earth atm. Plan on finishing the Dark Tower series after that.


[color=red]You're Pretty When I'm Drunk[/color]
It's damn good. It does take a bit of contemplation, but it's worth it.l0g1c wrote:Crime & Punishment is one I'm seriously considering next, although it's a little intimidating for me.
They both let me down; particularly Brave New World which borders on rubbish. They both start off marvelously, but then go absolutely nowhere. 1984 is marginally better, but only because it's better written. Both authors bit off way more then they could chew.Kaziganthe wrote:Brave New World
1984
MLA Style Handbook
English lit
Another disappointment, but not really bad. Just boring. At least it wasn't as bad as Dracula.ajerara wrote:I'm planning on reading Mary Shelley's Frankenstein next. I've seen a couple of movie versions but never read the book, bet it's good though.

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i read enough in ethics class, and every time i've seen him on TV he's been far from interesting.Nightshade wrote:How much of his stuff have you read?Dr_Watson wrote:people fawn over him like he's gods gift to academia... personally i find him to be kind of a wind bag.Jackal wrote: ?what?
anyone at MIT can't be a dumbass... i just don't think he lives up to the pedestal he sits on.
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You seriously should. I honestly don't understand where watson is coming from. If you've only read a few things in an ethics class and say he's "not interesting" on television then I seriously think you need to reevaluate your position. Noam Chomsky isn't on tv often because he refuses to operate within the format all news channels use. That is quick 30 seconds spots focused on one subject. Beyond his socio-political work his work with semiotics in the field of linguistics is astounding too.Nightshade wrote:I haven't read much, snippets here and there, but a couple of friends I respect a great deal rave about him. From what little I have read, he seems to have some amazing insights into the way the socio-political world turns.
I need to sit down and read Manufacturing Consent.
Last edited by Jackal on Thu Jun 23, 2005 3:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.