Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2005 3:29 pm
I don't know if anybody has ever read "Ishmael" or "My Ishmael" or "The Story of B" but they're pretty good reads. There's definately a fair bit of rubbish in them but overall they're fairly enlightening.
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yeah, but he's not cool on tv. so I think he's gay.HM-PuFFNSTuFF wrote:first of all he revolutionized linguistics
second of all, Manufacturing Consent and Deterring Democracy are must reads
A friend summarized the gist of Manufacturing Consent for me, and as I though about the concept, I realized that it's an absolutely perfect description of the way things work.HM-PuFFNSTuFF wrote:first of all he revolutionized linguistics
second of all, Manufacturing Consent and Deterring Democracy are must reads
it's an incredibly prescient workNightshade wrote:A friend summarized the gist of Manufacturing Consent for me, and as I though about the concept, I realized that it's an absolutely perfect description of the way things work.HM-PuFFNSTuFF wrote:first of all he revolutionized linguistics
second of all, Manufacturing Consent and Deterring Democracy are must reads
*fires up amazon.com*
this book sounds amazingsaturn wrote:I just finished: "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" by Mark Haddon.
Absolutely great novel about an autistic boy who tries to solve the murder on the neighbour's poodle and discovers much more. Entire novel is written in this boy's perspective and his autistic mind can't cope with the chaotic stimuli from the outer world like the way we do. His mind is pure logic and functions with pure reason.
Actually, it's brilliant.
he's an autitistic savant with excellent numerical and mathematical abilities. Throughout the whole book you'll find mathematical puzzles which are explained. The chapters are numbered as prime numbers :icon32:Massive Quasars wrote:A savant?
Fucking great book, in the most interesting sense of the phrase. :icon14:saturn wrote:I just finished: "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" by Mark Haddon.
Absolutely great novel about an autistic boy who tries to solve the murder on the neighbour's poodle and discovers much more. Entire novel is written in this boy's perspective and his autistic mind can't cope with the chaotic stimuli from the outer world like the way we do. His mind is pure logic and functions with pure reason.
Actually, it's brilliant.
Read it, it's only 240 small pages so you'll read through it in one day.HM-PuFFNSTuFF wrote:this book sounds amazingsaturn wrote:I just finished: "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" by Mark Haddon.
Absolutely great novel about an autistic boy who tries to solve the murder on the neighbour's poodle and discovers much more. Entire novel is written in this boy's perspective and his autistic mind can't cope with the chaotic stimuli from the outer world like the way we do. His mind is pure logic and functions with pure reason.
Actually, it's brilliant.
coolsaturn wrote:he's an autitistic savant with excellent numerical and mathematical abilities. Throughout the whole book you'll find mathematical puzzles which are explained. The chapters are numbered as prime numbers :icon32:Massive Quasars wrote:A savant?
I heard that Mark Haddon works with autistic children.werldhed wrote:
Fucking great book, in the most interesting sense of the phrase. :icon14:
*edit: for those interested, it reads kind of like a children's book -- very simple. Nevertheless, very insightful.
I don't really remember why, but i didn't like it that much. The autism stuff was interesting, and well done, but i seem to recall an abrupt ending that didn't properly follow what had come so far.saturn wrote:I just finished: "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" by Mark Haddon.
Absolutely great novel about an autistic boy who tries to solve the murder on the neighbour's poodle and discovers much more. Entire novel is written in this boy's perspective and his autistic mind can't cope with the chaotic stimuli from the outer world like the way we do. His mind is pure logic and functions with pure reason.
Actually, it's brilliant.
You haven't read Fahrenheit 451?ajerara wrote:Frankenstein is a bit boring, eh? Well, I may skip a few parts, then. Make my own condensed version. What do you guys recommend by Ray Bradbury? That's another author whose work I've only seen on TV and film. I saw him speak at the Comic-con in San Diego last year, really has a great mind. He speaks like he writes, it's almost poetic. I'm going again this year, probably see him lecture again.
Top notch book, bought it a few months ago :icon14:saturn wrote:I just finished: "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" by Mark Haddon.
Absolutely great novel about an autistic boy who tries to solve the murder on the neighbour's poodle and discovers much more. Entire novel is written in this boy's perspective and his autistic mind can't cope with the chaotic stimuli from the outer world like the way we do. His mind is pure logic and functions with pure reason.
Actually, it's brilliant.
The ending wasn't totally on a par with the rest of the book, but adequate without diminishing the story.sliver wrote:
I don't really remember why, but i didn't like it that much. The autism stuff was interesting, and well done, but i seem to recall an abrupt ending that didn't properly follow what had come so far.
:icon14:mik0rs wrote:
Top notch book, bought it a few months ago :icon14: