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nanaintelligentjesus gets you SMART IN YOUR BRAINS Posted:
Oh, Fight Club. I’ll have to look into him. Thanks |
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 8:08AM | View CoreyJess's Profile | # | ||||||
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Wylin Posted:
The Dark Tower is a great series, up until book 5 or 6. That’s just my opinion, though, and I know many people who disagree. |
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 8:10AM | View CoreyJess's Profile | # | ||||||
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I prefer non-fiction, but here’s a few more light reading suggestions.
Ken Grimwood, “Replay” A 1986 fantasy-adventure that’s kind of like the premise of Groundhog Day, except the guy keeps reliving his entire life. Should be trashy, but it’s great.
Irvine Welsh, Marabou Stork Nightmares To paraphrase the movie “Crazy People,” this book won’t just scare you, it will **** you up for life.
E.L. Doctorow, “World’s Fair” Just a great book by one of my fave writers. No relation to Cory Doctorow, by the way, as far as I know! |
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 8:48AM | View Jalapeno Bootyho...'s Profile | # | ||||||
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Jalapeno Bootyhole Posted:
Holy ****, I only made it about 1/3 of the way through that book, and that was more than enough to **** me up for life. I would hesitate to call it “light reading.” It is well-written; I just think it should come with a Surgeon General’s warning. Take that as a recommendation or a dissuasion, depending on what you like.
A lot of my favourite books fall into the category of magic realism. My favourite book of all time is A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry. Anothe of my favourites is Blindness by Jose Saramago. If you like magical realism, I also recommend The Beggar and his Talismans by Anosh Irani. It’s very surrealistic. The whole thing seems to be available to read online (legally) at GoogleBooks.ca. |
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 9:38AM | View enire's Profile | # | ||||||
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I read a lot of science fiction. Here’s some of the last few books I read and loved:
The Player of Games – Iain M. Banks.
A Fire Upon the Deep (currently reading, but awesome!) – Vernon Vinge
Quarantine – Greg Egan |
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 9:59AM | View Evil Trout's Profile | # | ||||||
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Sirens of Titan Slapstick Breakfast of Champions Cat’s Cradle Catch-22
It’s pretty funny that 4/5 of my favorite books are Vonnegut. If you haven’t read any of the above, go and read them you bumhole. |
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 10:05AM | View TeeKayEff's Profile | # | ||||||
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iIRZ Posted: Good as Gold sucks. I really need to read American Psycho. |
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 10:09AM | View TeeKayEff's Profile | # | ||||||
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Jalapeno Bootyhole Posted:
World’s Fair was an awesome book! What makes Marabou Stork Nightmares so crazy, without spoiling it?
Evil Trout Posted:
I loved A Fire Upon The Deep! I picked up quarantine a while back, but haven’t read it yet. In fact until you mentioned it, I forgot I had it.
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 5:32PM | View CoreyJess's Profile | # | ||||||
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Jalapeno Bootyhole Posted:
This is exactly how I felt about “The Painted Bird” by Jerzy Kosinski. It is a controversial and powerful novel, one that was on the banned books list in most schools. I read it the first time when I was 17. To this day, I think it is still the most ****ed up book I have ever read.
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 10:54PM | View Courtney's Profile | # | ||||||
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On the subject of messed up books, has anyone read Twisted Little Vein by Warren Ellis? I think it’s safe to say it’s like nothing else I’ve read. |
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 10:58PM | View CoreyJess's Profile | # | ||||||
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coreyjess Posted:
Well ****, that’s what I came in here ready to suggest. Have you read any of Terry Pratchett’s books? Log in to see images! Discworld And of course Good Omens, which the two of them cowrote!
EDIT: I love replying without bothering to read the rest of the thread first. 1338h4x edited this message on 08/22/2008 11:10PM |
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Posted On: 08/22/2008 11:06PM | View 1338h4x's Profile | # | ||||||
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Chuck Palahniuk is cool until you realize almost all of his books are the same. They’re still worth reading up to Lullaby though.
In high school I wrote a letter to him and he sent me back his reply along with a box containing trick candles, a box of chocolates, a Virgin Mary night light, and a necklace that the letter said he made for me. He signed the box the necklace was in and his reply letter. Pretty cool dude.
Edit: I forgot there was also a stuffed musk rat. Not taxidermied, but a stuffed animal. The letter said it was my power musk rat. PhineasPoe edited this message on 08/23/2008 2:13AM |
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Posted On: 08/23/2008 12:26AM | View PhineasPoe's Profile | # | ||||||
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coreyjess Posted:
I have a signed copy here I got at San Diego when it first came out, expecting big things.
I found it to be a rather linear story, not in keeping with Ellis’ better work (ie. Transmetropolitan).
Maybe I’ve just had too much exposure to the internet, but I didn’t find it particularly shocking or revealing…perhaps sadly, I could remember real-life/internet examples of most of the stuff he wrote about. |
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Posted On: 08/23/2008 12:31AM | View DIRT-ROACH-688's Profile | # | ||||||
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PhineasPoe Posted:
I agree completely. My favorite was Choke, but after Lullaby I haven’t liked anything. |
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Posted On: 08/23/2008 12:36AM | View Evil Trout's Profile | # | ||||||
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DIRT-ROACH-688 Posted:
This is one of the reasons I limit my exposure to some of the Internets more twisted fads. I’m one of the few who’s never seen a goatse or 2G1C. If your totally desensitized, nothing can shock or surprise.
Crooked little Vein is a good first novel by Ellis though. It shows he’s staying true to the twisted aspect that make Transmetropolitan interesting.
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Posted On: 08/24/2008 12:01AM | View CoreyJess's Profile | # | ||||||
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Evil Trout Posted:
Are his novels connected, or completely individual stories? |
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Posted On: 08/24/2008 12:02AM | View CoreyJess's Profile | # | ||||||
coreyjess Posted:
They are all individual novels, but they all read the same or the same voice or whatever. The common consensus is that Choke is his best. I personally feel that Diary is the best written. I think it should be noted that his last three books have a more fractured story structure than the rest. |
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Posted On: 08/24/2008 3:01AM | View twas's Profile | # | ||||||
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coreyjess Posted:
You know, I asked that of someone who had read it previously and they struggled to explain, and now I find myself in the same position. It’s the way he injects psychological horror into the mundane. It’s replete with dark, ugly images, and contains some disturbingly violent acts, as you’d expect from Welsh. But a very good read nonetheless. |
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Posted On: 08/24/2008 10:35PM | View Jalapeno Bootyho...'s Profile | # | ||||||
I will have to say that The curious incident of the dog in the nighttime is one of the best books i have read. Written by Mark Haddon
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Curious_Incident_of_the_Dog_in_the_Night-time
NOW GOGO BUY IT! |
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Posted On: 08/25/2008 4:51PM | View LubaTuber's Profile | # | ||||||
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People have argued that Thomas Harris is a ****ty writer or something but I was reading the Hannibal books a while ago and thought they were fantastic. I went through Hannibal rising (weird + obviously made to cash in on Lecter but still interesting) and Red Dragon (really liked it, creepy as hell). I’m dieing to find Silence of the lambs and the other one.
coreyjess you might have even been there when i was talking about them in IDC, i can’t remember at all. Just in case you weren’t Log in to see images! |
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Posted On: 08/25/2008 5:11PM | View TUBSWEETIE's Profile | # | ||||||
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