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Rob Instigator 03.14.2016 02:23 PM

Finished ANGER IS AN ENERGY. http://rxttbooks.blogspot.com/2016/0...-tells-it.html

Not the best autobiography in the world, but much of it is like sitting and having a conversation with John Lydon, which I like.

ilduclo 03.14.2016 03:26 PM

about 1/3 thru of this 2nd classic Cossack epic

 


excellent

pony 03.22.2016 02:19 AM

 


makes my head hurt

tesla69 03.28.2016 09:57 AM

Stalingrad by Jochen Hellbeck

During and right after the battle Soviet historians interviewed key people, and then the interviews were locked up until recent times. The stories are intense. They had battles within a single building that went on lierally for days. The Nazi airstrikes would go on for 8 hours at a time - unending bombers screaming out of the sky dropping bombs. I get the impression of 2 great mechanized peoples colliding.

ilduclo 03.28.2016 10:48 AM

I read a Stalingrad history book about a year ago. I came away with respect for the Russians and pity for the Germans. Hitler was an ass, thinking he could get away with that in winter.


I'll bet this is a good one
 

tesla69 03.28.2016 10:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ilduclo
I read a Stalingrad history book about a year ago. I came away with respect for the Russians and pity for the Germans.


There are references in Stalingrad to enough gang rapes and mass child murders by the invading Nazis to justify any killing of any of the invading fascists. There were thousands of corpses around, the children the nazis had butchered and hung from the trees were just some of many the arriving troops would see trying to get to the front. For weeks no one had time to deal with the corpses, the onslaught by the Germans just went on and on, one barely had time to dig your own trench never mind bury a frozen stranger.

One thesis of this book is that Soviet Russia saved the world by stopping Hitler from gaining Moscow and the resources of Russia.

ilduclo 03.29.2016 08:45 AM

understood, the atrocities played a lot of ways in the WW2 contest. Glad that kind of shit is not quite as widespread now.

Rob Instigator 03.29.2016 08:56 AM

I requested that Flattening book from my Library. I want a literary headache.....

Rob Instigator 04.04.2016 03:56 PM

 


review up at my blog

http://rxttbooks.blogspot.com/

Severian 04.04.2016 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
 


review up at my blog

http://rxttbooks.blogspot.com/


Oh man, Rob, you rock! I'm checking the review out right now.

Planning to move on to the next one?

Severian 04.04.2016 05:21 PM

Awesome write-up. Based on what you seem to like about the story so far, I think it best that you power through. Thave not yet even begun to get truly strange or hypnotic. You're on the precipice of an entire universe, and I envy you.

Also, you've convinced me to pick this back up and take at least the first entry for another spin.

pepper_green 04.04.2016 07:24 PM

im reading Cashless: Bible Prophecy, Economic Chaos, and the Futre Financial Order. all you right jesus lovin mid-western comrades take notice.

this book is for you. me: I stomped on it, pissed on it, did a little drunk jig on top of it that disturbed my daughter while witnessing all this, then stuck it in the oven to dry and sold it back to the library that sold it to me for a dollar. then camped out in the corn fields by the moon and hungry deer.

he made great points. think i'll still vote democrat.:mad: unfortunately.

tesla69 04.05.2016 01:06 PM

Sharing Big Data Safely: Managing Data Security by Ted Dunning & Ellen Friedman - - - my friend gave me the new Bernie Gunther novel by Philip Kerr for my birthday! - - this site works kind of weird when you stop script

Rob Instigator 04.05.2016 01:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian
Awesome write-up. Based on what you seem to like about the story so far, I think it best that you power through. Thave not yet even begun to get truly strange or hypnotic. You're on the precipice of an entire universe, and I envy you.

Also, you've convinced me to pick this back up and take at least the first entry for another spin.


The Shadow of the Torturer is my 99th review for my blog, and I am doing a special review for my 100th, but the next after that will be the Claw of the Conciliator....

pony 04.08.2016 07:22 AM

 


and some Jorge Luis Borges

pony 04.08.2016 07:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
I requested that Flattening book from my Library. I want a literary headache.....

and you shall get it!
I will have to give it a re-read in a couple of days. There is SO much information in it. Apparently, it's a dissertation!

ilduclo 04.08.2016 09:40 AM

 


about 1/3 thru. Interesting things about A Jackson, I knew he was pretty fucking awful, but there was a lot I didn't know. Settlement and theft of indian land taking place at the same time slavery expanding. The American history you don't know

tesla69 04.18.2016 12:47 PM

To Have and Have Not - Ernest Hemingway. This was a very good read, and having also recently read Portrait of an Artist by James Joyce I found some similarities, just in that the language would be very simple dialogue and then suddenly the chapter plunges in dense stream of consciousness. Also read A Moveable Feast, esp enjoyed the Fitzgerald chapters, sounds like Nancy Spungeon was a reincarnated Zelda Fitzgerald, but everyone was too polite back then to say anything. I can't quite put my finger on it but the writing has a cubist feel to it - like Hemingway keeps showing the subject from so many different angles at once.

Currently reading A Farewell to Arms. I always avoided Hemingway but certainly he should be read alongside Conrad and London and Orwell.

pony 04.24.2016 06:39 AM

 

evollove 04.24.2016 07:53 AM

I've always loved the graphic novel version of City of Glass.

Severian 04.24.2016 12:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pony
 


and some Jorge Luis Borges


Nice.

pony 04.25.2016 06:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by evollove
I've always loved the graphic novel version of City of Glass.


planning on getting it soon.
books excite me so much, oooaaah.:eek:

Rob Instigator 04.26.2016 02:31 PM

James George Frazer - The Golden Bough
 


I have been itching to read this seminal work for years. It will be my 100th review on my blog. http://rxttbooks.blogspot.com/

gmku 05.02.2016 01:32 PM

Recently... 77 Dream Songs by John Berryman

The Collected Poems of Wallace Stevens

Some James Joyce book I found on a shelf somewhere.

tesla69 05.14.2016 03:35 PM

Better Dead - Max Allen Collins - through private eye Nathan Heller, Collins writes historical detective fiction that takes an interesting look at the Rosenberg executions, Joseph McCarthy and the late Roy Cohn, who is popping up these days as the one time 'tutor' of a young Donald Trump. The 2nd half of the book is more about illegal biological warfare in Korea, chemical torture, LSD, Frank Olsen and his death, and the cover up of his death, but the stories are all based on reported facts, not conspiracy literature, since that is so important to people.

I really like the 3 Nathan Heller character books I've read and there is a list of like 15 written so I have something to look for at The Strand.

pony 05.15.2016 07:41 PM

 

ilduclo 05.16.2016 10:16 AM

 


Frontiers: The Epic of South Africa's Creation and the Tragedy of the Xhosa People. Noel Mostert

one of the best history writers I've read, along with Barbara Tuchman

Severian 05.16.2016 10:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
James George Frazer - The Golden Bough
 


I have been itching to read this seminal work for years. It will be my 100th review on my blog. http://rxttbooks.blogspot.com/


Hey, how's it coming with all this? Did you do your special 100th review yet? Are you ready to get back to business with Claw of the Conciliator? You've only barely scratched the surface of the Wolfe's world (or have you?), and I'm dying to hear what you think of the rest.

Rob Instigator 05.20.2016 04:46 PM

Just finished up Nick Sousanis' UNLFLATTENING. http://rxttbooks.blogspot.com/2016/0...n-what-we.html

I am halfway through The Golden Bough (about 500 pages in). Dense material!

As soon as I finish up Golden Bough I am picking up the next Wolfe book !!!!

Rob Instigator 05.23.2016 08:48 AM

Nick Sousanis retweeted my review of Unflattening! Sweetness.......

Severian 05.24.2016 09:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
Nick Sousanis retweeted my review of Unflattening! Sweetness.......


Wow, that's fucking cool man!

I once had Blag Bug and HoZac records favorite some Twitter praise I posted for BB's Reflecting the Light album. Blackalicious also rt'd a comment I made about them. So did Perfet Pussy back when I was doing the whole music blog thing.

But your thing is cooler.

Severian 05.24.2016 09:10 AM

Can't wait for you to delve back into the Wolfe-iverse. Really, I'm giddy with anticipation over here.

Also, I can't find JACK SHIT to read, so I'm ready any time if you still want to recommend a nice, weird, literary sci-fan-horror novel for me.

pony 05.25.2016 06:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
Nick Sousanis retweeted my review of Unflattening! Sweetness.......

SWEEEEEET!!!

I am reading several books at the same time right now, because they all have to be read for class. Some I like more than others, as you can probably guess from the titles...

this is for my metafiction class:
 


Remix/Mashup class:
 


graphic novel class:
 


Plus, on the weekend i'll probably try and start reading either "Everywhere Antennas" or "The Nao of Brown" since i need to start thinking about a presentation topic.

GAH, also I have to read Barthes' "The Pleasure of a Text", as my presentation on that is in a week.

... only 1,5 more months before I can sleep again... :roll eyes:
(still gonna go and buy Don Quixote today...)

Rob Instigator 05.27.2016 09:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pony
SWEEEEEET!!!



Looking at my blog stats today I saw a giant spike in "hits" and then I saw that Nick Sousanis quoted my review and linked to it here http://spinweaveandcut.com/teaching-...rench-edition/

supa sweeeeeeettttttt!!!!!

tesla69 05.27.2016 11:47 AM

A slipcased edition of Autobiography of a Secret Agent by R H Bruce Lockhart, he was in charge of the British foreign office when the Bolsheviks took power in Moscow and was also a contemporary of Sidney Reilly, the greatest of all spies and a compelling character as played by Sam Elliott.

Rob Instigator 05.27.2016 04:04 PM

Finished Feynman's Rainbow by Leonard Mlodinow. short book.
http://rxttbooks.blogspot.com/2016/0...hy-i-love.html

!@#$%! 05.27.2016 04:51 PM

GAH, also I have to read Barthes' "The Pleasure of a Text", as my presentation on that is in a week.

this is one of the very few truly beautiful "theory" books i've ever read

the pleasure of THE text (le plaisir du texte)

it is so good

vive la jouissance

Severian 05.28.2016 04:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
GAH, also I have to read Barthes' "The Pleasure of a Text", as my presentation on that is in a week.

this is one of the very few truly beautiful "theory" books i've ever read

the pleasure of THE text (le plaisir du texte)

it is so good

vive la jouissance


Presentation?

pony 05.28.2016 10:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
GAH, also I have to read Barthes' "The Pleasure of a Text", as my presentation on that is in a week.

this is one of the very few truly beautiful "theory" books i've ever read

the pleasure of THE text (le plaisir du texte)

it is so good

vive la jouissance

i read it today. it's actually nice. it's readerly vs writerly text. "easy".

pony 05.30.2016 06:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian
Presentation?

university !


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