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mangajunky 03.24.2008 03:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by krastian
 

Getting ready for spring training!!!


I used to work with his son, Mike.

I'm now reading
Prelude to Foundation - Isaac Asimov

 

Everyneurotic 03.26.2008 09:54 PM

just finished crime and punishment, and i'm now starting:

 


in addition to kenji siratori's (debug).

!@#$%! 03.27.2008 01:11 AM

i broke down & went to get some comix

serenity-- wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!don :D

 



 

_slavo_ 03.27.2008 03:00 AM

 


I guess it's a pretty difficult book to read.

!@#$%! 03.27.2008 03:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _slavo_
 


I guess it's a pretty difficult book to read.


nooo! and it's awesome!!

screamingskull 03.27.2008 06:52 AM

 


It's ok, not as good as Douglas Coupland's books about Gen-X.

_slavo_ 03.27.2008 07:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
nooo! and it's awesome!!


from what I've heard it's very much based on the linguistics of english language, of the words and different meanings they can get. That means, reading that in other language (i read it in Czech) you kind of lose a little bit of that spell.

nicfit 03.27.2008 07:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
i broke down & went to get some comix

serenity-- wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!don :D


 




 


oooh, yes!
transmetropolitan is funny as hell.
still have to read serenity...that's the new mini-series, right?

!@#$%! 03.27.2008 04:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nicfit
oooh, yes!
transmetropolitan is funny as hell.
still have to read serenity...that's the new mini-series, right?


yes yes-- the local comix nerd at the store told me all about it-- there is a prequel called "those left behind" that deals with the serenity years between the series & the movie. this comes after but it's the same-- pre-movie, in the timeline of events, just called "serenity". first issue is very funny! and the art is really good.

i gotta say, i love small stores where people *really* know their shit. fuck buying on the internet when your money can support the existence of a creature like my local comic books store nerds. seriously.

and i blame transmetropolitan on you, ha ha ha-- you sent me that first PDF.

m1rr0r dash 03.27.2008 07:30 PM

just went to the show at the dali museum in st. pete, picked up the catalog.

 



for a paper (T. Mical - former professor of mine):

 

RdTv 03.27.2008 07:33 PM

 

krastian 03.27.2008 09:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _slavo_
 


I guess it's a pretty difficult book to read.

I wrote a 10 page paper on it in college.

PS - The kids are the ones who know "what's up."

Cantankerous 03.27.2008 10:01 PM

 

m1rr0r dash 03.27.2008 10:28 PM

same paper, different book

 

Everyneurotic 03.29.2008 04:17 PM

finished uptight yesterday, now reading:

 

fugazifan 03.29.2008 05:47 PM

chekhov-the duel

gmku 03.30.2008 03:52 PM

The Penguin Book of Rock and Roll Writing

Has a coupla good articles by Patti Smith from her Creem writing days, one of them on the Stones. Main reason I checked it out, for her writing. Some other interesting stuff throughout, including a thing by Lou Reed.

marleypumpkin 03.30.2008 04:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Everyneurotic
finished uptight yesterday, now reading:


 


Ahh yes, classic. I myself am reading Burroughs', "My Education: A Book of Dreams". So far a great read.

fugazifan 03.30.2008 04:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fugazifan
chekhov-the duel

ive decided that i do not liemchekhov
next im reading the tempest (W.S) [i have to read it by tues
after that i think great expectations

m1rr0r dash 03.30.2008 04:34 PM

 

nomadicfollower 03.30.2008 08:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by m1rr0r dash
same paper, different book


 



I tried to read Birth of the Prison but had a little trouble and stopped.

Sonic Youth 37 03.30.2008 08:35 PM

In addition to Ulysses:

 


For my Roman History class

looking glass spectacle 03.30.2008 09:04 PM


 

Inhuman 03.31.2008 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nomadicfollower
I tried to read Birth of the Prison but had a little trouble and stopped.


Neat, that's what my brother's reading.

I'm reading:
 


 


 

Gogogonorrhea 03.31.2008 01:14 PM

 


Although it gets on my nerves that "Also sprach Zarathustra" is translated into "Thus spake Zarathustra". "Sprach" in german is just the ordinary past tense. Translators should write their own book if they want to be creative.

Tokolosh 04.02.2008 06:36 AM

An essay.
Descartes's Météores and the Rainbow Fountain
SIMON WERRETT

and various science books on how to generate artificial rainbows.
 

pao-lino 04.02.2008 09:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _slavo_
 


I guess it's a pretty difficult book to read.


It's one of my fave delillo novel.
I usually don't like his writing in first person, not difficult, but a little bit "heavy" although he's considered the master of "minimal post-modern", but here is perfect, very personal and fluent, bizarre and deep.
cool dialogues, that family is wonderful, the kids are amazing.
have a nice time reading it!

at the moment I'm reading great jones street, always by don delillo, but honestly is nothing special... also here first person narration, lot of contemplation on old-fashioned details, the story is not even that interesting... talks about a rockstar hiding from celebrity.
RUNNING DOG is another cool one by dondelillo, and so is MAOII. once he came in italy for a reading festival years ago and he is a really smart and polite person, he answered many stupid questions in a very intelligent way.

Everyneurotic 04.10.2008 05:32 PM

finished naked lunch yesterday and started this bad boy:

 

pbradley 04.10.2008 05:59 PM

Finished Heidegger's lectures The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics and Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. In keeping with the class material, I've began Gadamer's Truth and Method as well as Bruno Latour's The Pasteurization of France.

Sonic Youth 37 04.10.2008 06:06 PM

Ulysses, page 260. It took me 4 hours to read 80 pages 2 days ago.

!@#$%! 04.11.2008 02:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sonic Youth 37
Ulysses, page 260. It took me 4 hours to read 80 pages 2 days ago.


that's pretty fucking fast for ulysses

✌➬ 04.11.2008 02:51 AM

Several books on Diane Arbus, and Richard Hamilton.

Toilet & Bowels 04.11.2008 03:04 AM

i started this on the wy to work this morning:

george orwell - down & out in paris & london

truncated 04.11.2008 09:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sonic Youth 37
Ulysses, page 260. It took me 4 hours to read 80 pages 2 days ago.

I didn't think any sane being read that unless it was mandatory.

!@#$%! 04.11.2008 09:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toilet & Bowels
i started this on the wy to work this morning:

george orwell - down & out in paris & london


that is one fucking awesome book. more fun in paris than in london. chicken/elevator = YES.

gmku 04.11.2008 10:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
that's pretty fucking fast for ulysses


Ha, no shit. True story: My college freshman English prof (none other than David Morrell, author of First Blood and many other "thrillers") assigned us Ulysses. He told us to read the first and last 50 pages or something like that and he would tell us all about the rest in between. And this was for an English lit course for my major, not a core class. I loved him for that. He was a great teacher.

Sonic Youth 37 04.11.2008 10:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by truncated
I didn't think any sane being read that unless it was mandatory.


It's more of a test of my willpower. The way I see it, if I can read Ulysses, I can read anything. My major consists of reading A LOT of Latin translated to English and it drives me insane and I don't have time to learn fluent Latin right now. Latin jokes, puns, and insults do not translate well at all into English. Apuleius can kiss my golden ass.

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
that's pretty fucking fast for ulysses

My goal is to have it finished in two more weeks or less. Page 292, right now.

!@#$%! 04.11.2008 10:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sonic Youth 37
It's more of a test of my will power. The way I see it, if I can read Ulysses, I can read anything. My major consists of reading A LOT of Latin translated to English and it drives me insane and I don't have time to learn fluent Latin right now. Latin jokes, puns, and insults do not translate well at all into English. Apuleius can kiss my golden ass.


if it's a test of athleticism then you should go after finnegan's wake. that's where i throw the towel.

and shouldn't you change your major to something you can actually read in the original? this reminds me of the professor of hitler studies who couldn't read german.

Sonic Youth 37 04.11.2008 10:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
if it's a test of athleticism then you should go after finnegan's wake. that's where i throw the towel.

and shouldn't you change your major to something you can actually read in the original? this reminds me of the professor of hitler studies who couldn't read german.


Well, what I said is a half-truth. My major is History, but I haven't decided on which branch yet, so I'm in an early Roman Empire class right now because I know the professor pretty well. Ideally, my concentration will not be Roman History. I'll still take all his classes, though, along with whatever I choose to focus on.

I'm going to go back after I finish Ulysses and read Portrait of the Artist (I was about 1/4 finished with it....a year ago), then finish off the rest of Joyce.

NWRA 04.11.2008 12:52 PM

I'm skim-reading In Search Of Lost Time again, because Proust is easily my favourite writer: the way that he describes the tones and textures of things, the subjects that he writes about (the psychological idiosyncrasies of people, his philosophies, 'society') and the long, intertwining storyline which is so full of surprises (and retrospective irony)... I just can't comprehend that there will ever be anything written that can match it. And he was gay.

I'd be grateful if anyone could help me with these questions:

1) I love New York Trilogy by Paul Auster. What is his second-best book?

2) I once tried to read Anna Karenina but stopped after 200 pages, at the point where Levin goes back to his farm and Tolstoy starts describing ancient Russian farming-techniques. I just thought 'why am I reading this?'. Should I try again, and be more patient?


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