I started to read The Name of the Wind but gave up. I might try again but I'm going to focus on one book. :)
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I started to read The Name of the Wind but gave up. I might try again but I'm going to focus on one book. :)
I just recently reread The Name of the Wind and the sequel A Wise Man's Fear, the first one is a little frustrating and slow to start but it gets better :).
I'm currently reading 11/22/63 by Stephen King. 600 pages in and WOW(!), it's almost impossible to put it down. King is one of very few authors who manage to create characters that I actually care for. Guess I will continue to cry through the rest of the night :damnit::crying:
Dancing is life!
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, by Phillip K. Dick.
I just finished it. It's... ah, it sounds newer than 1964, when it was written. It's like if Douglas Adams wrote a dark, coherent book without making it dark.
or something
I'm stuck between finishing Charles Baudelaire's The Flowers of Evil and picking up a certain Patrick Rothfuss book.
Maybe I'll just re-read the Silmarillion...
I started reading the Luann comic strip from the beginning with the intention of reading every strip. Luann Comic Strip, March 17, 1985 on GoComics.com
I'm almost up to 1988.
It centers around a girl named Luann and her friends and family. It the beginning, she's 13, but as the strip has gone on she's slowly aged. I think she's 18 or 19 right now. It's pretty entertaining!
You just read the strip and press the single right arrow button to move to the next strip, repeating this 11,000+ times to read the whole thing. A new strip is still being released every day.
just bought J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter and The Cursed Child
I hope you realise that it isn't actually written by J.K. Rowling lol
To Have or to Be. By Erich Fromm. A very enlightening book that gives some perspective of our personal self-worth as humans or the things we have. I didn't have any expectations out of this book, more than that it sounded interesting. I would recommend it to anyone who might want to get to know them selfs in a different light.
Here is an interview with Erich Fromm, about his book: To Have or to Be?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BzpT1mZf718
Robin Cook's Chromosome 6. I've only just started it but it looks okay to me.
I recently finished volume 1 of the Gulag Archipelago and it is a magnificent work. Intensely harrowing and terrifying stuff, but brilliantly written. Will have to pick up volume 2 soon. I have just started reading Notes From Underground by Fyodor Dostoevsky (The Constance Garnett translation :( I have a pdf of the Pevear translation to read after to compare). It is pretty dense and stilted but I hope the other translation is better. The concepts discussed are great though. I have a slew of Dostoevsky books lined up, crime and punishment and the brothers karamzov next in my list. I have a lot of reading to do this summer lol, also have some Nietzsche and Jung to read.
Currently reading.
"The Pale King", by David Foster Wallace (Fiction)
"Essential Tibetan Buddhism", by Robert A.F. Thurman (Non-Fiction)
"In Search of the Miraculous", by P. D. Ouspensky (Non-Fiction)
Murakami's Norwegian Wood!
Currently I am reading A Clash of Kings by George R. R. Martin.
I just finished Crime and Punishment and it is unbelievable. Hands down the best book I have ever read. Dostoevsky is a genius. Time to start The Brothers Karamazov now, I've heard it is even better.
I'm currently reading your conversations :rolllaugh:
I'm currently in the middle of The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood. I've heard all kinds of good things about the new series based on it, but would like to read first before I watch. I'm disappointed anytime I do the opposite because I end up picturing the acted scenes while I'm reading, instead of conjuring my own images of things.
I'm reading Dreaming Through Darkness by Charlie Morley and trying to read The Name of the Wind again. The dreaming book I'm reading seems right up my alley. I hope to stick with both books and finish them. :)
Now in the midst of Rabbit, Run by John Updike. It's one of the assigned readings in a class I'm taking on banned novels in American culture.
I just started reading Be Obsessed or Be Average by Grant Cardone
I just finished Oathbringer by Brandon Sanderson. It was wonderful. At first, I think at some point he said that the book's focus would be Jasnah and Dalinar (Dalinar, yes, Jasnah...not so much) and I wasn't super jazzed, thinking I might be bored. But I was wrong, this one was even better than Words of Radiance. If you're a fantasy fan and haven't yet read anything in Sanderson's Cosmere, I really recommend it. He's really good at hiding twists, which is great for me because I have an annoying habit of figuring out the twist before it even happens.
In about a week (when the book will get here) I'll be reading I Want My Epidural Back by Karen Alpert. :D
I like the newer, brazenly honest motherhood kinds of books these days. I read Confessions of a Domestic Failure by Bunmi Laditan and it was so good. Haven't ever had a book make me laugh so much.
Last book I read was Schizo by Nic Sheff. It was alright, more geared towards teenagers in my opinion but still relate-able. I'd like to read some more of his works though, give him another chance with the other books by him that I've got on my wishlist.
I'm currently reading Just Kids by Patti Smith and Little Birds by Anais Nin, really enjoying both so far.
Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
Click! Cat Training System by Karen Pryor...my cat gets very theatrical if not fed every two hours
Slouching towards Bethlehem by Joan Didion