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AliceInAspieland
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01 Dec 2012, 6:41 am

'The Talented Mr. Ripley,' by Patricia Highsmith.


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Ztrain
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01 Dec 2012, 9:54 am

On The Road by Kerouac



daydreamer84
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01 Dec 2012, 3:37 pm

Game of thrones by George R.R. Martin.

Just starting it today.



Jory
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01 Dec 2012, 6:28 pm

GoonSquad wrote:
Jory wrote:
Quatermass wrote:
Only Robert Louis Stevenson book I've read was Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.


Try Treasure Island. It's awesome.


My second favorite novel ever... right behind Dracula. I reread both every couple of years.

There are some awesome annotated versions of Dracula, I wonder about Treasure Island... Hmm...

Right now I'm reading Lives of the Caesars by Suetonius.


Oh my God. Will you marry me?

Dracula is my #1 favorite novel. (Even though I hate vampire fiction in general.) And Treasure Island is certainly in my Top 5. (And I don't even like pirate stories!)

You're awesome.

By the way, I have an excellent annotated version of Dracula, called The New Annotated Dracula by Leslie S. Klinger...

...he also did a great annotated Sherlock Holmes...

I wish there were a great annotated Treasure Island...



VIDEODROME
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02 Dec 2012, 12:56 am

GOD is not great:

How religion poisons everything: Christopher Hitchens.



GoonSquad
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02 Dec 2012, 1:54 am

Jory wrote:
GoonSquad wrote:
Jory wrote:
Quatermass wrote:
Only Robert Louis Stevenson book I've read was Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.


Try Treasure Island. It's awesome.


My second favorite novel ever... right behind Dracula. I reread both every couple of years.

There are some awesome annotated versions of Dracula, I wonder about Treasure Island... Hmm...

Right now I'm reading Lives of the Caesars by Suetonius.


Oh my God. Will you marry me?

Dracula is my #1 favorite novel. (Even though I hate vampire fiction in general.) And Treasure Island is certainly in my Top 5. (And I don't even like pirate stories!)

You're awesome.

By the way, I have an excellent annotated version of Dracula, called The New Annotated Dracula by Leslie S. Klinger...

...he also did a great annotated Sherlock Holmes...

I wish there were a great annotated Treasure Island...


You know, I've read a few reviews of Klinger's edition. It seems as if everyone either loves or hates it. I think I will give it a try next time I read D.


It's too bad there isn't a good annotated Treasure Island there's definitely a lot to annotate!

PS
:oops:
.... maybe we should 'go steady' first.

I believe in long engagements.
:wink:


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02 Dec 2012, 1:56 am

Towers of Midnight by Brandon Sanderson/Robert Jordan. That is book #13 of the Wheel of Time series. I started reading these books in the mid 90's. The writing quality took a dive around books seven through ten. I stopped right about there having grown frustrated with the author's refusal to tie up existing plot lines and steadfast determination to add more and more and MORE superfluous characters. Many years passed. Author Robert Jordan died, series still unfinished. Brandon Sanderson took over at book #12. I heard better things about new author. A sibling of mine sent me the new books as a gift. I skipped straight to the new author ones, books 12 and 13.

Book 12 was pretty good, considering. New author moved the plot forward. Book 13, not quite so good. Part of that is new author struggling to fix all the nonsense original author added. If you're familiar with this series, the bits of Towers of Midnight I take issue with are the entirety of the Perrin Aybara chapters and most of the Gawyn Trakand ones. A lot of time wasting tedium with those two. Other parts of the book were generally better.



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04 Dec 2012, 5:46 pm

GoonSquad wrote:
You know, I've read a few reviews of Klinger's edition. It seems as if everyone either loves or hates it. I think I will give it a try next time I read D.


Klinger can be annoying as hell, but there's too much good in his annotated editions to stay away from them if you're a fan of the original material. I reviewed his annotated Dracula on Amazon here if you want my detailed thoughts on it. I haven't reviewed his annotated Holmes, but my feelings about it are pretty much identical.



Staralfur
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04 Dec 2012, 7:46 pm

Breakfast of Champions. I don't like it and would like to go back to rereading The Name of the Wind.



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15 Dec 2012, 2:35 am

A Man in Full by Tom Wolfe


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featherbrained
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15 Dec 2012, 2:25 pm

Everything is Illuminated, Jonathan Safran Foer



featherbrained
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30 Dec 2012, 3:22 pm

Stephen King - 'Salem's Lot
"What was down there?" Royal asked. "What did you see?"
"Nothin'," Hank Peters said, and the word came out in sections divided by his clicking teeth.
"I didn't see nothin' and I never want to see it again."



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30 Dec 2012, 5:39 pm

A History of Warfare by John Keegan.


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GoonSquad
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30 Dec 2012, 6:27 pm

GoonSquad wrote:
A Man in Full by Tom Wolfe


I'm still reading it (I got a bit sidetracked)... :roll:

Currently on page 255 of 690--I'm just now getting through all the character introductions, and the plot seems ready to begin in earnest. :lol:

This is my first Tom Wolfe novel and the first general, contemporary fiction I’ve read in a long time. It's very good, actually...
:)


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31 Dec 2012, 12:53 am

How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie. It has practical advice illustrated with examples, and it is very readable.


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31 Dec 2012, 12:58 am

Yoga b!# ch. It' s funny, relatable, and a quick read. :)