Books The BOOK thread

Finished reading John Dies at the End. Very enjoyable read. Hard to describe the book. It's really messed up in all sorts of way but fun the whole way through.

The guy who wrote it got the book deal through word of mouth on his short stories online. It had gotten popular enough online that he was prompted to make the short stories into a book and so he did. Oh, he's also a senior editor of cracked.com so you might expect some humor and weird references.

Going to start now on World War Z as I want to read it before the movie comes out.

Looking forward to reading it, heard great things about it. JDATE that is.

Borstal Boy is one of the best pieces of Irish literature I've laid hands on, it's fantastic.
 
Just started John Sweeney's "Church of Fear". People might remember him going into meltdown on camera during his investigation of Scientology. This is his payback and so far, it's pretty juicy. Also reading Neil Sanders' two volume book "Your Thoughts Are Not Your Own". It's a very well-researched investigation into media manipulation, marketing, music, and the connections to government and places like Wellington House and the Tavistock Institute.
 
I just reread The Hobbit and enjoyed it again.
 
Good, innit? Haven't seen the film yet but I hear it actually follows the book plot quite well.

Yeah it really is a great read. I was reading it again before watching the film and friends have said they found the film a little boring and I thought that maybe I had placed the book on a pedestal as it was one of the first I read. Still I thought it was great with the characters and adventures being fun and a little dark.
 
Yeah it really is a great read. I was reading it again before watching the film and friends have said they found the film a little boring and I thought that maybe I had placed the book on a pedestal as it was one of the first I read. Still I thought it was great with the characters and adventures being fun and a little dark.

Got hooked on Tolkien when I was about 14. Like Christopher Lee, I try and read LOTR at least once every couple of years. But I hadn't read The Hobbit for yonks then decided it was time. You're right about the dark side of the book too. I'd never really seen it as anything more than a romance for children, but it's clearly much more. Must go and see the flick now to see what Jackson makes of it.
 
Just finished reading Cloud Atlas and I've got to say it was a joy from start to finish, looking forward to watching the movie now.
 
Got hooked on Tolkien when I was about 14. Like Christopher Lee, I try and read LOTR at least once every couple of years. But I hadn't read The Hobbit for yonks then decided it was time. You're right about the dark side of the book too. I'd never really seen it as anything more than a romance for children, but it's clearly much more. Must go and see the flick now to see what Jackson makes of it.

I'm going to have a watch this weekend. I hope I don't draw comparisons with Lord of the Rings films but I fear it may happen.
 
Just finished reading Cloud Atlas and I've got to say it was a joy from start to finish, looking forward to watching the movie now.

I read this a few years back and I found it a disjointed pile of sh1te. I may try it again but it was a bit beyond me.
 
I read this a few years back and I found it a disjointed pile of sh1te. I may try it again but it was a bit beyond me.

maybe try giving it another read, I can only speak from my own experience of reading it and to reiterate what I've already said I found it a complete joy. There are six stories inter-mingled throughout the book and tbh I found the first part a little slow but stuck with it and was rewarded for doing so as it just got better and better and then when it reverted back to each story in the final half I devoured each page, loved it.
 
maybe try giving it another read, I can only speak from my own experience of reading it and to reiterate what I've already said I found it a complete joy. There are six stories inter-mingled throughout the book and tbh I found the first part a little slow but stuck with it and was rewarded for doing so as it just got better and better and then when it reverted back to each story in the final half I devoured each page, loved it.

I'll definitely give it another go because I have heard good things about it and may have just not had the patience for it the first time.
 
Are you reading for pleasure or for an academic assignment, Jazz?
 
I love both, of course, but Dorian is a real mixed bag & inconsistent too. There are great parts which really ring true - Wilde's knowledge of London's seedier side; the believable disposal of a body etc etc - but there are also melodramatic bits which are of poor quality; then there's all that chatter, witty as it may be but tiresome after a while.

In contrast, Earnest is nigh-on perfect, and 'goes like a rifle shot,' as Wilde said. Still, I prefer Dorian, as it was my introduction to the author; if you love elegant literature, it's a beautiful book. :)
 
I love both, of course, but Dorian is a real mixed bag & inconsistent too. There are great parts which really ring true - Wilde's knowledge of London's seedier side; the believable disposal of a body etc etc - but there are also melodramatic bits which are of poor quality; then there's all that chatter, witty as it may be but tiresome after a while.

In contrast, Earnest is nigh-on perfect, and 'goes like a rifle shot,' as Wilde said. Still, I prefer Dorian, as it was my introduction to the author; if you love elegant literature, it's a beautiful book. :)

Yeah, Dorian has a bit of a reputation for being gratuitously verbose in some circles.. I'm sure it's great but I think I'll go for Earnest as an easy introduction to Wilde. Thanks.
 
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The sinking of the whaleship Essex by an enraged whale in the Pacific in November 1820 set in motion one of the most dramatic sea stories of all time: the twenty sailors who survived the wreck took to three small boats (one of which was again attacked by a whale) and only eight of them survived their subsequent 90-day ordeal, after resorting to cannibalising their mates.

Three months after the Essex was broken up, the whaleship Dauphin, cruising off the coast of South America, spotted a small boat in the open ocean. As they pulled alongside they saw piles of bones in the bottom of the boat, at least two skeletons’ worth, with two survivors – almost skeletons themselves – sucking the marrow from the bones of their dead ship-mates.

Good stuff, and only 50p at The Works.
 
I love both, of course, but Dorian is a real mixed bag & inconsistent too. There are great parts which really ring true - Wilde's knowledge of London's seedier side; the believable disposal of a body etc etc - but there are also melodramatic bits which are of poor quality; then there's all that chatter, witty as it may be but tiresome after a while.

In contrast, Earnest is nigh-on perfect, and 'goes like a rifle shot,' as Wilde said. Still, I prefer Dorian, as it was my introduction to the author; if you love elegant literature, it's a beautiful book. :)

You've probably read "The Ballad of Reading Gaol" Steve, but that was my introduction to Wilde. It's still one of my favourite poems to this day. Have you ever read any of Wilde's works for children? I remember receiving a copy of "The Happy Prince" when I was a kid and I really enjoyed it, especially if it was read out loud to me.
 
almost finished "a prisoner of birth" by jeffrey archer

great book so far

Read this a while ago and loved it. One of my favorite books recently and anyone I've lent it to has loved it too. I haven't read any more Archer but this will encourage me.
 
I just reread The Hobbit and enjoyed it again.

I read 68% of it before my kindle packed in, and I really couldn't be arsed trying to get back to where I was to finish it. I have the film so I might just watch that, but I feel almost compelled to read the rest of it now.

Question for SteveJ: The Picture of Dorian Gray or The Importance of Being Earnest to take on first?

I read Dorian Gray a while back and thought it was decent. As Steve says it is a bit long winded and drawn out at times, but on the whole I thought it was decent. But I'm a fussy bugger.

I haven't read Ernest, but I might give it a try. I just finished Mort by Terry Pratchet and thought it was okay, started out good but didn't live up to my expectations - nothing ever does :(

So I've decided I might go for something more low brow to see if that pleases me any, and may go for Killing Floor by Lee Child.

Has anyone read The Passage? It's pretty monsterous so I don't want to read a big chunk of it to find out it's actually shit. I read the unabridged version of The Stand and then IT. Far too long for my liking, it almost put me off reading ever again, even though on the whole they were both good, especially The Stand. Just far far too long.
 
I thought the Hobbit was one of the best 2 books I'd ever read - mind you I was 9.
 
I thought the Hobbit was one of the best 2 books I'd ever read - mind you I was 9.

One of the first books I read and I didn't want to reread it in case it didn't stand up to my memories of it. In fairness it held it's own.
 
Good. Let us know what you think as I won't have a chance to get to the flicks until next week sometime.

Watched the Hobbit yesterday and while I enjoyed it I felt it was a little drawn out. Still a very good adaption of the novel but I felt that Jackson could've completed this with only two pictures.
 
This sounds really bad, but I haven't done any 'real' reading in about 5/6 years now... And I'm only 24. So, I have no real experience of what I like in terms of a book, I have read quite a few famous ones, such as Game of Thrones, Lord of the rings and a few others, as well as some 'crime/mystery' books. One about human trafficing and the other about random killings, both were quite good with how they kept you guessing the whole way...

But I'm looking to get some recommendations, I am open to anything in terms of Genre except paranormal (Vampires/ Zombies etc) as I generally don't like that theme, however if there is a particuarly good one, please mention it and I can give it a try.

Are there any books which are generally considered 'NEED TO READ', I need an idiots catch up for titles of books for the last 5 years...
 
Some of the must-reads are perhaps tough to get into if you haven't read much recently. I'd start with some more middle-weight modern stuff like William Boyd's 'Any Human Heart' or perhaps some classic crime fiction like Chandler, Hammett and Ross Macdonald.
 
Some of the must-reads are perhaps tough to get into if you haven't read much recently. I'd start with some more middle-weight modern stuff like William Boyd's 'Any Human Heart' or perhaps some classic crime fiction like Chandler, Hammett and Ross Macdonald.

Thanks for the recommendations mate, I will have a look at that 'Any Human heart', I have heard of that at least....

And what would you say are the bigger must reads, I don't think I would struggle getting into it as although I haven't read many books of late, magazines, articles and dribble that passes in the general on here :)...
 
I'd ignore ps, Jaybezia. :smirk:

The 'middle-weight' authors he mentions are 'popular' writers whom the cognoscenti of literary fiction deign to condescend to. Not popular writers that readers of popular fiction like to read.
 
I'd ignore ps, Jaybezia. :smirk:

The 'middle-weight' authors he mentions are 'popular' writers whom the cognoscenti of literary fiction deign to condescend to. Not popular writers that readers of popular fiction like to read.

:) Thanks for the heads up, I'm slightly innocent when it comes to reading :angel: what would you recommend?
 
I'd ignore ps, Jaybezia. :smirk:

The 'middle-weight' authors he mentions are 'popular' writers whom the cognoscenti of literary fiction deign to condescend to. Not popular writers that readers of popular fiction like to read.
I'm trying to be helpful. 'Any Human Heart' is a readable 400-odd page version of 'A Dance to the Music of Time', which is 12 volumes long. If someone hasn't read much in a while they probably aren't going to read it all. Since she'd read some crime it's probable that she'd get a lot out of the classic crime novels then has the new Scandicrime to look at.
 
I'm trying to be helpful. 'Any Human Heart' is a readable 400-odd page version of 'A Dance to the Music of Time', which is 12 volumes long. If someone hasn't read much in a while they probably aren't going to read it all. Since she'd read some crime it's probable that she'd get a lot out of the classic crime novels then has the new Scandicrime to look at.

My post wasn't entirely happy. Besides being tautologous - 'deign to condescend' - it came across harsher than I intended.

But if you're going to offer reading advice to a non-reader, it's best to choose books of the widest appeal, rather than picking from the minority of genre fiction which has sufficient literary merit to make it acceptable to those of cultivated taste.
 
May I get some recommendations?

The books I've enjoyed for the last couple of months have been

Infinite Jest - David Foster Wallace
Portnoy's Complaint - Phillip Roth
Mother Night - Kurt Vonnegut
 
I'm trying to be helpful. 'Any Human Heart' is a readable 400-odd page version of 'A Dance to the Music of Time', which is 12 volumes long. If someone hasn't read much in a while they probably aren't going to read it all. Since she'd read some crime it's probable that she'd get a lot out of the classic crime novels then has the new Scandicrime to look at.

I presume you genuinely didn't know I'm not female...
 
You don't sound in the least girlie but your profile sez different.

:lol: I will give you that, I can take it...

I tried, you may remember, to get a tag-line and emailed modmin requesting so, at which point a thread was started....

....and I got temporarily banned.

Now I have lots of little things by name as its the closest I can fecking get :D