1234-5678 Posted February 26, 2005 Report Posted February 26, 2005 "Leaving Las Vegas" by John O'Brien
Vyce Posted February 27, 2005 Report Posted February 27, 2005 "Perdido Street Station" by China Mieville. And after that, "Eyes of the Dragon" by Stephen King.
Youth N Asia Posted February 27, 2005 Report Posted February 27, 2005 I'm about to start "Body Rides" by Richard Laymon
Nighthawk Posted February 27, 2005 Report Posted February 27, 2005 "Get Shorty" by Elmore Leonard. I never saw the movie either. What with the sequel coming out I figure I'll get all caught up.
Henry Spencer Posted February 27, 2005 Report Posted February 27, 2005 "Tropic Of Cancer" by Henry Miller
SuperJerk Posted February 27, 2005 Report Posted February 27, 2005 "I Am Charlotte Simmons" by Tom Wolfe.
tbondrage99 Posted February 27, 2005 Report Posted February 27, 2005 "Heavier Then Heaven" by Charles R. Cross.
Swift Terror Posted February 28, 2005 Report Posted February 28, 2005 "I Am Charlotte Simmons" by Tom Wolfe I'm curious as to how real Div. I college basketball players would react to this novel and the way the players are protrayed. Provided they could read it, that is. RobotJerk, do you find that most of the characters all seem to be overly stupid. Then again I'm only about 90 pages into it.
starvenger Posted February 28, 2005 Report Posted February 28, 2005 "Get Shorty" by Elmore Leonard. I never saw the movie either. What with the sequel coming out I figure I'll get all caught up. If I may make a suggestion, this book reads better if you listen to music like "Green Onion" by Booker T and the MGs or even the Reservoir Dogs soundtrack... Anyways, currently reading "Medstar II: Jedi Healer" by Steve Perry and Michael Reaves. Far better than "Medstar I: Battle Surgeons", but still not great. Read it only if you're a Star Wars EU mark, or if you like reading books just to find a singular nod to H2G2 (I'm kinda doubting anyone's that obsessed). Anyways, "Survivor's Quest" by Timothy Zahn is a better novel. It's a Luke and Mara story, with a tie-in to the prequel-era EU.
Masked Man of Mystery Posted February 28, 2005 Report Posted February 28, 2005 Right now I'm working through the Bounty Hunter Wars, only because I have the third book and never read the first two.
starvenger Posted February 28, 2005 Report Posted February 28, 2005 Right now I'm working through the Bounty Hunter Wars, only because I have the third book and never read the first two. Tell me how it turns out. I only made it halfway through book 2. Boring as hell.
Angel_Grace_Blue Posted March 1, 2005 Report Posted March 1, 2005 Ken Follett's On Wings of Eagles It's the true story of Ross Perot organizing a prison break for two of his employees in Iran in 79. Crazy Ross Perot.
SuperJerk Posted March 1, 2005 Report Posted March 1, 2005 "I Am Charlotte Simmons" by Tom Wolfe I'm curious as to how real Div. I college basketball players would react to this novel and the way the players are protrayed. Provided they could read it, that is. RobotJerk, do you find that most of the characters all seem to be overly stupid. Then again I'm only about 90 pages into it. You're actually a bit farther along then I am. I just checked it out on Saturaday and haven't had a chance to really sit down with it yet. The book did cause quite an uproar over its athenticity when it first came out.
Nighthawk Posted March 1, 2005 Report Posted March 1, 2005 Finished "Get Shorty" which was pretty good but not one of my favorite Leonard offerings. I watched the movie and was dissapointed by it. I have to learn to stop reading the books first, cause that always happens. When I watch the movie first I usually like both. I had intended to read "Be Cool" now, but because of what I've said, I'm watching the movie first. Instead I'm going to start "No One Here Gets Out Alive", the Jim Morrison biography. Heard a lot about it, never sat down and read it myself.
Giuseppe Zangara Posted March 1, 2005 Report Posted March 1, 2005 Jonathan Lethem's The Fortress of Solitude.
Hank Kingsley Posted March 1, 2005 Report Posted March 1, 2005 Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston. The dialect gets quite annoying after awhile.
Vyce Posted March 2, 2005 Report Posted March 2, 2005 Understanding Power - Noam Chomsky Must....resist urge to.......make snide remark....
cbacon Posted March 2, 2005 Report Posted March 2, 2005 Understanding Power - Noam Chomsky Must....resist urge to.......make snide remark.... Don't hold back, I know you can do it! I love my anti-semitic literature!
Guest PlatinumBoy Posted March 3, 2005 Report Posted March 3, 2005 "I Am Charlotte Simmons" by Tom Wolfe I'm curious as to how real Div. I college basketball players would react to this novel and the way the players are protrayed. Provided they could read it, that is. RobotJerk, do you find that most of the characters all seem to be overly stupid. Then again I'm only about 90 pages into it. You're actually a bit farther along then I am. I just checked it out on Saturaday and haven't had a chance to really sit down with it yet. The book did cause quite an uproar over its athenticity when it first came out. How good is it? The frat house Wolfe based the frat scenes on is RIGHT outside my dorm... which is one reason I want to read it. According to Drudge, Bush likes it but his people don't want him publically saying he's reading such an EVIL book. As to the thread, currently reading, "Who's Your Caddy?" by Rick Reilly, then starting "A Confederacy of Dunces"
Crimson Platypus Posted March 3, 2005 Report Posted March 3, 2005 Black House - Stephen King and Peter Straub From a Buick 8 - Stephen King Hearts of Atlantis - Stephen King (yes all at once, well not simultaneously, but you know what I mean)
1234-5678 Posted March 3, 2005 Author Report Posted March 3, 2005 I had intended to read "Be Cool" now, but because of what I've said, I'm watching the movie first. Instead I'm going to start "No One Here Gets Out Alive", the Jim Morrison biography. Heard a lot about it, never sat down and read it myself. NOHGOA is the first Morrison biography ever written, and it did touch off a bit of a Doors revival, but go into it with an open mind and know that most of it is bullshit, bullshit touched up by the recently deceased Doors manager, Danny Sugarman, and Doors keyboard player Ray Manzarek. If you want to read a real, non objective book on Jimbo, I suggest Break On Through by James Riordan and Jerry Prochnicky. I am currently reading Cobb by Al Stump.
1234-5678 Posted March 3, 2005 Author Report Posted March 3, 2005 Hearts of Atlantis - Stephen King My favorite part of that book is not the part that was made into the movie, it's the part where the guy is in college during the Vietnam War. Great stuff.
Nighthawk Posted March 3, 2005 Report Posted March 3, 2005 NOHGOA is the first Morrison biography ever written, and it did touch off a bit of a Doors revival, but go into it with an open mind and know that most of it is bullshit, bullshit touched up by the recently deceased Doors manager, Danny Sugarman, and Doors keyboard player Ray Manzarek. If you want to read a real, non objective book on Jimbo, I suggest Break On Through by James Riordan and Jerry Prochnicky. I'm about half way through it, and I can tell. The groveling hero worship is coming through pretty thick. It's very interesting in a historical perspective, and as a record of Morrison the legend as opposed to the man. I can see it's influence on other rock stars. I may indeed pick up your suggestion sometime.
Anorak Posted March 3, 2005 Report Posted March 3, 2005 Just started... Peter Straub - Koko Various Authors - My Favourite Year: A Collection Of Football Writing Just finished the 4th & 5th Harry Potter books and loved them to death. Can't wait for the new one this summer.
Vyce Posted March 3, 2005 Report Posted March 3, 2005 Black House - Stephen King and Peter Straub From a Buick 8 - Stephen King Hearts of Atlantis - Stephen King (yes all at once, well not simultaneously, but you know what I mean) Unlike Jaxl, I pretty much just read Hearts in Atlantis for the Dark Tower tie-in "Low Men in Yellow Coats". Haven't read "Black House", but it's on my already obscenely long "To Read" list. "From a Buick 8" is just sad to read. Not in the sense that the material is sad, mind you, but that book, much like "The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon", are just representative of King's post car-accident work, which has more often than not tended to be mediocre or just plain awful. I personally thought the book was be pretty pedestrian coming from the guy who's written many of modern horror literature's "classics".
Gary Floyd Posted March 4, 2005 Report Posted March 4, 2005 "Bad Chili" by Joe R. Lansdale. God, this book kicks all kinds of ass, especially the dialouge
Crimson Platypus Posted March 4, 2005 Report Posted March 4, 2005 Black House - Stephen King and Peter Straub From a Buick 8 - Stephen King Hearts of Atlantis - Stephen King (yes all at once, well not simultaneously, but you know what I mean) Unlike Jaxl, I pretty much just read Hearts in Atlantis for the Dark Tower tie-in "Low Men in Yellow Coats". Haven't read "Black House", but it's on my already obscenely long "To Read" list. "From a Buick 8" is just sad to read. Not in the sense that the material is sad, mind you, but that book, much like "The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon", are just representative of King's post car-accident work, which has more often than not tended to be mediocre or just plain awful. I personally thought the book was be pretty pedestrian coming from the guy who's written many of modern horror literature's "classics". Bump Black House up that list Vyce, you won't be disappointed. I'm almost done, and absolutely loving it. Of those three books I listed this one has engrossed me completely.
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