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![]() I was wandering around in borders with a 49% off coupon and came upon it. It was sticking out on the shelf in front of everything else. The only one. Thought I should finally get around to reading it. So far i love it.:) |
"Giacomo Joyce", a post-humous published Joyce story. Fucking wierd and awesome.
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you really need to read all six books in the trilogy. |
after like a few pages of the first one i wanted to burn it for warmth
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Just finished:
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I'm not reading it now but once I get some spending cash I want to finally read this:
![]() Took a traveling Czech girl to remind me of it. |
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The Ultimate History of Video Games |
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You really don't. Just the first four books. The fourth one is barely worth reading, and that's only for the appropriate ending. Mostly Harmless is completely horrible and I don't even want to think about that new one. The only truly good books in that series are Hitchhiker's Guide and Restaurant At The End of the Universe. |
I read the first three in high school. I can scarcely remember some things but most of it I am drawing a blank.
Fun read at the time, though. |
man i hated it completely. it reminded me of the sort of thing these smug right wing physics teachers would find funny along with their stories about how drunk they get cos they're so fuckin edgey and their terry pratchet collection and their xboxes because they are such edgey nihilists yo but in shirts.
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I've just started The Restaurant at the End of the Universe and so the story so far is very familiar to me because of the original radio series (I had the two LPs as well). |
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![]() Only read the prologue, no opinion yet. Loved the first two books though. Everytime I'm taking a shit I read a few pages of this: ![]() It's my second time reading it. It's alot funnier the second time. I never really appreciated the prose the first time. Also I've been reading Lovecraft's short stories. The Nameless City was a really solid read. The Tomb was boring as all hell, really hard to get through. Lastly I recently read this really cool short story by Arthur Conan Doyle called When The World Screamed. It's about these guys who drill down eight miles into the Earth to confirm a theory that the Earth is actually alive and sentient and we're all just chilling on it's back. |
Just finished Paul Austers New York Trilogy. It was pretty cool, but I was a bit underwhelmed.
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Cosmic Mirror - Haniya Yutaka
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![]() And the Devil Will Drag You Under - Jack L Chalker |
![]() some of the ideas on art are a bit "can't believe i paid £13 for that" but the early stuff on the evolution of fiction is worth it. i tried to scan all these and make pdfs but my scanner doesnt work. the ideas in this one will be very useful to anyone struggling to make art right now. certainly gave me a lot to think about, in fact i'd say it's actually given me the tools with which to get out of the creative rut i've been stuck in. wait for the paperback or the pdf tho. ![]() ![]() have only skimmed these 2 ![]() this is an absolute classic. i urge everyone to buy this one. i was put off by one of his articles in an old semiotexte schizo culture issue (seems like it was 70's/80's) were he talked about the criminality of homosexuality and put across some questionable stuff that obviously came from a different era and seemed like more like a coping strategy with the oppression at the time than anything else. but this book is really really fantastic, his attack on freudo marxism and the stuff on love and frustration REALLY spoke to me. |
late night reading
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Barry Green is one of my favourite authors.
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John Storey: An Introductory Guide to Cultural Theory and Popular Culture
Helen Thomas (ed.): Dance in the City Keith Negus: Music Genres and Corporate Cultures David Hesmondhalgh & Keith Negus (ed.): Popular Music Studies |
![]() Words of Science. One of Asimov's many hundreds of non-fiction works. details the word origins and meanings behind many of the most used words in science. wish I knew Greek! |
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I've been most reading wikipedia about the East-West Schism, the Crimean War, and things related to both.
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Almost finished
![]() It's excellent. About sexual desire/frustration, unhappiness, Jewishness. And it's incredibly lol. |
Phillip Roth is still one of the 4 most important living American novelists, and that's my second favorite by him, behind "American Splendor", which is just too good for me to get into.
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Im reading this, its very pleasent and wistful, which makes a nice change. And i bought it, new, from a branch of Poundland.
http://www.suketumehta.com/books.html ![]() |
Also currently reading:
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sweet mother of fuck, i've been looking for that in spanish, and nada! i don't want to read a shitty translation meanwhile... ![]() i used to have a shitty college-used edition full of ketchup stains and a stranger's pen notes on the margin-- now i got a pristine hardbound copy-- still used, but sweet-smelling-- which makes it much more readable. Quote:
are you into panny cameras or are you, as they say in your country, "taking the piss"? http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_no...een%22&x=0&y=0 |
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You mean American Pastoral? That's next on my list of Roth books to read. Just waiting for it to show up in a second hand book somewhere in the 'hood. In the meantime, now that I've finished Portnoy's Complaint, it's on to: ![]() or ![]() |
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Don't bother |
Just finished:
![]() Now: ![]() The guy hasn't really started talking about the Beatles yet, and I'm 100 pages in. It's mostly jazz history. My mind has repeatedly been blown by this book so far. |
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If I were fluent enough in Spanish, I'd do the same. I have Bolanos "Romantic Dogs", and the nice thing about the edition I have is it's both in spanish and english. 2666 was supposed to be 3 books (upon bolanos request), but after he died they just stuffed it into one book and published it anyway. |
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guess what, i found them in the public library, thanks to your post it was in my mind the other day and when i did a search-- surprise! i grew up in spanish so gringospeak is actually still foreign to me (you'll notice at times i'm clumsy with idioms, also my syntax is more convoluted than your average english speaker-- that's my brain in spanish). anyhuevos, i've ordered Llamadas Telefónicas, will follow with Los Detectives Salvajes, etc-- meaning I'm gonna approach him chronologically. there's one called Nazi Literature in the Americas that I haven't found untranslated yet, but i'll keep looking for it. so, thanks for bringing up this book cuz i've been meaning to read it for the last couple of years. i'd rep you if i could even if rep is meaningless-- so thanks. |
![]() This book is so ridiculously insightful. Oppression is caused by socio-cultural structures which tyrants thrive on and exploit, its bottom up not top down.. The past is cyclic and the cycle is petrified into the structures of society, our cultural/historical myths which dictate our current thinking and perpetuates the ills of previous societies such as greed, corruption and thirst for power. Our society is a pyramid, and we sacrifice ourselves and others to the "Gods" of history in order to keep the flow of our society in flux. Criticism is the essense of freedom, silences is the stagnant petrification of the status quo and the birth of authority. Essentially, the problem is our own, and we must own up to it and change our society to remove the structures which oppress us. Why are we controlled and manipulated by power hungry individuals and businesses? Because we let them and structure our society around it and continue it on as ever... |
http://www.iplant.eu/fiction.html
iPlant fiction This is a novel-in-progress by Chris Harris. It describes the development of iPlants from the perspective of reserchers working in the private brain surgery industry. The different segments of the story are not in chronological order. In the novel, conditional rewarding brain stimulation (CRBS) is first introduced as a last-resort procedure to help morbidly obese patients exercise. The move is motivated by a worsening obesity-cardiovascular-neurodegeneration-aging epidemic, unsuccessful attempts to inhibit hunger in morbidly obese patients with traditional deep brain stimulation procedures (Hamani et al 2008), and several effective applications of CRBS to motivate exercise in rats (Burgess et al 1991, Garner et al 1991). Following success in several hospitals, the procedure is rapidly applied to a wide variety of patient groups and behaviours, including learning. As the effectiveness and safety of the implants improve, an increasing number of clinically healthy individuals choose to undergo the surgical procedure, and private clinics specializing in the procedure become increasingly lucrative. Ike, Meg, Lucy and the narrator Chris conduct R&D at such a clinic/company. Their research is necessarily self-experimental. The novel begins with the public launch of the 'iPlant' - an advanced CRBS implant aimed at a general market, which, unlike previous CRBS implants, targes dopamine and serotonin nuclei directly. |
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I prefer this "V". ![]() |
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!@#$% where you at? |
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