What are you reading now?
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@brenda said in What are you reading now?:
Listening to this while working in the yard. It's quite enjoyable to listen to this version, if you like detail. I'm almost half done with it, and there's much left to do in the yard.
Highly recommend. I enjoyed it immensely, and for so many aspects of the life he led. I try to use his perspective techniques from painting in my rug hooking when appropriate, and this was a good review, but there's something for everyone in this bio.
Politics? Lots.
Art guilds? Good explanations of how they were run.
Other greats of the time, and his relationships with them? Oh, yes, indeed, and with some spicy details.
Coverage of his scientific studies? Much and detailed.Again, I listened to this while doing some landscaping, and it was very easy to keep up with it at 1.2 speed. I find most recorded books go too slow, so I speed it up a bit.
Not too technical, IMO, just enough to help explain and compare. Not dumbed down either.
Enjoy!
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@taiwan_girl said in What are you reading now?:
What is Bosch?
Hieronymus "Harry" Bosch is a fictional detective. He is the chararacter that was the protagonist of a series on Amazon Prime. Brilliant detective show staring Titus Welliver.
The TV series was based on the books written by Michael Connelly. There are now 25 books in the series. Connelly was the in the production crew of the TV series, so the shows are pretty faithful to the books, though the books have different characters, sometimes.
If you like detective shows, check out Bosch. If you like mysteries, the books are tons of fun.
Connelly is also the author of "The Lincoln Lawyer" series of books. He really cranks 'em out.
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Just finished another Bosch book this afternoon ("Nine Dragons"). Good tale, and typical Bosch. It's interesting to see how characters in the TV series are different from the ones portrayed in the books.
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@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
Just finished another Bosch book this afternoon ("Nine Dragons").
Oh, guess who says "Hello!"
“He called the number now and this time got an immediate answer.
“Mickey Haller.”
“It’s Bosch.”
“Harry? I didn’t think I’d—”
“I think I need a lawyer.”
There was a pause.
“Okay, when?”
“Right now.”Yeah. Mickey Haller - The Lincoln Lawyer.
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I believe I've read this before, but I have no memory of it. It's not the easiest of reads by any means, but it's such a massively influential book. I really respect William Gibson's writing, but I find it hard work to get through.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in What are you reading now?:
I believe I've read this before, but I have no memory of it. It's not the easiest of reads by any means, but it's such a massively influential book. I really respect William Gibson's writing, but I find it hard work to get through.
Yeah, it's fun. The whole Sprawl trilogy is great.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in What are you reading now?:
Yeah, it's fun. The whole Sprawl trilogy is great.
The weird thing is that this was the first book I read when I bought a Kindle, and yet I literally have no memory of it. I'm actually wondering whether I read a different book by accident.
Or I could have been having my Scotch phase, which was a thing.
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@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
Everyone says that "Neuromancer" is the seminal work of cyberpunk sci-fi. I tried to do it as an audiobook about 8 years ago and gave up.
Perhaps I should try again, but MOAR Bosch is so tempting, because popcorn is satisfying.
It's a great book. I find I have to read most of Gibson's stuff twice to figure out what the hell is going on. I did the same thing with Ep. 1 of The Expanse.
I'm a big fan of cyberpunk. Taking sci-fi in a different direction from Asimov, Heinlein and Clarke was a great thing to do.
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@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
@Doctor-Phibes said in What are you reading now?:
It's a great book.
Where to start? "Neuromancer?"
That's the first one in the trilogy.
For cyberpunk, I've actually found Neal Stephenson's books easier - Snowcrash is a great book.
I also enjoyed The Windup Girl, and The Waterknife, by Paolo Bacigalupi.
Obviously, Aqua's almost certainly read a lot more of this stuff than me, so he might have some suggestions...
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@Doctor-Phibes said in What are you reading now?:
@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
@Doctor-Phibes said in What are you reading now?:
It's a great book.
Where to start? "Neuromancer?"
That's the first one in the trilogy.
I'll give it another shot.
For cyberpunk, I've actually found Neal Stephenson's books easier - Snowcrash is a great book.
Vampires? Really? I tried.
I LOVED Seveneves, however. It didn't strike me as "punk," however.
I also enjoyed The Windup Girl, and The Waterknife, by Paolo Bacigalupi.
Yes. Windup Girl was fun (?) and it's on my "need to read again" list.
Obviously, Aqua's almost certainly read a lot more of this stuff than me, so he might have some suggestions...
Yeah, but he's more geeky than you and I put together.
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@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
Obviously, Aqua's almost certainly read a lot more of this stuff than me, so he might have some suggestions...
Philip K. Dick is like the O.G. of Cyberpunk. "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep" is of course the most well-known. Also a quick read.
Hardwired was good. Fun, Cyberpunk, 80s.
Infomocracy is kinda Gibsonesque, and fun to read for the ideas, but might be a little bland if you're looking for popcorn.
Altered Carbon's probably the most successful modern series in the genre, but Morgan's got another series that's pretty fun, too. Different premise, still cyberpunk. It starts with Thirteen. ("Black Man" in the U.K.)
Cyberpunk's also a big genre for graphic novels. Transmetropolitan by Warren Ellis, and the original Ghost in the Shell and Akira series are really great fun.
For movies, A Scanner Darkly is great if you don't mind rotoscoping. Gattaca is as good as people say it is. If you like 12 Monkeys, you might also like Zero Theorem, also a Gilliam movie. Dark City's pretty good but it kinda didn't age well.
Yeah, but he's more geeky than you and I put together.
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@Aqua-Letifer yeah. Dick is amazing. I've read a lot of his stuff and enjoyed it all.
Altered Carbon was a lot of fun too. A lot "weirder" than "Androids" but very engaging.
As to movies, yeah what you said. Shame about Dark City.
Now, a question: what, exactly do you mean by "cyberpunk?" How does it differ from regular sci-fi? I never really thought of Dick as being anything other than speculative sci-fi.
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@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
Now, a question: what, exactly do you mean by "cyberpunk?" How does it differ from regular sci-fi? I never really thought of Dick as being anything other than speculative sci-fi.
You can't really define cyberpunk without first defining what sci-fi was at the time. Sci-fi then dealt exclusively with astronaut-scientists going to distant galaxies, Martians, space military and interacting with aliens.
Cyberpunk was never supposed to be its own genre—its first writers didn't intend that, they just wanted to write something different. But, well, it became a genre. Generally speaking, cyberpunk:
- is set closer to our time
- is dystopian
- has elements of Gothic fiction: place is almost its own character in the story
- borrows a lot from noir in terms of scene-setting
- explores different ideas: corporate tyranny and capitalism run amok, biotech, information technology, and spy shit.
There are a shitload of books and movies that now follow this as a formula.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in What are you reading now?:
cyberpunk:
is set closer to our time
is dystopian
has elements of Gothic fiction: place is almost its own character in the story
borrows a lot from noir in terms of scene-setting
explores different ideas: corporate tyranny and capitalism run amok, biotech, information technology, and spy shit.Excellent description. Thanks. I think I get it now.
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Today was a totally "nothing" day. No appointments, no chores, no visits.
So, why not more Bosch?
I really enjoyed this one. Two stories unfold, with nice references to past history.
(Irving Irwin is a real a-hole)
The plot finds Bosch juggling two investigations: one an old cold-case murder that was reactivated by a new lead from DNA evidence, and the other the death of a politically-connected power broker in a fall from a hotel balcony.
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if you are into roman history, 750 pages, Yale University press, of very detailed analysis of the war in Judea, probably only for true "Rome" nerds.
not so expensive for an academic text.
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I go back and reread books that I like. I'm on my third or fourth reading of these:
http://www.webgriffin.com/series_corps.html
His son, William Butterworth IV, was an editor by trade and helped cowrite a few novels with his father in his dad's later years. But when you read those books and pay attention, you can notice subtle differences when the writer shifts. The father was the better writer. These are written by the father. Mr. Griffin served with X Corps in Korea, which was a combined unit of Army and Marines. Some background on the author:
http://www.webgriffin.com/authors.html
If you like popcorn reading and you like military fiction with a heavy dose of actual characters and events, I think the series is a fun read. It starts in China in the late 1930's and ends in Korea in the 1950's. Sadly, it ends on a bit of a cliffhanger and it's obvious that there should be at least two more books in the series (possibly three), but declining health and the author's eventual death cut the project a bit short. Readers of the author have been clamoring for years for the son to collaborate with another writer and finish the series. The story arc is obvious and it just needs somebody to write with the original flair and style of Mr. Griffin.
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