What are you reading now?
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wrote on 4 Apr 2020, 23:32 last edited by
Hmmm?
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wrote on 4 Apr 2020, 23:39 last edited by
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wrote on 6 Apr 2020, 23:02 last edited by
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wrote on 6 Apr 2020, 23:03 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in What are you reading now?:
Geekiest response of the day.
Almost as geeky as Klaus's "Markdown" thread from this weekend.
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wrote on 6 Apr 2020, 23:06 last edited by
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wrote on 6 Apr 2020, 23:12 last edited by
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wrote on 6 Apr 2020, 23:18 last edited by
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I read that a few years ago. Some people think that it tended toward being a hit-piece directed at the docs she talks about.
I'm agnostic as to that charge. It is, nevertheless, a compelling description of what people did under the worst of circumstances.
Perhaps Jolly can comment.
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wrote on 6 Apr 2020, 23:38 last edited by
"On The Road" is a ... what's the word...touchstone book for the 1960s.
I've never read it.
Worth my time?
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"On The Road" is a ... what's the word...touchstone book for the 1960s.
I've never read it.
Worth my time?
wrote on 6 Apr 2020, 23:47 last edited by@George-K It's fun as a cultural artifact; same reason you might, say, pick up Fear and Loathing.
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"On The Road" is a ... what's the word...touchstone book for the 1960s.
I've never read it.
Worth my time?
wrote on 6 Apr 2020, 23:50 last edited by@George-K - Did you like Easy Rider or Into the Wild? If yes, then maybe yes. I did the audiobook while running. It is interesting reading about people living literally on their last dollar. It is a product of its times - people living for the experience of exploring/seeing the world, dropping out, turning on. I'll probably read some more of his work.
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@George-K - Did you like Easy Rider or Into the Wild? If yes, then maybe yes. I did the audiobook while running. It is interesting reading about people living literally on their last dollar. It is a product of its times - people living for the experience of exploring/seeing the world, dropping out, turning on. I'll probably read some more of his work.
wrote on 6 Apr 2020, 23:54 last edited by@kluurs Might I recommend Desert Solitaire and basically anything by Bukowski.
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wrote on 7 Apr 2020, 00:01 last edited by
pgp documentation.
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wrote on 7 Apr 2020, 00:44 last edited by jon-nyc 4 Jul 2020, 00:45
I was disappointed by On The Road.
I read it when I had a highly itinerant lifestyle thinking I’d relate. Frankly I thought the writing was unimpressive and the traveling and adventures rather noobish.
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wrote on 7 Apr 2020, 00:47 last edited by
Hey, Phibes...
The Gap series?
On the advice of Phibes, I persisted. I'm halfway done with the 5th and final book.
Donaldson takes a great idea, several, as a matter of fact, and stretches out to Wagnerian length. The five books total over 2600 pages of print. He spends way too much time describing how characters feel, how they are conflicted, how they worry about possible outcomes of their actions. Every time I read "Morn could feel the rage boiling within her..." I wanted to
put the book downpull my earbuds out.This could have been half the length it is and it would have been a much better, tighter tale.
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Hey, Phibes...
The Gap series?
On the advice of Phibes, I persisted. I'm halfway done with the 5th and final book.
Donaldson takes a great idea, several, as a matter of fact, and stretches out to Wagnerian length. The five books total over 2600 pages of print. He spends way too much time describing how characters feel, how they are conflicted, how they worry about possible outcomes of their actions. Every time I read "Morn could feel the rage boiling within her..." I wanted to
put the book downpull my earbuds out.This could have been half the length it is and it would have been a much better, tighter tale.
wrote on 7 Apr 2020, 01:59 last edited by@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
Donaldson takes a great idea, several, as a matter of fact, and stretches out to Wagnerian length.
It is supposed to be loosely based on the Ring Cycle
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@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
Donaldson takes a great idea, several, as a matter of fact, and stretches out to Wagnerian length.
It is supposed to be loosely based on the Ring Cycle
wrote on 7 Apr 2020, 02:00 last edited by@Doctor-Phibes said in What are you reading now?:
@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
Donaldson takes a great idea, several, as a matter of fact, and stretches out to Wagnerian length.
It is supposed to be loosely based on the Ring Cycle
And that's a justification for its length because.....
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wrote on 7 Apr 2020, 02:19 last edited by
At least it's not in German.
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At least it's not in German.
wrote on 7 Apr 2020, 02:28 last edited by@Doctor-Phibes said in What are you reading now?:
At least it's not in German.
Half-full guy you are, eh?
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wrote on 7 Apr 2020, 15:06 last edited by