OS Book Club Pt II

Collapse

Recommended Videos

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • DieHardYankee26
    BING BONG
    • Feb 2008
    • 10178

    #721
    Re: OS Book Club Pt II

    Got hipped to a life hack for the ebook readers:

    So most local libraries will lend out Kindle books with a card. Someone on Reddit mentioned that there are a few huge libraries that allow you to maintain a membership even living out of state, the Brooklyn Public Library being one of them. I checked their catalog on Libby to see if they have any of the books I plan to read, they have almost all of them. $50 a year for ebook checkouts of almost every book I want to read, glorious. I can save my money on hardcover copies.
    Originally posted by G Perico
    If I ain't got it, then I gotta take it
    I can't hide who I am, baby I'm a gangster
    In the Rolls Royce, steppin' on a mink rug
    The clique just a gang of bosses that linked up

    Comment

    • DieHardYankee26
      BING BONG
      • Feb 2008
      • 10178

      #722
      Re: OS Book Club Pt II

      Something Wicked This Way Comes

      I was shocked how much I loved this book. I was worried the Halloween fantasy theme wouldn't work for me, but Bradbury is such an incredible writer I think I could read him write about anything. He's vivid in his descriptions without bogging down the narrative. Such a fun ride, I read the majority of it yesterday and was excited to be able to get back and finish it this morning. Really a great piece of writing, like Fresh said, Bradbury really takes you into the scenes. All of those quotes you posted stood out to me when reading as well. Some others:

      Spoiler


      That's probably my favorite fantasy book I've read so far, this and The Hobbit give me hope for the genre. Bradbury's writing make me excited to read the Martian Chronicles and re-read Fahrenheit 451.

      Next is my first BPL checkout, Dust Tracks on a Road by Zora Neale Hurston. I've got big expectations for this. After that, another I've got big expectations for, Sing Unburied Sing by Jesmyn Ward. Hopefully I can get those done in time for Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee during Thanksgiving week.
      Originally posted by G Perico
      If I ain't got it, then I gotta take it
      I can't hide who I am, baby I'm a gangster
      In the Rolls Royce, steppin' on a mink rug
      The clique just a gang of bosses that linked up

      Comment

      • Fresh Tendrils
        Strike Hard and Fade Away
        • Jul 2002
        • 36131

        #723
        Re: OS Book Club Pt II

        It's an instant favorite in every sense of the word and will be read every year. It's the type of book you look forward to sharing with others and reading to your kids.

        I started Anti-Intellectualism in American Life and am through the first two "introductory" parts. So far it's very dry and can be a little dense, but when he gets rolling on a topic it's fairly compelling. I'm hoping the rest of the book is more of this way since each part is a focused look through various lenses (religion, education, etc).

        I still need to read the last two Harry Potter books before the end of the year, but I want to push through Anti-Intellectualism and read Bury My Heart and Wounded Knee first.



        Comment

        • War Eagle!
          Pro
          • Mar 2010
          • 635

          #724
          Re: OS Book Club Pt II

          Just finished up Born a Crime by Trevor Noah. I enjoyed the book. Noah's story telling is inviting and exciting, he's pretty darn funny.

          The book starts with Trevor's journey through apartheid. He broke down a couple of the different classes of the system with consequences of mingling with others than your own. Hadn't studied apartheid prior to the read but as Noah described it, it was racism perfected.

          There were parallels with America present through much of the story. Things like schooling, hustling, and policing were very similar to the way things operate in America. For a while I had a misconception about Africa as a whole being somewhat uncivilized but Noah's book proved quite the contrary.

          I gained a new respect for Noah after listening to the book. The man is a hustler that's for sure and the way he built his career leaves me with nothing but respect for him. I would definitely recommend you all check it out. I grabbed the audible version which he narrates himself which I think brought even more to the book.
          PSN: FiSH_M3AT

          Comment

          • DieHardYankee26
            BING BONG
            • Feb 2008
            • 10178

            #725
            Re: OS Book Club Pt II

            Born A Crime is definitely on my list. Heard tons of praise for it. One thing that worries me is I've seen numerous times people say that the audiobook is the definitive version, that the voices he does adds to the narrative and hilarity of it all. I hope it translates decently to the page when I get to it.

            Anyway, finished Dust Tracks on a Road by Zora Neale Hurston . Where to begin...

            The foreword, by Maya Angelou, sets the stage in a strange way. It's kind of lukewarm, like Angelou is conflicted. Having read this now, I understand why. A lot can be learned from Hurston in her telling her own story but not necessarily the things that she says. Another thing is the book was edited to take certain sections out to make it more palatable, and those IMO are some of her best.

            Her background was in anthropology and folklore, studying people and the stories they tell about themselves. She mentions early on that as a kid she would create stories, adding details until they became indistinguishable from reality...an interesting trait given the way the autobiography is told. Angelou mentions that growing up in the South when she did, it is surprising to see lack of racial tension in the story.

            I think there are 2 reasons for this, one kinda pushing the other along. She mentions many times that she doesn't believe in race prejudice, that racial pride of any kind has been damaging to the world. This is hard to square with the idea that she basically spent her whole life studying a race of people. It's odd. Ellison was a strong believer in the individual, but Hurston takes it a step further than he did. Where Ellison simply saw race as something not to be judged upon, Hurston sees it as something that should be forgotten.

            As such a strong individualist, I think she believed it would take away from the power of her story if she told it from the standpoint of "Well they did this, so I had to do this." So she refocused it in a way that made her the central force.

            This leads to some strange moments as a reader. Early, she is called the n word by someone and immediately says "I knew he meant class and not my race." You're like.... Sure OK. Then later she's a little girl, and older people, almost to their amusement, are constantly asking her to read difficult passages of books. She says she has no idea why they wanted to hear it. It's like... Probably because they didn't believe what they were seeing. But I guess if you had taught yourself to forget those things, it wouldn't occur to you that things are happening because of them.

            Overall I was really conflicted through most of the book. Despite it being so well written, I found myself scratching my head at the ideology behind her opinions, trying to figure out how 2 and 2 came together to equal 5. When Coates says he was inspired by "Morrison, Baldwin, Hurston" I was a little confused. Regardless of the way she came to her way of thinking, it's a testament to the fact that people do think differently. Her fierce independence as a person played into the way she told her story, one in which she is the central character and everything that happens does so as a result of a decision or a choice that she made, and no one else. Made me sad to read about the way she ended up, as a broke maid struggling to finish her last book. Not the first talent to die mostly unheralded, but sad nonetheless.

            Having said that, it's one of the best books I think I've read this year. A great glimpse into a clearly talented mind who thinks very differently than I, it's something I can appreciate in the long run. Makes me angry (once again) that Clarence Thomas's book is not on Kindle, I'm gonna have to send someone an angry email.

            Quotes: I ended up with 75+, between the way she spoke and the things she said, just a ton to sift through.

            Spoiler


            On to the next one, Sing Unburied Sing by Jesmyn Ward. It won this year's National Book Award for Fiction and the book podcast I listened to compared her to a young Toni Morrison which is extremely high praise.
            Originally posted by G Perico
            If I ain't got it, then I gotta take it
            I can't hide who I am, baby I'm a gangster
            In the Rolls Royce, steppin' on a mink rug
            The clique just a gang of bosses that linked up

            Comment

            • Fresh Tendrils
              Strike Hard and Fade Away
              • Jul 2002
              • 36131

              #726
              Re: OS Book Club Pt II

              I started Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee this morning, but only managed to get through the introductions and first chapter. The bulk of the book focuses on the final, definitive push of Western settlement through the remnants of native tribes. As such the first chapter cruises through 350 years from Columbus to Jamestown to the continuing expansion of the mid 1800s. Already I'm making mental notes to revisit later, but the mass systematic genocide is astounding already. It's not really a matter of not knowing anymore, but a matter of confronting those facts with one's own eyes and mind.



              Comment

              • youvalss
                ******
                • Feb 2007
                • 16601

                #727
                Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                Finally finished reading Michael Jordan: The Life by Roland Lazenby. Wow, all I can say is wow. I didn't want to finish it, just wanted it to keep going and going.

                With all the negatives (some of which I knew before), I now see MJ as even greater, if that's even possible. What an amazing book, what an amazing life.
                My Specs:

                ZX Spectrum
                CPU: Z80 @ 3.5 MHz
                GPU: Monochrome display
                RAM: 48 KB
                OS: Sinclair BASIC

                Comment

                • DieHardYankee26
                  BING BONG
                  • Feb 2008
                  • 10178

                  #728
                  Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                  I read the Jordan Rules last year, but growing up to hate Jordan and also being young so I never had the impression of him being a great teammate or anything, so it didn't hit me very hard. I thought it was ok. I'd like to read a biography on him some day, I'm sure he's had quite a life.

                  Had no time to read the first 3 days this week, and now I've blown through Sing Unburied Sing by Jesmyn Ward yesterday and today. Very moving book. I get the Toni Morrison comparisons, mainly for the story. It's beautifully written for sure, and there's some incredibly poignant passages, but it's a tier under Toni Morrison in that respect (which is no insult, Toni Morrison is on the highest tier for me). It really does play out like a modern day Beloved.

                  It's set in modern day Mississippi. About a Black mother with a White boyfriend (who's parents do not approve of their relationship) and their 2 kids and their families. The boyfriend is getting out of jail and the mom, who is addicted to coke, takes the kids to pick him up. There's a lot going on. It's told from 3 points of view, the mother Leonie, her son JoJo, and a ghost of a kid who knew Leonie's father when he was younger. It's worth the read for sure.

                  Spoiler


                  It's the first fiction book released this year that I've read, but if it's the best one of the year (as the NBA said it is) then I'd say it was a pretty good year. On to Buried My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee Brown.
                  Originally posted by G Perico
                  If I ain't got it, then I gotta take it
                  I can't hide who I am, baby I'm a gangster
                  In the Rolls Royce, steppin' on a mink rug
                  The clique just a gang of bosses that linked up

                  Comment

                  • DieHardYankee26
                    BING BONG
                    • Feb 2008
                    • 10178

                    #729
                    Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                    I just binged the first 3 episodes and of The Defiant Ones on HBO and have the strongest urge to read a Tupac biography so I'm pivoting to Holler If You Hear Me (garbage title) by Michael Eric Dyson real quick, I'll come back to Bury My Heart before the end of the year.
                    Last edited by DieHardYankee26; 12-03-2017, 01:32 PM.
                    Originally posted by G Perico
                    If I ain't got it, then I gotta take it
                    I can't hide who I am, baby I'm a gangster
                    In the Rolls Royce, steppin' on a mink rug
                    The clique just a gang of bosses that linked up

                    Comment

                    • Qb
                      All Star
                      • Mar 2003
                      • 8797

                      #730
                      Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                      Haven't read anything for a while, but with the semester winding down at work and a vacation looming, I picked up The Accidental President by A.J. Baime. It covers the first four months of Harry Truman's presidency, which of course were rather eventful to say the least.

                      Comment

                      • dsallupinyaarea
                        Rookie
                        • Jan 2009
                        • 2764

                        #731
                        Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                        Truman post made me remember.



                        Nixonland: The Rise of a President and the Fracturing of America


                        Recently finished this on a flight. Given current events, it's an eerie, almost predictive text.


                        It's long, it's dry but that's kind of my speed.
                        Last edited by dsallupinyaarea; 12-04-2017, 12:42 PM.
                        NFL - Vikings

                        twitter - @dsallupinyaarea
                        psn - dsallupinyaarea8
                        xbox - dsallupinyoarea

                        Comment

                        • Fresh Tendrils
                          Strike Hard and Fade Away
                          • Jul 2002
                          • 36131

                          #732
                          Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                          Originally posted by DieHardYankee26
                          Finished Anti-Intellectualism. Oh man, such a relief. Great, great book but not fun to read at all. I went on Amazon to see what else he's written and I think I'll end up reading more of his stuff, especially The American Political Tradition, which is a book of essays that follows changes in political thought through all the presidents.

                          Part V - Education

                          Spoiler


                          Conclusion

                          Spoiler


                          Feel like I just took an American History course. Amazing book, I loved it, but it'll be a minute before I jump into something similar. On to Of Mice and Men and Huck Finn.
                          I finally finished this and I share your sentiments exactly. A great book that I'm glad I read, but also glad that I finally finished it. It's a very interesting read throughout the majority of the book, but some parts are dry and meandering. Still, all of the topics are well structured and I found enough interest in all of them to read somewhat leisurely. Surprisingly the most interesting topic he covered was following the intellectual thread in Religion from the time of the Puritans to the 18th and 19th centuries.

                          Much is made of the Puritans somewhat strict views of society, but their adherence to and importance stressed upon intellect and learning was completely new to me. They're responsible for the structure of intellectual communities and colleges in the beginning of the country. Very interesting to read. For me the rest of the book wasn't nearly as interesting, but that speaks more to subverting a learned view of the Puritans from 12 years of history classes and not being familiar with the history of the remaining topics of the book.

                          With this being written in the 1960s after the conclusion of McCarthyism it's interesting to see some of these aspects of business, politics, and education repeated in various cycles. Some of these topics still have the same problems that were developed in some cases over 100 years ago. Even the "in-fighting" of intellectuals as they struggle between mass acceptance and voluntary alienation and individualism continues to this day.

                          Overall a great read and something I'm glad to have read. It's an interesting perspective on American history and one that I would easily recommend to any history buff or anyone looking to pinpoint problems of a modern "stupid" society.



                          Comment

                          • DieHardYankee26
                            BING BONG
                            • Feb 2008
                            • 10178

                            #733
                            Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                            Truman's actually the first president I ever really knew anything about. My dad was on the USS Truman for a while so his name was always familiar, I did a project on him in 3rd grade. I still remember FDR was 32 because of Truman (33) - 1.

                            Reading the description for Nixonland it sounds interesting, but man, you weren't kidding about it being long. Goodreads says almost 900 pages. It's something to look into, the 60's are a time I want to learn a lot more about but feel like I could spend a whole year doing it.

                            Finished Holler If You Hear Me: Searching for Tupac, by Michael Eric Dyson. It's part biography, part...explanation, thesis I guess on Tupac. It's less about the "who" than it is about the "how" or "why", as in the circumstances that led to Tupac becoming the person he was. Takes a lot of the facts surrounding Pac and contextualizes his rhymes and thought process through them. I thought it was pretty cool, just seeing rap (or a rap figure) dissected in such a manner was fascinating to me. Tupac, of all rappers, kind of begs explanation as to his huge impact and Dyson gets into explaining the things that made the man who he was. Talks about his childhood, his thoughts on education, his love for reading, his love for women, his love for his mom, his tattoos, etc. This one quote basically sums it up:

                            Spoiler


                            My next fiction book will be another of the most acclaimed of the year, Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng. I was deciding between this and Pachinko by Min Jin Lee, which kinda sounds like a Korean East of Eden from the descriptions I've read. I'm going to do Bury My Heart after Little Fires Everywhere, and then decide what I want to do afterwards when I get there. I do know I want to start Infinite Jest at the top of the year. I had plans to start with something else, but I just want to get into it already.
                            Originally posted by G Perico
                            If I ain't got it, then I gotta take it
                            I can't hide who I am, baby I'm a gangster
                            In the Rolls Royce, steppin' on a mink rug
                            The clique just a gang of bosses that linked up

                            Comment

                            • DieHardYankee26
                              BING BONG
                              • Feb 2008
                              • 10178

                              #734
                              Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                              Just finished Little Fires Everywhere, by Celeste NG . Incredible book. It's hard deciding now which I prefer between this and Sing Unburied Sing. Sing Unburied Sing took place in the rural South (as opposed to the suburbs, like Little Fires did) so there were more descriptions of the environment and the scenery to set the stage. The setting in LFE is important but not because of the way it looks, moreso the way the people in the little town act.

                              It's hard to say even what it's about without spoiling too much: I'll just say it's about 2 families, one that's affluent and one that is more in the starving artist vein, and how they impact and interact with each other and change each other's perception of their own and the other family's lives. It's all about the characters, which I love. You really get the sense the people are real, with real motivations, and there's a lot of issues brought up that make you think. I'm still unsure how I feel about the resolution of the main conflict, I'll be thinking about it and the ending of this book in general for a while. Like Sing Unburied Sing, the story follows a path that kind of shows you there's only one way for this to end, but you still can't believe it as you're reading it. Just great stuff, I wanna read Celeste Ng's other book now for sure.

                              Spoiler


                              On to Bury My Heart take 2.
                              Originally posted by G Perico
                              If I ain't got it, then I gotta take it
                              I can't hide who I am, baby I'm a gangster
                              In the Rolls Royce, steppin' on a mink rug
                              The clique just a gang of bosses that linked up

                              Comment

                              • Fresh Tendrils
                                Strike Hard and Fade Away
                                • Jul 2002
                                • 36131

                                #735
                                Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                                I started up Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince yesterday and got about a third of the way through already. I'm taking Bury My Heart slowly because each chapter is fairly depressing, alarming, and basically shakes the whole foundation of American History and imperialism.



                                Comment

                                Working...