OS Book Club Pt II

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  • DieHardYankee26
    BING BONG
    • Feb 2008
    • 10178

    #706
    Re: OS Book Club Pt II

    Finished The Bell Jar. It's a semi-autobiographical fiction novel by poet Sylvia Plath, kinda chronicles the main characters descent into madness. Another very interesting book. As someone who deals with depression, it is hard to read at times, the prose is fantastic but the detachment of the author from the main character despite the fact that the character is basically her is frightening to read, especially given the real end to Plath's story. I really loved it. It's hard enough to deal with depression in a vacuum, to have to add that on to all of the other troubles an independent woman in the 50's would face is daunting. She does an incredible job at putting the reader in her state of mind, there's so many times when you just want to jump in and tell her something. The symbolism of being trapped in a jar relating to the way it feels like madness descends and just engulfs you sometimes was very relatable.

    Spoiler


    From sadness back to anger, We Were Eight Years in Power on deck.
    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

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

      #707
      Re: OS Book Club Pt II

      Started reading Michael Jordan: The Life (by Roland Lazenby) a couple of weeks ago. What in interesting biography! I'm only about 1/6 way through (it has about 700 pages) and it's so interesting, it's a must for any MJ fan.

      I will probably have to renew (extend) the due date again and again (I don't read that fast), but I'll make it to the end of the book. It's great.


      Also, I have read almost every Paul Auster book (maybe except for the last one or two). If you are looking for those unique books that are like no others, get some of them.
      Last edited by youvalss; 10-04-2017, 02:50 PM.
      My Specs:

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

      Comment

      • War Eagle!
        Pro
        • Mar 2010
        • 635

        #708
        Re: OS Book Club Pt II

        Currently reading Emotional Intelligence by Daniel Coleman. Ive been working at it for about a month now. Not a long read but there is much to learn. I've been reflecting upon what ive read and applying it which has sparked awareness of different situations and alternative ways of handling them which have been very fruitful.

        fishin for wisdom
        PSN: FiSH_M3AT

        Comment

        • DieHardYankee26
          BING BONG
          • Feb 2008
          • 10178

          #709
          Re: OS Book Club Pt II

          Finished We Were Eight Years in Power by Ta-Nehisi Coates, a collection of essays written during the last 8 years chronicling the feelings of the last presidency. It's awesome to see the quality of Coates's prose improve over the course of the book in the essays. By the epilogue, I was just in awe. Not that we didn't know he couldn't write, but just how powerful every sentence was. Aside from the essays that had been released through the years, there's reflections on them beforehand that were newly written. He basically explains his state of mind when writing the essay, what it meant to him then and what it means now.

          My favorite of the previously released essays was probably the Epilogue. It's his newest, which as he keeps getting better means it's his best written. It's just very powerful in what he's saying and how he says it. Second would probably be the Case for Reparations, just a really well researched and interesting piece. My favorites of the new reflection essays were Notes from Year 5 and Notes from Year 7. In Year 5, he gets into how he came into his religious beliefs, which I've said before is always very interesting to me. Year 7, he talks about how great Baldwin was, and wanting to follow in the footsteps of him and the other greats. Of all the essays I've read this year, my favorite has to still be Letter to my Nephew, the one TNC used as inspiration for Between the World and Me, and Baldwin is still my favorite writer.

          Spoiler


          Great, great book. Next up, The Shining. I'll probably start Monday, but I've got the day off, so maybe Tuesday.
          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

            #710
            Re: OS Book Club Pt II

            I finished Maplecroft by Cherie Priest on Saturday. This is one of those books that would ideally take a rainy weekend to complete as I ran through the second half of the book Saturday morning.

            A rare occasion, but I am coming up with very little to say positively or negatively towards the book. It is well written and paces itself nicely. The action, by the end of the book, is enticing and rewarding. The characters are engaging enough, but most are fairly flat. There are some noticeable holes in relationships and characters that end up depending on suspension rather than development. The Lovecraftian components lend enough to be thoughtful, but the monster/monsters crowd in the shadows and reflect little of the main characters in their blind, seaglass eyes.

            Still, it was a fun read and I enjoyed the whole far more than the sum of its parts would suggest. Priest writes in an efficient way, but is not short on style as you can almost hear the flap of Lizzie Borden's dress as she swings her ax in terrible, decapitating arcs. Unraveling the mystery of the monstrous scourge alongside the characters while witnessing the transformation of another is a fun and at times grossly compelling ride.

            Overall, this is a good book for those that enjoy the Lovecraftian niche of monsters, lore, and science. While I would never stoop to call this a "guilty pleasure" reading it is clearly something for pure entertainment as it offers little for those wanting to delve in. Frankenstein this is not. Still, there is a place for the B movie monsters and this book would shine right alongside.

            -----

            Yesterday, I started Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes. I'm only about 60 pages in, but I can already tell this will end up being a favorite for this time of the year. Bradbury's poetic style is superb. He creates the nostalgic, late October atmosphere immediately. Each sentence builds upon the atmosphere until the reader is breathing in that cool, crisp October air and can hear the leaves crunch with the turn of each page.

            I will be surprised if this book lasts until the weekend.



            Comment

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

              #711
              Re: OS Book Club Pt II

              Originally posted by Fresh Tendrils

              Yesterday, I started Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes. I'm only about 60 pages in, but I can already tell this will end up being a favorite for this time of the year. Bradbury's poetic style is superb. He creates the nostalgic, late October atmosphere immediately. Each sentence builds upon the atmosphere until the reader is breathing in that cool, crisp October air and can hear the leaves crunch with the turn of each page.

              I will be surprised if this book lasts until the weekend.
              The book survived until 4PM Saturday - somehow. Part of the time was spent rereading a couple chapters and paragraphs. Not necessarily for comprehension sake, but because you can blindly throw a dart and hit on a sentence that is exquisitely, poetically written and each one asks for an instant replay. Just read these examples:
              Spoiler


              The writing itself is masterful and the narrative is the same. A coming of age tale bracketing a fight between good and evil ("Good to evil seems evil"). A story that is concurrently standing one leg in the past, the other in the present, facing the future. Bradbury writes in such a way that waxes nostalgic as he easily transports the reader back to a date-less time of innocence and naivety of maturity. He drives this nostalgia home with his poetic prose giving even the simplistic act of a falling leaf it's own impactful spotlight. Memories are powerful and Bradbury's writing strives to capture that power to great success.

              This one has quickly become a personal favorite of mine hitting me at the right time. The emotions and feelings throughout the story are powerful and drive right out from your stomach. My jealousy of nostalgia fueled my own understanding of any one's motives to advance or rewind the carousel of life. It's a nice thought. An escape from today back into yesteryear or to speed into the future where it's all figured out. Yet, as the creepy climax saunters and works itself into a jog and finally a blind sprint you reconcile the present is a present. Happiness is contentment with that present. Living arm stretched out the past while sprinting toward the future will miss you out on so much. To fight those temptations of jealousy, longing, and angst is to live.

              This one I will have to work into my rotation every October. Despite this year's more tropical October I always felt that rush of stinging, cooling, leaf-flavored air when I opened the book and turned a page. I heard the trampling of dry, sidewalk leaves into brown dust under worn out tennis shoes. The sting of sweat beading down the forehead and pool across the arms beneath shirt and jacket from running on a cool autumn evening.

              Instant favorite and Bradbury made it look so easily done.



              Comment

              • DieHardYankee26
                BING BONG
                • Feb 2008
                • 10178

                #712
                Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                Man I am struggling with this book. It's not bad, as a matter of fact it's very well written. As I sit here on Kindle page 238 in the middle of a chapter full of newspaper articles about the hotel I'm just like... Come on dude get to the story lol. So much world building, it's almost exhausting.

                I'm gonna finish it out of sheer obstinance but there's not a chance in hell I'm picking up IT.
                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

                • dsallupinyaarea
                  Rookie
                  • Jan 2009
                  • 2764

                  #713
                  Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                  The Man from the Train: The Solving of a Century-Old Serial Killer Mystery by Bill James



                  Bill James (the baseball guy) posits the theory that a string of connected murders in the late 1910s actually started all the way back in 1898. He presents his case by examining the facts of the known crimes with other home invasion homicides reported in the papers during the time. He makes a pretty compelling case and, if he is right, he's unearthed the most prolific serial killer in history.


                  It's not a particularly well written book as it's more or less an information dump. He goes off on random tangents and the timeline is disjointed. After you pick up the book's style, you sort of learn what to "skip" and it makes for a more enjoyable read. It's short and interesting so I'd recommend it once the price drops a bit.


                  I was put on to the book by this Ringer podcast with him:


                  The Ringer's Ben Lindbergh talks to author, historian, and statistician Bill James about his new true-crime book, 'The Man From the Train: The Solving of a Century-Old Serial Killer Mystery,' in which James attempts to identify…
                  NFL - Vikings

                  twitter - @dsallupinyaarea
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                  Comment

                  • DieHardYankee26
                    BING BONG
                    • Feb 2008
                    • 10178

                    #714
                    Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                    Amazon is having a 30 year anniversary sale for Kindle books, I picked up a bunch of stuff, the most expensive being $3.99:

                    Seed to Harvest (The Patternist series), Liliths Brood (Xenogenesis Trilogy), Parable of the Sower, Parable of the Talents - all by Octavia Butler
                    Slaughterhouse Five - Kurt Vonnegut
                    Dark Matter - Blake Crouch
                    Rise and Fall of the Third Reich - William Shirer
                    Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee - Dee Brown
                    The God Delusion - Richard Dawkins
                    The Art of Loving - Erich Fromm

                    The backlog grows!
                    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

                      #715
                      Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                      I haven't picked up anything since I finished Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes apart from We Were Eight Years In Power. I have The Haunting of Hill House, but no real motivation to actually grab it off the mantle and start reading it yet.

                      Nothing on the stack really speaking to me the last week or so. NBA tip-off had my attention and hype last week. Hopefully I will finished Coates this week and jump in to some kind of fiction this week before Assassin's Creed and Wolfenstein 2 drop on Friday.



                      Comment

                      • dsallupinyaarea
                        Rookie
                        • Jan 2009
                        • 2764

                        #716
                        Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                        Hillbilly Elegy

                        Good read even if I disagree with some of the author's points. A bit too much finger wagging for my taste and while the author seems to understand the advantages he had, I don't think he truly grasps how that makes his situation wholly unique from other kids in his neighborhood.


                        As a city kid through and through, this was an interesting look into a world I didn't even know existed.
                        Last edited by dsallupinyaarea; 10-24-2017, 10:24 AM.
                        NFL - Vikings

                        twitter - @dsallupinyaarea
                        psn - dsallupinyaarea8
                        xbox - dsallupinyoarea

                        Comment

                        • DieHardYankee26
                          BING BONG
                          • Feb 2008
                          • 10178

                          #717
                          Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                          I finished The Shining, I'll try not to ramble...

                          OK so this is a really good book, probably a great one. Stephen King is a great writer. Everything is basically in place, but it never came all the way together for me to say I loved it. I don't tend to like horror, or I guess I should say supernatural things, hard for me to wrap my head around. It's like "oh they're running through the hallway, they got tripped by the newly animated chair, OK". That's strike one.

                          It took me a while to read because I kept getting lost in descriptions of stuff and having to take a break. It ended up being 660 Kindle pages, I feel like it could've been done in half that. Having said that, that's a really personal gripe. I was reading on Reddit yesterday, a thread where someone said if you don't want all the whaling expertise knowledge in Moby Dick, just read the abridged version and everyone saying to do that is to lose what makes Moby Dick a classic. I feel there's a similar thing here. Stephen King has written a million stories, and has millions of fans, I'm willing to bet that a big part of what they like about him is the atmosphere that he creates, and he does that by putting you in the world. He walks you through every action, shows you what the characters see, even goes off on slight tangents on what things make them think about like no one I've ever read. I felt by the end of the book I knew the Torrance family as well as some of my own lol.

                          Spoiler


                          All that said, I liked it but didn't love it. I liked King's style, but would've preferred all of the description to be in a book with a bigger scale. It's a contained story for the most part, and by the end, the Overlook is a character of its own, which is very cool. A lot of my complaints are a result of my wanting to get through it, which I think is just not the way the book should be read. You have to really want to be in the hotel with the characters. It's something that if I had let it, given the imagery, I could've really gotten lost in. I'm going to watch the movie and see how it compares. I've seen all the "It's a great film but a terrible adaptation" takes and am interested to see how I feel. Def getting a hardcover copy to keep in the freezer. I think I'll appreciate this more reading it in the future.

                          On to Shadow and Act by my guy Ralph Ellison. I told Fresh this but I think having found essays so easy to get through for nonfiction, I should try for short stories for fiction. When I try to get into another Stephen King book, it'll be one of the short story collections or The Green Mile.
                          Last edited by DieHardYankee26; 10-24-2017, 12:05 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

                          • DieHardYankee26
                            BING BONG
                            • Feb 2008
                            • 10178

                            #718
                            Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                            Unreal timing, making my way through a Ralph Ellison book, when Variety announces Hulu is adapting another Ralph Ellison book for a TV series, my favorite book of all time, Invisible Man.



                            It's really hard for me to picture this as a series, but I'll be watching to see how they pull it off. Any press for the book is good by me, it's a masterpiece.
                            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

                              #719
                              Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                              Finished Shadow and Act, Ralph Ellison is a genius. 5/5.

                              Just on him, he's fascinating to me. Wrote Invisible Man, it was his first novel, spent the rest of his life trying to write another and never finished, he's like the black male Harper Lee. It wins the NBA, regarded as a great American work of fiction, and he never puts out another novel (though, 2 attempts have been taken at boiling down his manuscripts into a full story, I was reading reviews for the latest one, over 1100 pages, the consensus seems to be that the prose is fantastic and the premise interesting but that it doesn't go anywhere, which makes sense as he didn't finish it, I think I'll still read it eventually anyway).

                              On to this, it's a collection of some number of essays split into 3 sections, the first primarily being essays on literature, the second essays on music, and the third just about American society and what he saw deemed as "black culture".

                              Off top, he's an amazing writer. Probably tied with Baldwin now for my favorite (they're both incredible but in different ways. I look at Ellison as being the head and Baldwin the heart, they wrote about many of the same things from different angles). Someone on Reddit described Invisible Man as "like reading jazz" and I didn't really get it but I kinda do now. There's just a rhythm, or flow to the way he writes. It doesn't bog you down, very free flowing.

                              I could talk about this book, this guy, these essays for probably ever so ill just leave some quotes:

                              Spoiler


                              So yeah, incredible. He mentions The Waste Land by TS Eliot as the work that drew him to writing, so I'm adding that to my list. Also, he talked about Native Son and Black Boy by Richard Wright so I really want to get into those eventually.

                              But for now, following Fresh in reading Something Wicked This Way Comes, by Ray Bradbury.
                              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

                                #720
                                Re: OS Book Club Pt II

                                I finished We Were Eight Years in Power by Ta-Nehisi Coates this weekend. A lot of this was new to me as I started following him about the time his article The Case for Reparations came out, but it's essentially eight feature articles from the Atlantic during Obama's time as President. Between each article is a short chapter that acts as a memoir of sorts as he attempts to explain his thoughts, feelings, and writing process.

                                The topics of the book won't lend themselves to discussion here since, unfortunately, they would all lead down a road that's not in adherence to the site's TOS, but I will say Coates has always had a knack for writing unabashedly. He writes bluntly - some may feel he writes sharply like a pin to a balloon - and faces his topics squarely. As his writing progresses his topics begin to incorporate more research and knowledge. By the epilogue he is seamlessly interweaving his mind-space with background and data in a forward-moving flow.

                                After following him for several years it's amazing to see his career compressed in such a way to showcase his growth as a writer. Reading through it's a pleasure to witness this especially since it makes his growth even more obvious and consistent.



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