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Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Sun Sep 04, 2016 3:26 pm
by madameskye16
A woman named Don't by Alex Bench


https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/659237

Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Thu Oct 13, 2016 5:32 am
by MReuel
The Fencing Master by Arturo Perez-Reverte, the fourth book of his I've read this year so he's quite addictive.

Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2016 5:42 am
by stephentrayner
Re-reading the "Midnight Mayor" series of books by Kate Griffin...if you love a bit of contemporary urban fantasy I would urge you to give them a go...and in Matthew Swift she has created a real everyday MC, who just happens to be a sorcerer, oh and also cohabiting with another entity. Good insight into London and its environs and the history of the city too

Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Tue Feb 28, 2017 9:52 pm
by lelik
Series about Odd Thomas by Dean Ray Koontz

Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Sat Mar 18, 2017 7:16 pm
by Murmur
Various board games' rules.

Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Mon Apr 17, 2017 2:10 am
by Anne
McCarthy Cormac - The Road, its old one, but after watching movie I start to read it :)

Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Mon Apr 17, 2017 7:27 am
by rozysmith
Right now I am reading Chetan bhagat new book "Half Girl Friend".its about a boy , name-madhav..who fall in love with a girl, but she refuse, after that what happen I will not mention here, because it cab be spoil you imagination, recently buy book online, when type online book store, so reach at infibeam.com, books store , there this book was in new row..instantly buy it, because previously also buy chetan bhagat novels.

Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2017 11:59 am
by Felipebf
I am reading this book on Social Philosophy

Solitude: In Pursuit of a Singular Life in a Crowded World

link:
https://www.amazon.com/Solitude-Pursuit ... 1250088607

Till the moment, it is good. Not a life changing book, but good and really actual.

Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Thu May 25, 2017 10:00 pm
by KindaSkolarly
Sometimes I'll read a few pieces from Roger Ebert's Book of Film. Ebert's a well-known film critic, and the book is a collection of his favorite writings about film. Maybe a couple hundred selections, from short stories and novel excerpts to newspaper columns, magazine articles, interviews, segments from biographies and so on. Tonight I learned that Daryl F. Zanuck liked to read O'Henry. He read screenplays for hours every day, but he made time to read a short story by O'Henry each night.

Anyway, there's an excerpt from Klaus Kinski's autobiography in Ebert's book. The first paragraph of Kinski's description of Werner Herzog made me laugh. Herzog was a temperamental director and Kinski was a temperamental actor. The excerpt is on wikipedia. I'll put a link to it below. Ebert's book is a good one if you like movies:

His (Herzog's) speech is clumsy, with a toadlike indolence, long winded, pedantic, choppy. The words tumble from his mouth in sentence fragments, which he holds back as much as possible, as if they were earning interest. It takes forever and a day for him to push out a clump of hardened brain snot. Then he writhes in painful ecstasy, as if he had sugar on his rotten teeth. A very slow blab machine. An obsolete model with a non-working switch — it can't be turned off unless you cut off the electric power altogether. So I'd have to smash him in the kisser. No, I'd have to knock him unconscious. But even if he were unconscious he'd keep talking. Even if his vocal cords were sliced through, he'd keep talking like a ventriloquist. Even if his throat were cut and his head were chopped off, speech balloons would still dangle from his mouth like gases emitted by internal decay.

https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Klaus_Kinski

Re: What are you currently reading?

Posted: Fri May 26, 2017 9:57 am
by Chris OConnor
Felipebf,

That's an interesting book. What is fueling your desire to read about this subject?

I agree that we're all so connected and linked but in increasingly shallow ways. The meaning of these relationships has been diluted to almost nothing.