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-   -   What are you reading right now? (https://www.musicbanter.com/media/19733-what-you-reading-right-now.html)

GuD 09-01-2014 08:09 PM

All that said I picked this up in hopes of having sort of a "The Fvck's Goin on in that Israel Place for Dummies who Prefer Comics" kinda deal. So far decent. Art is great. It's pretty direct which I like.

https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/i...1Qci143A2H6fuA

Surell 09-01-2014 08:17 PM

goddamn Madness and Civilization and Meditations on First Philosophy and selected readings from insert existentialist author, my eyes hurt all the time

Yac 09-09-2014 12:35 AM

I almost feel ashamed posting this here, so many serious and challenging books here and what do I come with ?
http://netkabook.co.uk/image/cache/d...29-400x550.jpg
First of all, I don't know how well the Metro 2033 universe is known around the world, and to how many languages the books have been translated. I'm lucky to be Polish as we get our translations fairly quick. You might also know the world from the 2 Metro 2033 games that were released on both the PC and the consoles, post apocalyptic shooter/stealth games.
Anyway, to the book:
Dziedzictwo Przodków (The Legacy of the Ancestors) takes place in 2033, after a global nuclear war, around Kalliningrad - a now Russian, formerly German city near the Baltic coast. The region wasn't hit as hard as some, that's why there are 3 settlements in the area, all based around some old bunker system. Living underground is tough but people manage, one way or another. There are the usual toxicity/ratiation issues, there is a living space shortage, there is no shortage of military equipment though ;) Even if some is in very bad shape. At the same time, there are rumors of a secret underground Nazi city with tunnels and an underground railroad that spans the entire area.
This period of relative peace is broken with the arrival of an unidentified amphibious assault ship with a clearly hostile and somewhat familiar crew (yes, they are nazis).

The above might sound silly, and well.. it is :D No more than most other post apocalyptic scenarios imo, and I've read quite a few. This book won't change your life or give you many philosophical questions, but it will entertain you. 450 or so pages of war, survival and exploration. Add to that a bag of myths and legends about the area (Germans really had extensive underground installations there, including a railway that was used by armored trains during the defense against the red army), almost no mentioning of current politics (and it's somewhat hairy here between Poland and Russia in case you don't know) and some interesting plot twists and here you go.

So far I read 7 Metro novels and the original ones were the weakest. The beauty of this world is that there are over 30 authors using it, you can find very different styles and plots here.

jackhammer 09-29-2014 06:32 PM

https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/i...OBCDiwZN6m_35U

A product of it's time (1971) so it's not politically correct in parts but there is some fascinating dialogue.

Blarobbarg 09-29-2014 08:46 PM

Just finished On The Road. Goddamn that book rocked my socks. So ****ing good.

Now I'm onto Jack Kerouac's good friend, William S. Burroughs' famous landmark, Naked Lunch. can't say I'm surprised, but this **** is warped as hell. I'm gonna get through it, but it may take me awhile... because I'm not able to stomach it just any time of the day.

Also, I picked up a collected works of TS Elliot months ago, and I'm finally getting somewhere with it. Just finished his famous (and borderline incomprehensible) poem The Waste Land. Now I'm onto a bunch of essays on "the art of criticism" and poetry. It's good stuff, if a bit dry.

GuD 09-29-2014 09:07 PM

I remember reading the Wasteland in an English class and spending the whole time wondering how the guy had nothing better to do than write something so boringly vague.

Frownland 09-29-2014 09:33 PM

Lovesong of J. Alfred Prufrock 4 lyfe.

Blarobbarg 09-29-2014 10:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WhateverDude (Post 1492180)
I remember reading the Wasteland in an English class and spending the whole time wondering how the guy had nothing better to do than write something so boringly vague.

I legitimately loved certain parts of it. Snippets of the work hit me like a ton of bricks and left me wanting more. Unfortunately, "more" was usually dull as a box of bricks.

Mondo Bungle 09-30-2014 08:27 PM

http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1405420745l/7669.jpg

I haven't read anything in a long time, gonna start this in a little bit.

The Batlord 09-30-2014 09:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mondo Bungle (Post 1492360)
http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1405420745l/7669.jpg

I haven't read anything in a long time, gonna start this in a little bit.

Like most Michael Crichton books, it's great until he's done explaining all the science ****, then you're just left with a cliched thriller. Most overrated author ever.


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