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

BassoonPlatoon 08-14-2018 02:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 66Sexy (Post 1987043)
Ur bad at reading good.

You don’t have enough evidence or info about me to discern such a thing.

The Batlord 08-14-2018 02:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BassoonPlatoon (Post 1987105)
You don’t have enough evidence or info about me to discern such a thing.

I know you can't read beyond a single sentence.

MicShazam 08-14-2018 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BassoonPlatoon (Post 1986664)
The literal first sentence of this starts off talking about romance. No, thanks.

Quote:

Originally Posted by BassoonPlatoon (Post 1986791)
Love stories are usually pointless and take the focus away from the actual plot.

No, you got me, I am not 100% that there is one present in Catch 22, but, then, that begs the question as to why they would choose to begin the story that particular way.

If you think so, you probably need to read more stories about romance to challenge your assumptions. You just sound like a teenager who thinks romance is "only for girls".

(Even though it takes two to tango and there's barely a major literary writer in existence who hasn't written about romantic relationships in some way shape or form. Human experiences. Life, death, love, faith, etc... Major themes for a reason.)

Frownland 08-14-2018 04:24 PM

https://rateyourmusic.com/board_mess...x=m#msg7057539

OccultHawk 08-14-2018 04:29 PM

The Social Conquest of Earth - Edward O. Wilson

Psy-Fi 08-14-2018 05:23 PM

https://image.ibb.co/iRUFmU/SWaL.jpg

Just picked up a copy of this recent repress of a 60's pulp fiction classic.

This review from an Amazon customer sums it up nicely...

Quote:

Books like this were once described somewhere as so cheap that someone could read them on the bus and leave them on the seat. Well, this reprint has all the marks. The text looks like an off-center, page-number-clipping Xerox, assumedly of the original. It's full of typos, usually just annoying, but occasionally so cryptic one has to stop and decode. And, sometimes, the latter are amusing, like "arms" misprinted as "anus".
The plot is, unsurprisingly, not reflected in the cover art, which appears to depict an older lesbian in conflict with a man over a woman. The story is, instead, little more than a device to link together the sexual encounters of a young car hop named Charlene. All the characters are, of course, excessively horny, and the uncontrolled jealousy and vengefulness that plague them result in battery, abduction, ravishment, ritualized S & M, and murder. (There's even erotic torture with turkey feathers!) The descriptions are rather explicit until they dissolve into oceanic movements as metaphors for the ultimate passion.

The Batlord 08-14-2018 05:32 PM

Completely unlike my MO I've heard of those kinds of books that are all about American GI's dominating female Nazis in WW2. Have always been curious.

BassoonPlatoon 08-15-2018 12:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 66Sexy (Post 1987110)
I know you can't read beyond a single sentence.

I have no reason to, the first sentence didn't capture my interest. Newsflash: That's how reading and other entertainment work; if they capture your interest you continue, if not you move on and maybe come back to it later. Maybe if you were more engaging with other people we could discuss the book and I'd have a reason to continue. You must be an awful book club member.

Quote:

Originally Posted by MicShazam (Post 1987167)
If you think so, you probably need to read more stories about romance to challenge your assumptions. You just sound like a teenager who thinks romance is "only for girls".

(Even though it takes two to tango and there's barely a major literary writer in existence who hasn't written about romantic relationships in some way shape or form. Human experiences. Life, death, love, faith, etc... Major themes for a reason.)

That's a good suggestion, but every time I come across it in literature it feels the same. I will probably eventually give books like that another chance, but the romance angle drops them to the bottom of my to-do list. Heh, you'd be surprised how moot that argument is.

I know, that's the problem. Romance is injected into every plot for one contrived reason or another that it gets difficult to read something without losing interest. Luckily, there are a lot of books were it isn't too heavy of a focus or too distracting to where I can either skip it entirely or get through it quickly. Yeah, but the best stories usually don't follow the major themes and the cliches. An author usually sets out to tell a one of a kind story that separates itself from whats already there because it has something different to say.

The Batlord 08-15-2018 07:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BassoonPlatoon (Post 1987318)
I have no reason to, the first sentence didn't capture my interest. Newsflash: That's how reading and other entertainment work; if they capture your interest you continue, if not you move on and maybe come back to it later. Maybe if you were more engaging with other people we could discuss the book and I'd have a reason to continue. You must be an awful book club member.

Unless it was some grammar horror fanfiction I don't think I've ever heard of someone opting out after the first sentence. Sounds to me like you have some hangups.

The Batlord 08-15-2018 06:03 PM

I guess it was about the love between a WW2 bomber pilot and his fat Spanish housekeeper with lime-colored panties.


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