TMoney Posted July 30, 2021 Report Posted July 30, 2021 (edited) The Underground Railroad - Colson Whitehead What if the Underground Railroad was actually a subterranean railroad? That is the hook that draws you in here, but it is the journey through antebellum America that really drives the narrative. This has strong vibes of The Odyssey, filtered through Cormac McCarthy. In my opinion this is/was a deserving winner of both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer for fiction. Whitehead really showed me something here. I think I'll read more of his stuff in the future. I read this ahead of diving in to the Amazon Prime series based on it. The book is brutal. I'm not sure I have the stomach to watch the series after reading the book. One of the things Whitehead does masterfully is to have asides where he will go back and show things from earlier in the book in a new light or from a different point of view. While Whitehead by no means is the first to do this, he does it so tactfully and so beautifully that it really elevates his narrative. I'll be curious how they handle that in the show, given how different the natural rhythms of reading a book are from watching a tv series. Edited July 30, 2021 by TMoney 1 1
blessingx Posted July 30, 2021 Report Posted July 30, 2021 Thanks. If you want to venture over to a third medium, Dawoud Bey: Night Coming Tenderly, Black, is another modern look at the Underground Railroad. 1
Torpedo Posted August 8, 2021 Report Posted August 8, 2021 Just finished reading this interesting article about the "complex English spelling" https://aeon.co/essays/why-is-the-english-spelling-system-so-weird-and-inconsistent 2
ktm Posted August 12, 2021 Report Posted August 12, 2021 The little green book of chairman Rahma. Very different book from Brian Herbert.
blessingx Posted November 6, 2021 Report Posted November 6, 2021 Sushi in America https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/11/05/magazine/sushi-us.html?campaign_id=52&emc=edit_ma_20211106&instance_id=44772&nl=the-new-york-times-magazine®i_id=78835134&segment_id=73747&te=1&user_id=d8e28ecb31abfc66412f87150dbdd4c4 1
blessingx Posted November 22, 2021 Report Posted November 22, 2021 The annual list is out. NYTimes 100 Notable Books of 2021. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/11/22/books/notable-books.html?referringSource=articleShare Just picked up Ishiguro’s Klara and the Sun. Need to get more. 1
TMoney Posted December 7, 2021 Report Posted December 7, 2021 Just finished the Broken Earth trilogy by N.K. Jamisin. Fabulous! Each of the three books won the Hugo award the year it came out. All three are deserving winners. I’d rank this as my second favorite sci-fi series of the last decade after the Three Body Problem books. 2 1
MoonShine Posted December 7, 2021 Report Posted December 7, 2021 I read the first one and liked it, still need to read the other 2. Also LOVED the 3BP series. Reading The Wasp Factory now. & Gravity's Rainbow. Going full immersive on the Pynchon: First I read the corresponding chapter in Weisenburger's Companion, then I read the actual chapter, then I read the online Wiki, then I listen to the chapter on audiobook, then, lastly, I look at the corresponding pages in Pictures Showing What Happens on Each Page of Thomas Pynchon's Novel Gravity's Rainbow. 1
TMoney Posted December 31, 2021 Report Posted December 31, 2021 (edited) Rex Stout - Fer-De-Lance. My first Nero Wolfe. I like it! I think I’ll for sure be coming back to Nero and Archie for some more fun mysteries in the future. - At a friend’s suggestion I did an experiment and read this while listening to music in the background. The friend mentioned that having ambient music on while reading helped their brain having something to bounce off of when they inevitably lose focus on the book. There might be something to that. It seemed to work for me. I burned through the book a lot faster than I usually do in just two evenings. Edited December 31, 2021 by TMoney 1
blessingx Posted January 4, 2022 Report Posted January 4, 2022 (edited) Started Station Eleven last night, but this morning Alex Steffen on discontinuity and the planetary crisis. https://alexsteffen.substack.com/p/discontinuity-is-the-job https://alexsteffen.substack.com/p/were-not-yet-ready-for-whats-already Learning fun new words like “transapocalyptic”. Edited January 4, 2022 by blessingx 2
TMoney Posted March 2, 2022 Report Posted March 2, 2022 Rebecca - Daphne du Maurier I saw Rebecca listed as one of the top 10 crime books on a list somewhere so I was intrigued. I’ve also seen it on lots of people’s bookshelves over the years. About halfway through I was not convinced. It felt like a gothic romance novel and I wasn’t sure where things were going. What an ending though! I loved it. It’s place among the great crime novels is well deserved. 2 1
Voltron Posted March 2, 2022 Report Posted March 2, 2022 Now watch Hitchcock's film version. Claire needs to watch it a couple of times every year, and I can join for at least one per year. 😁 1 1
TMoney Posted March 23, 2022 Report Posted March 23, 2022 Project Hail Mary - Andy Weir From the author of The Martian, this is another "science the shit out of it" book. It is extremely entertaining. If you liked either the book or movie of Martian, this one is a no-brainer. Wikipedia says the movie rights have already been snapped up. I'll be very curious how they make the movie work for reasons I won't spoil here. 3
MoonShine Posted March 23, 2022 Report Posted March 23, 2022 ^ I really enjoyed PHM. The audiobook narration is excellent. 1
Dusty Chalk Posted March 23, 2022 Report Posted March 23, 2022 Finally finished Bobiverse books 1, 2, & 3 -- excellent series, love the premise, love the variety of stories Started Gideon the Ninth -- snarky necromancers in space what's not to like? 1
MoonShine Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 Bobiverse & Project Hail Mary = same narrator (Ray Porter). 2
TMoney Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 I’ve never been able to shake the habit of subvocalization so I’ve been stuck with the same narrator for every book I’ve read. 🙃 2
Grahame Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 (edited) So you took Stephen Fry's and Jim Dale's Jobs? You Monster! Assuming you managed to aquire goods not for resale in the USA Comedian Stephen Fry Plays Not My Job On 'Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!' https://www.npr.org/transcripts/1022827299 Edited March 24, 2022 by Grahame
mikeymad Posted April 4, 2022 Report Posted April 4, 2022 (edited) Just Finished Just as you would expect some stories of tragic losses (most recent not included) and rocking. Now: Off of the internet archive https://archive.org/details/JohnRackhamAlienVirus1955/mode/1up Edit: The only problem is that it is part for of the Space Puppet series, so I am at a little disadvantage not reading the others first. Edited April 4, 2022 by mikeymad
Dusty Chalk Posted April 4, 2022 Report Posted April 4, 2022 "Tit-Bits" Science Fiction Library Spoiler This is me, getting distracted by the (deliberate?) misspelling of "Tidbits".
TMoney Posted April 14, 2022 Report Posted April 14, 2022 Endurance - Alfred Lansing I was inspired to pick this up after they found the Endurance preserved under the ice. What. A. Story. I knew the broad outlines of the Shackleton expedition, but this takes you day by day through the gauntlet. It is an incredible tale of survival that I wouldn't believe if it wasn't true. Chilled me to the bones and I can't get the smell of burning seal flesh out of my nose. Highly recommended. 3 1
robm321 Posted April 15, 2022 Report Posted April 15, 2022 I'm going to read that next. Thanks for putting it back on my radar. 1
MoonShine Posted June 2, 2022 Report Posted June 2, 2022 Enjoying it so far, although not nearly as much as A Gentleman in Moscow, which I loved. 2
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