What are you reading right now?

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I wasn't too interested on this book, the author wrote the Eragon books. However upon picking up a copy the sheer girth of the thing (it's about 800 pages long) has me intrigued. I may write a book report when I'm done.
 
Finished "The Man on the Train" yesterday.
Starting: " Rue Morgue Magazine's: Blood in Four Colors: A Graphic History of Horror Comics" (I regret this purchase), "The Power of Self-Esteem" by Nathaniel Branden, Ph.D, "Banco" by Henri Charrière (I found the prequel online and planned on reading that first)
 
The appendix has an interview between Paolini and Mr. Quality over Quantity, Brandon "in the next 5 hours we'll explore how to world-build" Sanderson
In July I went to a webinar for Science and Fantasy books and this was one of the books in the slideshow.
 
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It's my turn to recommend a book for my bi-monthly book club. Any suggestions?

So far we've done:
Mysterious Stranger by Mark Twain Metamorphosis by Kafka
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

Only requirement is that it not be too long (I think we said under 400 pages). Any genre, era, style welcome. All I would say is that everyone has suggested pretty "safe" classics so far, and while they've all been pretty good I kind of feel like choosing something a bit left-field and edgy to shake things up a bit.

Not really got any ideas at the moment. I might go with Salinger's Nine Stories (which I saw on the previous page) if nobody replies to this.
Herman Hesse's Siddharta
Ernst Junger's Eumeswil
Both solid books which I vouch for personally and you can insult me if you find them bad.
 
Recently started reading The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao. The author won a pulitzer prize and and a genius grant before being brought down by #metoo. So far it's just about an incel. Definitely interesting. I'm the kind of person that can't read a book without thinking about the author once I know about them.
 
I am reading right now American Psycho. I find the protagonist very sympathetic between the episodes of ultraviolence.

Reviving the dead Fight Club chat, I read that a week or two ago. Then, despite the mixed reviews, I got Fight Club 2 on Comixology. I'll keep the comic sperging brief: Palahniuk embraces the tropes of comics and builds a much bigger story, then blows it all up at the end to be clever and arch, except he's not. I don't think I'll read the third one.
 
I found this book - The Hidden Persuaders by Vince Packard - in my parent's conservatory. It was published in 1957, though this is a later printing. It's about the early forays by advertisers in the realm of social science and psychology - essentially the same thread of research that yielded the Orwellian practices of Facebook/Meta et al, in [current year].

I am only a few chapters in. Highlights so far are Dr Dichter's 'psycho panel' - a forum of several hundred families, living in the vicinity of his Institute for Motivational Research, whose personalities have been meticulously analysed in a bid to accurately predict their responses to different stimuli.

The other thing worth mentioning is the Szondi test where a subject is:

"shown a series of cards bearing the portraits of people and is asked to pick out of them the one person he would most like to sit beside if he were on a train trip, and the person pictured that he would least like to sit beside. What he is not told is that the people shown on the cards are all thoroughly disordered. Each suffers severely from one of eight psychiatric disorders (is homosexual, sadist, epileptic, hysterical, catatonic, paranoid, depressed, or manic). It is assumed that we will sense a rapport with some more than others, and that in choosing a riding companion we will choose the person suffering from the same emotional state that effects us mildly."​
This test, which seems to have been developed by the Hungarian, Léopold Szondi, as a means of using psychology to call people gay, was used by one advertising agency on whiskey drinkers. I am beginning to suspect that the Kiwi Farms might be a giant Szondi Test designed to corral and then categorize a vast array of Internet deviants. Null obviously works for Coca Cola.

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I start reading Ulysses by Irish writer James Joyce. I tried to read this modernist novel several times already, but the maximum reached the third chapter. This time I want to read to the end, no matter how long it takes me.
 
Finished All Tommorows. Interesting premise: First chapters have humanity colonizing the stars, and getting forcibly evolved by schizo aliens into radically different creatures. Rest of book just follows those different evolutionary paths to civilization. Some guy hyped it to me and apparently it has a subculture around it that worships it as this profound book. Dunno if the reputation is deserved, but its short and fun read. Very subversive commentary on grand narratives (dunno how people can argue its communist) and lots of fun twists.

Its really short and legally free online so I'd recommend it.
 
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Wuthering Heights.

I'm over halfway in and, wow, everyone is such an asshole. I can imagine everyone in that house having a thread here.
When I read "Wuthering Heights," all I could think about was how all the characters would be deep into social media drama if they were alive today.
 
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Guess you missed the underwear sniffing scene and the 'If you won't fuck me, I'll cry rape' scene too.
That stuff didn't really bother me. There's something about the idea of consuming someone's cold bodily fluids that I find uniquely off-putting.

I was pretty much on board until it became apparent that Oliver was meant to reciprocate Elio's obsessive attraction. After that point the book ceased to ring true and seemed more of a fantasy.
 
That stuff didn't really bother me. There's something about the idea of consuming someone's cold bodily fluids that I find uniquely off-putting.

I was pretty much on board until it became apparent that Oliver was meant to reciprocate Elio's obsessive attraction. After that point the book ceased to ring true and seemed more of a fantasy.
I plan on re-reading it as well as the sequel. But one thing that grabbed me was how nasty Oliver was to Elio. He was always an asshole. He never tried to start a friendship or act as a mentor to Elio. Plus, this took place in 1983 when the AIDS crisis was beginning to take off. He had to have known what was causing it.

Elio was also extremely toxic. His internal monologues are very revealing. Had it been Oliver sniffing his underwear it'd be seen as creepy, or if Elio was swapped to be a teenage girl.

I'm one of the few to notice how bizarre this pederast relationship is when everyone else 'literally cries' at the movie. Armie Hammer was a good choice, though. He's an IRL pervert and prick.
 
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Finished the second book of The Chronicle of the New Sun, by Gene Wolfe, and decided to take a break before reading the second half of the tetralogy with... Peace, by Gene Wolfe. After that, I have the remainder of the "Sun" books, A Borrowed Man, and Pirate Freedom on my shelves.

I may have a problem.
 
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