What are you reading right now?

"No one here gets out alive" there's a good chance that Jim Morrison could be considered a proto lolcow. Also there's a bit in the book where Jim's wife catches him with a groupie in a motel room and when she asks him who she is he responds "a girl i'm butt fucking" after pulling the girls jewelry off and attempting to give it to his wife as a gift. Kino stuff.
 
I read Guy Debord's The Society of the Spectacle. I'd recommend reading the first two and the last two chapters. The middle is outdated Marxist theory and really has no bearing on the current day. Certain sections are vague, possibly deliberately so, and you could play around and add to them quite easily. Perfect for the lazy university student who wants a secondary source. It was not a waste of time, but Marshall McLuhan is better and meatier. Cool cover though.

91ey3YQlqLL.jpg


I also finished the Man in the High Castle whilst I was in London. I think it is Dick's best written novel, but I prefer his messier and more spiritually minded work (MINHC does feature elements of Buddhism though). Went through a few of his short stories after my nightshift. 'The Skull' stuck out to me because it was an obvious plot but still hit me in the gut.

I read Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling, but I don't have much to say on it. It was good but I have been long since aware of his arguments and they didn't have much of an expected affect. I wonder how convincing someone unaware of it would find the work. We are awash with great existentialist writing (not to say Kierkegaard only fits that label) that to be even vaguely "well-read" (read: FAGGOT) means you might know at least a few and what they talk about.

I have other books, but whatever, I thought I would share what my younger brother is reading:

713vf5m01tL.jpg


Apparently this is a good introduction to Taoism. He's 14 and asked me to look for a copy where I live and I did.

I know very little about Eastern philosophy beyond the superficial, so I wish him the best of luck with this. It seems entertaining and I may read it after him.
 
Still having trouble getting into reading, so I'm trying to read stuff that falls in my interest. Currently reading Moneyball by Michael Lewis.
 
Finished "A Renegade History of the United States" after seeing it recommended in another thread. Pretty interesting, and I've been meaning to read more history (not just the US, but any country). I'm picking up where I left off on Moby Dick rn
 
Finished "Revelations space". First half and general lore of "human" civilisation(s) I really liked. In latter half technology became magic. Finished IMO was rushed and bloated at the same time. Also had too many cliff-hanger moments. Reading 150 pages in one day was like watching an entire season of the show in one go. I'll give it 7/10. Probably will read next chapter.

Next I'll read two books at the same time: "History of Christianity: Sancitites, downfalls and reformations" and "Canticle for Leibowitz". Something for soul and something for fun. Going for an average of two books a month.
 
I'm about three-quarters finished with the Audible version of "The Keep"; for a sort-of vampire story, it's been pretty solid. I know there's an old Michael Mann film based on it but I've long heard it was infamously cut-up by studio execs, so I've actively avoided it. Still, if like me you are always on the look out for some decent monster fiction, The Keep is better than most.

Also just read the Troy Rising series by John Ringo. Pity he doesn't appear likely to finish a fourth book, as I found the first three quite interesting. The main character is something of a throw-back to the old school scifi heroes, in that he's a self-made bajillionaire and effectively one-manning Earth's fight against alien invasion by creating a space program from scratch. I'd say this is my second favorite of Ringo's series, after the Empire of Man books he collabed with David Weber.
Finished "Revelations space". First half and general lore of "human" civilisation(s) I really liked. In latter half technology became magic. Finished IMO was rushed and bloated at the same time. Also had too many cliff-hanger moments. Reading 150 pages in one day was like watching an entire season of the show in one go. I'll give it 7/10. Probably will read next chapter.
I greatly enjoyed the Revelation Space trilogy (I'm including Chasm City as part of that) but the fourth book, Absolution Gap, absolutely ruined the series for me. There are interesting ideas in AG, particularly the dead alien species with their removable limbs, but the ending is one of the most rushed, pointless things I've read in a major series before. (And I think it was ripped off in some recent movie, maybe Mortal Engines?)

But the first three books, especially the first Revelation Space and Chasm City, had a massive influence on my own science fiction writing, and are one of the few series that I can easily recall even nearly two-decades after I read them.
 
  • Like
Reactions: LurkNoMore
Why did you like it so much? I'm genuinely interested.
Hard to say exactly, part of it was my age when I first read it. It was one of the first hard science fiction universes I ever read, which made it automatically very different from most scifi I'd encountered at that point.

Ultimately, forcing characters to follow slower-than-light physics completely changes how the story can play out, and I'd never really thought how spending decades on trips between planets would preclude the formation of stellar empires or even a coherent civilization from playing out. People traveling to explore some dead planet would also by necessity have to colonize and rebuild civilization when they got there.

Though some of the science in the story is probably approaching fantasy, for the most part it remains grounded in reality and I really like the idea of exploring how advanced science applies to things like body modification and medical care, or space suits (specifically the suits in the first RS where they drop down from orbit in fusion-powered suits that make Ironman look amateur). One of my main issues with series like Star Trek is that the advanced science of the world never seems to apply to anything beyond space travel, people never use it to change their daily lives like happens in real life.

The initial premise of studying a dead alien civilization on a dead world and accidentally waking up a Lovecraftian species-destroying horror from the depths of space is just very fun. It's been used a few times now for various video games, but when I read RS it was a pretty new idea for a story setting.

And then there's the weird locations, especially Chasm City being a far-future transhuminist paradise turned rotten ruin, the Nostalgia For Infinity as a living ship ran from the brain of a frozen dying captain as it slowly rots as well, the Glitter Band rotating habitats made from discarded diamond hulls. It's a nice blending of various genres, bits of cyberpunk, horror, even some classic science fiction.
 
Kafka's Trial until the lawyer chapter has been a blast. I'm getting absolutely filtered by the 16-page wall of fictional blogposting and it's been driving me nuts. Seriously contemplating just reading a summary.

On the other hand, I've snatched these two books from a thrift store
a6a78276e94a33952e00f547984128c4305c63ba.jpg

Of all the 6 characters McBain introduces in the first chapter, he doesn't miss a mark when describing their clothes. There's even a hilarious part where the daughter of the victim is testifying, barely holding it together mind you, finding her dad's fucking hung corpse, and midway she describes what shirt/pants combination he was wearing. 10/10
51LanPkw0HL._SX314_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
 
  • Informative
Reactions: LurkNoMore
CAC0FC5E-3990-4517-ACAF-B58CC191AFC9.jpeg2AFEA7C4-E9ED-45A3-B095-ACD9935A75DE.jpeg

BLAME! is probably the best manga series of the late ‘90s, and I’m going to finish up collecting the series by the end of the month. The artwork is visceral and fantastic, and the story reminds me a lot of a mix between Blade Runner and Minority Report, but with androids and robotic parts.
 
Back