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-   -   what are you reading? (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=3180)

!@#$%! 06.21.2006 03:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toilet & Bowels
don't put words in my mouth, i defy anyone here to read some heartbreak soup stories and see that they are not below the par of whatever contemporary literature.


contemporary literature is written sloppily. pick me someone worthy of balzac. :p

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toilet & Bowels
and it's a shame you can't "persue a thought" from a drawing the same as you would be able to if you had it l i t e r a l l y s p e l t o u t t o y o u


well now that's just bad spelling. don't get cranky, you are more fun when you maintain your sarcastic detachment.

jon boy 06.21.2006 04:45 PM

i saw a poster for the film adaptation of atomized the other day. that is sure going to be interesting because the book sure is fucked up. i like the book.

Toilet & Bowels 06.21.2006 07:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!


well now that's just bad spelling. don't get cranky, you are more fun when you maintain your sarcastic detachment.


i'd just returned home from a drunken rampage when i wrote that, but i maintain the sentiment.

m^a(t)h 06.21.2006 07:17 PM

im reading Angela's Ashes for AP english

Pookie 06.22.2006 04:23 AM

 

Lurker 06.22.2006 09:04 AM

Reading 'OLd Goriot' by Balzac, had to stop for a while cause of exams, start it again soon

Gookid 06.22.2006 10:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by acousticrock87
I kind of want to read Atlas Shrugged, but I heard that it hammers the idea of Objectivism into the readers ad nauseam, because she didn't feel Fountainhead did a good job of it. Sounds like it would be a bit tedious if that's true. I've always kind of shied away from it. If I take on a book that big, I have to really want to read it.

Fountainhead turned out to be better than I thought when I read it.

Bunbury 06.22.2006 05:33 PM

white teeth

o o o 06.22.2006 06:01 PM

i just started reading "a farewell to arms" by hemingway... a friend of mine told me that when i will have finished this book, i will want to cry and quit my job immediately... is that true?
but the guy who said that is actually full of shit so for all i know he might have said that about just any book he liked, without it meaning something in particular...

LifeDistortion 06.22.2006 10:39 PM

If you want to read something depraved but mainstream you can't go wrong with Palahniuk. Other then his short story "Guts", I would read "Invisible Monsters", probobly his most depraved book.




 

luxinterior 06.23.2006 12:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by o o o
i just started reading "a farewell to arms" by hemingway... a friend of mine told me that when i will have finished this book, i will want to cry and quit my job immediately... is that true?
but the guy who said that is actually full of shit so for all i know he might have said that about just any book he liked, without it meaning something in particular...


I've only once read something that was so good/sad it made me want to die, which was a frightening thought at the time, but looking back on it, I'm just so overwhelmed by the fact that someone's writing was so real to me that I was able to feel that way at all. So, hooray for talent.

static-harmony 06.23.2006 12:25 AM

Im reading: Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham and its bringing me down.

bytheriver 06.23.2006 05:18 PM

Chomsky is too adament in his own arguments, and has a tendency to put motives where there may only be machination, he also denied the Khmer Rouge Genocide was occuring, and more recently that there was no Genocide in going on in Serbia before the NATO bombing.

But his books have a lot of information in them, and he does point out some pretty blaring hypocrisys, a lot of what he says is inarguable despite the contexts of his arguments. He's probably best used as a stepping stone into issues than as an authority of them. Fateful Triangle his account of the Israel/Palestine conflict is one of his better ones (although its long and dense)

How is he a self denying hypocrite?

For Political books I'd recommend - depending on your interests


Crimes Against Humanity - Geoffrey Robertson (one of the best books about the international human rights structures, it's critical but only of their unfulfilled potential).

What Is Al Quada - Jason Burke (calm lucid analysis)

One No Many Yesses - Paul Kingsnorth (pretty inspiring account of the myriad Social Movements internationally umbrella'd together as anti globalisation movement)

!@#$%! 06.23.2006 05:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by o o o
i just started reading "a farewell to arms" by hemingway... a friend of mine told me that when i will have finished this book, i will want to cry and quit my job immediately... is that true?
but the guy who said that is actually full of shit so for all i know he might have said that about just any book he liked, without it meaning something in particular...


farewell to arms is great and beautiful but my favorite of his is "a moveable feast". oh man. that book... you'll forever be discontent with your life after it.

HaydenAsche 06.23.2006 05:27 PM

This board.

nomadicfollower 06.23.2006 05:30 PM

Plan on wading into Atlas Shrugged tonight. Hopefully it'll catch my interest quick, or I might have to put it down for some Dostoyevsky.

!@#$%! 06.23.2006 05:32 PM

chomsky's work in linguistics is pure genius; unlike french wankers, his work has been corroborated by solid scientific evidence.

chomsky on politics is another story. feel free to agree/disagree, it's a matter of opinion.

the thing with this guy is that he's too smart for the rest of us-- i've seen him live, by the way, and the lights went off for a second, and i could swear he was glowing in the dark. i suspect he's an alien, or at least a genetically engineered mutant.

nomadicfollower 06.23.2006 05:38 PM

Maybe I should check out some of Chomsky's linguistics work...

!@#$%! 06.23.2006 05:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nomadicfollower
Plan on wading into Atlas Shrugged tonight.


gross.

cut the bullcrap & read nietzsche.

chomsky himself is rather abstruse; i recommend steve pinkert's "the language instinct" as an intro to chomskian linguistics (& the amazing discoveries it's spawned)

nomadicfollower 06.23.2006 05:44 PM

Right now I'm listening to a Chomsky lecture on language.


I guess your not an Ayn Rand fan?


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