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Posted

I recently finished re-reading "Slaughterhouse-Five" for the first time in 13 years. I'm pleased to say that to this reader, it has not lost a bit of its magic.

I also recently read a very enjoyable non-fiction book called "Soccernomics: Why England Loses, Why Germany and Brazil Win, and Why the U.S., Japan, Australia, Turkey--and Even Iraq--Are Destined to Become the Kings of the World's Most Popular Sport"

I just started reading "The Yiddish Policemen's Union" this afternoon.

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Posted

Not reading yet, but I'm hearing good things about Adam Haslett's new novel, UNION ATLANTIC. I loved his short-story collection (YOU ARE NOT A STRANGER HERE), so I'll probably be checking this one out as well.

Posted

My 'ol beat-up copy from '54. Some fine short stories by O. Henry, Joe Alsop, Ring Lardener, Irvin Cobb, C.S. Forester, Faulkner, Joe Hergesheimer (anyone here ever read Hergesheimer's 'Java Head'?). Includes various cover reprints spanning the decades. The March 6,1948 one by Rockwell ('Gossip') is a hoot. A great collection that you can get for a song over at Amazon. 1 cent! :crazy:

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Posted

Richard Powers: The Time Of Our Singing

How is that? I went through a lot of Powers' books, then I just got tired of all the erudition, which started to come off as know-it-allism to me.

Posted

Richard Powers: The Time Of Our Singing

How is that? I went through a lot of Powers' books, then I just got tired of all the erudition, which started to come off as know-it-allism to me.

First one of his I've tried.

So far I like it.

Erudite for sure, but the concept of this one intrigued me.

Posted

C.J. Cherryh: Serpent's Reach

I'm not sure how I missed her works before, but she writes excellent SF.

As I recall, back in the 70's, she, Joan D. Vinge, and of course Ursula K. LeGuin were considered the Big Three women SF writers.

Posted

Well, I think the main problem is that Cherryh was published mainly by DAW books, and for some reason, I had this impression of DAW as some cheap garbage publisher back in the seventies and early eighties, and so avoided their books completely. I missed out on a lot of good SF with this misguided approach; I'm trying to make up for it now.

Posted

Milestones: The Music and Times of Miles Davis by Jack Chambers. I've always liked this one, lots of information. I now have numerous books, more than I dare count, at various stages of completion, about Miles cluttering my desk and tables in my home.:blush:

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Posted

Just finished Nathalie Sarraute's TROPISMS.

Now I'm flipping through James Wagner's THE FALSE SUN RECORDINGS (for all you readers of contemporary American poetry.)

Posted

The Boys' Crusade: The American Infantry In Northwestern Europe, 1944 - 1945 by Paul Fussell. Interesting take by Fussell, trying to convey the reality of the infantryman's life in Europe. Not too many pages, just 165, but an interesting read. I might try his memoirs next.

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Posted

Well, my plans have been shot to hell, but I've still read some interesting things. I wrapped up Divided Cities. It's pretty good actually, for an academic book.

I finished Buffalo by Sidney Blair (it's been my cardio workout book).

Not to be confused with The Night Buffalo by Guillermo Arriaga, which is also on my reading list.

I've continued my detour into Soviet literature and am about 1/3 through Alexander Kaletski's Metro.

I'll probably wrap up The Burn by Vassily Aksyonov by the end of March and get back to my master plan of Mahfouz, Narayan and Nabokov.

Posted (edited)

Still reading "Brave New World". I've developed a bit of a taste for these "dystopian future" books. Over the past year I've read Burgess's "Clockwork Orange" and "1985", "1984" and a Martin Amis short story. Anyone got any other suggestions? Preferably not too sci-fi.

Edited by rdavenport
Posted (edited)

Try Edgar Pangborn's "The Judment of Eve." In some ways lighter weight than the others, but not the worse for it.

Edited by jazzbo
Posted

Still reading "Brave New World". I've developed a bit of a taste for these "dystopian future" books. Over the past year I've read Burgess's "Clockwork Orange" and "1985", "1984" and a Martin Amis short story. Anyone got any other suggestions? Preferably not too sci-fi.

I don't know how dystopian you want to go, but you might try Brian Aldiss' Greybeard, though be warned, the premise that launches the story is definitely sf. I hope.

Posted

Still reading "Brave New World". I've developed a bit of a taste for these "dystopian future" books. Over the past year I've read Burgess's "Clockwork Orange" and "1985", "1984" and a Martin Amis short story. Anyone got any other suggestions? Preferably not too sci-fi.

Here's a little list:

Ray Bradbury, Farenheit 451

Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale and Oryx and Crake

Kasuo Ishiguro, Never Let Me Go

Cormac McCarthy, The Road

Posted

Still reading "Brave New World". I've developed a bit of a taste for these "dystopian future" books. Over the past year I've read Burgess's "Clockwork Orange" and "1985", "1984" and a Martin Amis short story. Anyone got any other suggestions? Preferably not too sci-fi.

Here's a little list:

Ray Bradbury, Farenheit 451

Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale and Oryx and Crake

Kasuo Ishiguro, Never Let Me Go

Cormac McCarthy, The Road

Ta Bill. Funnily enough, a couple of days ago a colleague of my wife was telling her that he found "The Road" an almost life-changing experience.

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