What Book Are You Reading? Volume 9

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They did. In my opinion, the changes were for the better. It's best described as a "streamlined" game, where much of the pointless and useless crap was eliminated to make room for a larger amount of fun gameplay. For instance, the Mako is gone. Environments are a lot more varied, too.

MShep voice acting is also incomparably better than the first time around.
 
Also, Martin Sheen.
 
They did. In my opinion, the changes were for the better. It's best described as a "streamlined" game, where much of the pointless and useless crap was eliminated to make room for a larger amount of fun gameplay. For instance, the Mako is gone. Environments are a lot more varied, too.

MShep voice acting is also incomparably better than the first time around.

The Mako is gone? THE MAKO IS GONE?!?! WOOOOOOOOOT!!!

I know that there were some interesting side missions in the first game, but I simply didn't bother with a lot of them, simply because I would have to use the Mako to get to them.

Anyway, that is great to hear.
 
Just finished Jack London's Iron Heel, which was quite the read once I finished the introduction. Now I'm reading both The Art of Happiness in a Troubled World and George Orwell's Homage to Catalonia.
 
The Chronoliths by Robert Charles Wilson and Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus by Orson Scott Card.
 
So I've finished Empires of the Word: A Language History of the World by Nicholas Ostler. The subtitle does make the book sound more general than it is. You won't find (as the author says himself early on) anything about the migration of the Indo-Europeans, the Bantu-speakers in Africa or the Austronesians in the Pacific, since these all occurred before the advent of writing (or at least its arrival to the region in the last case). Also, the book concerns itself with the "major" languages only, so the chapter on Greek covers its history mostly from Alexander's conquest of the Persian Empire to the fall of Constantinople centuries latter, when Greek was a major lingua franca for eastern Mediterranean.

The book's main focus is on the rise and fall of the major world languages (e.g. Sumarian, Aramaic, Greek, Chinese, Latin, Sanskrit, Portugese, English, etc.), and examines how and why these rose and fell they way the did. I found the chapter on Sanskrit to be kind of boring, but the chapter on Spanish to be really enlightening. According to the author, the first two hundred years of Spanish rule didn't really spread Spanish throughout it's colonies; but it did spread the old imperial languages of the Aztecs and the Incas as "lingua generales" for the purposes of converting the Indians. It was only with the coming of the Enlightenment to Spanish America that the use of native languages was reduced and a policy of Castilianization was introduced. I'm not sure of it's entirely correct, but it certianly intriguing and I would love to learn more about. It shows nicely how the fate of world language are quite unpredictable and influenced by many unpredictable factors.

Right now I'm reading:

* 1491 by Charles C. Mann
* The Mismeasure of Man by Steven J. Gould
 
Finished The Chronoliths, good solid 4 day read.

Starting Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife: Counterinsurgency Lessons from Malaya and Vietnam by John Nagl
 
Ellison's Invisible Man, though I probably won't get to finish it since I have a paper on it due in 9 hours and classes before that
 
Reading the Communist Manifesto for the first time. Being sick of my job and having become disgusted with what consumer culture does to people has made me curious about communism.
 
Reading the Communist Manifesto for the first time. Being sick of my job and having become disgusted with what consumer culture does to people has made me curious about communism.

I doubt you'll find it shocking: Marx's name is very much abused. There's nary a trace of Stalin or Mao to be found there.
 
I finally finished Anna Karenina yesterday. Even if the translation was wonky, it was still a pretty good book. Tolstoy, for the most part, knew what he was doing. When he wasn't putting in criticisms of then-contemporary society and symbolism. The book also dragged a bit after the first couple hundred pages, but overall still pretty worthy of its classic status. :)

I'm back to reading Dandelion Wine, with Anna Karenina done I can turn my full attention to it.
 
I just finished Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy based on the numerous raves in this forum. It lived up to expectations. I had previously read The Road which is also quite good. I strongly recommend both.
 
Just finished "Much Fall of Blood". Mercedes Lackey, Eric Flint, and Dave Freer. Not bad, but not as strong as their earlier collaborations. Which leads me to think that Freer essentially wrote this one on his own.

In the middle of "The Commanding Heights". Daniel Yergin and Joseph Stanislaw.
 
I finished Dandelion Wine by Ray Bradbury tonight. It was light, a fairly easy read. It was nice after the density of Tolstoy. The book itself is a series of loosely connected short stories vignettes that take place over the summer of a small town. Bradbury certainly succeeded at evoking the nostalgic, fantastical and magical feel he was going for of childhood.

Next on the list of things to read is Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, the edition I have includes Brave New World Revisited, too.
 
The Wreck of the Titan, by Morgan Robertson, 1898.
A prophetic work, written 14 years before the actual sinking of the Titanic. Free download from Gutenberg.org.
 
Finished Brave New World today. I really liked it, Huxley has an extremely enjoyable prose style.

The next book I'm reading is Gun, With Occasional Music by Jonathan Lethem.
 
Red Cavalry
 
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