What Book Are You Reading? Volume 9

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Understanding Poetry - Cleanth Brooks and Robert Penn Warren. Fifty recommended it, and I'm finding it incredibly useful right now.
 
I just finished Anathem by Neal Stephenson. The first edition had been sitting on my bedside stand for years before I finally got around to reading it. It is a masterpiece that I cannot recommend enough, especially if you enjoy novels about alternate realities / science fiction. Stephenson may very well be the best American contemporary writer now that Vonnegut has died.
 
Mission of Honor by David Weber. One of his more disappointing efforts. He really needs to wrap that series up.
 
I was trying to read Red Mars again, and I got pretty damn far, but man.. why do people like this book so much? IT SUCKS.. Sure, the science is mainly good, except for the speed of colonization, which is highly unrealistic.. but the characters are 1-dimensional, and the 2 main characters?? are virtually identical in the way they think, speak, act, etc. I am giving up on this and moving onto:

Lamb: The gospel according to Biff, Christ's childhood pal
 
Kim - Kipling

So far I think I liked Patrick O'Brian/RP Russ's Hussein better. My opinion could yet change, though
 
Mission of Honor by David Weber. One of his more disappointing efforts. He really needs to wrap that series up.

I've been thinking about starting the series, as I've heard it's a space-tribute to the Horatio Hornblower novels. I'm almost done with Hornblower; I've just one more book in the series to read, Admiral Hornblower and the West Indies.
 
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. I have to wonder what the target audience was for this book. Fans of Jane Austin and George Romero? All three of us in North America? Average story largely based on Zombie jokes being imposed on period English situations and language, ie., no one recognizes a young bride's "condition" - not pregnant, but zombie-bitten and "turning".
 
Feynman Lectures on Physics, Volume III

Its about quantum mechanics and is quite confusing, especially since I'm just 13. Most of the math goes above my head. :lol:
 
Feynman Lectures on Physics, Volume III

Its about quantum mechanics and is quite confusing, especially since I'm just 13. Most of the math goes above my head. :lol:

I think it was Feynman who said that if you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don't understand quantum mechanics. ;)
 
I've been thinking about starting the series, as I've heard it's a space-tribute to the Horatio Hornblower novels. I'm almost done with Hornblower; I've just one more book in the series to read, Admiral Hornblower and the West Indies.

Most of it is interesting. But a few of the later books get bogged down.
 
Feynman Lectures on Physics, Volume III

Its about quantum mechanics and is quite confusing, especially since I'm just 13. Most of the math goes above my head. :lol:

Yeah, I don't think they were meant for 13 year olds.

But you still get an A for effort.

Did you read the first two volumes? How did you find them?

I think it was Feynman who said that if you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don't understand quantum mechanics. ;)

I remember a girl a couple of grades lower in grade school claiming she understood QM, which is the first time a ran into that, IIRC.

I suspect she didn't.
 
My serious reading is still Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution. My leisure reading was La Belle France: A History, but the library received a book I've been waiting on for nearly a year. It's a seven-day loan, so it's got my attention: Darth Bane: Dynasty of Evil. It finishes off the Darth Bane trilogy. Short, but it's keeping me interested. Once I'm done with it I'll return to La Belle and Citizens.
 
The Industrial Revolutionaries: The Making of the Modern World, 1776-1914 - Gavin Weightman
 
Whatever, by Michel Houellebecq.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Whatever-Mi...1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1280159769&sr=8-1-spell

the story of a some IT-guy completely detached from his fellow man.
almost totally devoid of any kind of empathy he struggles through a modern capitalist society alone, and, frankly, is a complete a-hole due to that, which makes the book barely readable for me, as it's style let's you very much inside the head of this protagonist.
 
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