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geekhack Community => Other Geeky Stuff => Topic started by: Kavik on Fri, 04 January 2019, 13:49:02
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Since 461 days have passed since this thread (https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=80900.0 (https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=80900.0)) was updated, I figured I'd start a new topic.
Last summer, I read the F@gles (GH won't let me spell his name without censoring....) translations of both The Iliad and The Odyssey by Homer. Out of curiosity, I am currently reading the Wishbone adaptation of The Odyssey by Joanne Mattern since it is the version I read as a kid. It is a very simplified take on the story, and it leaves out a lot of details. It is an easy read, and it's ok for a recap of the story. I've been reading it before bed as a way to increase my sleep hygiene (instead of going to bed right after being on the computer or watching TV).
I've liked The Odyssey since I was a kid because of this book (and the Wishbone episode and videogame based on it) though I never appreciated it fully until I read an actual translation.
The Iliad was harder to understand and not as interesting. It had a good moral, but it took more analysis to grasp it, and the story relies more on other stories in Greek literature than does The Odyssey in my opinion.
I have a bunch of other Wishbone books that I never read, so I'm wondering if I should bother reading them now or just read the actual classics they are based on at this point in my life.
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only thing i read before was mangas while going to work and back. Last few years i started reading Chinese web novels, Wuxia novels. It's like love at first sight. I love reading them and very much enjoy whole world and concept. Been reading them on Wuxiaworld (https://www.wuxiaworld.com/) and i very much recommend you all if you even want to start reading chinesee fantasy stuff you can start there. Most novels are translated on daily bases and list of novels is long and for everyone's tastes.
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One of the most frightening books that I have ever encountered.
Superb and must-reading for anybody who cares about the future of America.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30011020-democracy-in-chains (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30011020-democracy-in-chains)
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Currently, mostly music magazines and a book to learn Japanese.
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Just finished this book about the North Korean seizure of a US spy ship in 1969:
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And now back to some sci-fi. This is book two of the Fractured europe series - it's pretty good so far:
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Just recently finished the original Dune series (Dune-Chapterhouse). Now reading Hunters of Dune.
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Currently rereading The Malazan Book of the Fallen,just finished Gardens of the Moon,will most likely start Deadhouse Gates this weekend.
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まんが
^-^
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The third & last of the Fractured Europe series. Pretty good Sci Fi.
[attach=1]
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The firm by John Grisham
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Freedom from Fear
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/106317.Freedom_from_Fear (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/106317.Freedom_from_Fear)
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Working through The Witcher series. Currently almost done with Lady of the Lake.
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"Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution" by Mr. Steven Levy.
I'm almost done with it! Such a fantastic read for anyone into computers (I'm a software developer myself). :)
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"Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution" by Mr. Steven Levy.
I'm almost done with it! Such a fantastic read for anyone into computers (I'm a software developer myself). :)
His writing style makes for an easy read. You'd probably also enjoy his book Crypto.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/984428.Crypto
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I read mostly sci-fi and fantasy, which I buy mostly at flea markets .. and I buy everything that I can find. (except odd books in the middle of series)
The advantages of that is part the price, but also that I get a lot of things that I wouldn't have sought out otherwise.
Right now, I am in the middle of Anne Rice's "Pandora". A 2000-year old vampire tells her origin story: about how she had grown up and become a vampire during the Roman Empire.
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Almost done with Sandworms of Dune--there are some seriously ****ed up scenes in the books that follow Dune Messiah (just a friendly warning).
The language is not the same (I guess that's normal for 2K+ years and different authors), though it is neat to get some Butlerian Jihan backstory along with a continuation of Leto II's Golden Path.
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Recently I've been obsessed with the Kingkiller Chronicles by Patrick Rothfuss, I'm reading the second book now and really digging the series. Hopefully the next book is in the horizons.
I've got Cixin Liu's Remembrance of Earth's Past trilogy's second and third book, first three books of John Scalzi's Old Man's War, Forever War by Joe Haldeman and some Brandon Sanderson on order.
Tons of stuff to read but I'm hoping to get started on Sanderson's "magnus opus" I suppose, The Stormlight Archive series when the next book drops.
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I just picked up House of Leaves. Yes I am late to the show but a YouTuber I like called Night Mind is doing a whole thing on it and I want to know what is going on.
After that, I intend on diving into "The WoW Diary", a book I backed about how World of Warcraft came to be through development by a programmer at the time.
The massive library that is "The Expanse" novel series (the very same one the show is based on) is gathering dust but on my list to finish before Summer...
I'm set! I hope.
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UFOs! OOOOhhhhh!
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Witcher - Time of Contempt (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Time-Contempt-Witcher-Andrzej-Sapkowski/dp/0575090944/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=).
I've been reading the whole series, only if I find time...
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The Wheel of Time series
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Witcher - Time of Contempt (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Time-Contempt-Witcher-Andrzej-Sapkowski/dp/0575090944/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=).
I've been reading the whole series, only if I find time...
(Attachment Link)
Great series for sure. Just has been taking me forever to get through.
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Better late than never?
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4b/Neuromancer_%28Book%29.jpg/220px-Neuromancer_%28Book%29.jpg)
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Better late than never?
I read that when it came out and was very moved by it.
I should consider a re-read now to see how it aged through multiple decades.
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It's surprising how much Gibson got right, even 30 years ago. It's also refreshing to see the origins of the cyberpunk aesthetic as we know it -- so many shows/movies today are just copying (Altered Carbon for one).
I'm moving onto Count Zero now and trying to finish the full Sprawl series soon-ish (tm)
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It's surprising how much Gibson got right, even 30 years ago. It's also refreshing to see the origins of the cyberpunk aesthetic as we know it -- so many shows/movies today are just copying (Altered Carbon for one).
I'm moving onto Count Zero now and trying to finish the full Sprawl series soon-ish (tm)
Well, it's the lightbulb situation, independently invented by many people , and Eventually we begin to see iterative, and derivative designs.
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I have just started reading "The Color of Magic" by Terry Pratchett. It's been on my list for like a decade and now that I'm able to I'm jumping into Discworld.
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I have just started reading "The Color of Magic" by Terry Pratchett. It's been on my list for like a decade and now that I'm able to I'm jumping into Discworld.
Discworld is a very deep (but funny) hole. Good luck on not reading the following book(s)... ;)
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Just started reading The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon a few days ago. Didn't get past the first paragraph before Life interruptis came for a visit. Still planning on reading it, I've heard great things about this one (it's a psychological thriller, not one of his wackier horror stories).
(https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/519ZGRFsSRL._SX305_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg)
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I'm halfway through The Lies of Locke Lamora. So far I've been really enjoying it, although somehow from the synopsis I expected a different, less gruesome story.
I really like how the book has been written, the back and forth between flashbacks and current events has been done many times but I thought it was really well executed. For example, if I were to compare it to Mark Lawrence's Red Sister, that I read recently, it's implemented in a much better and more fluid manner. I'm not much of a book critic but the dialogue in the book jumps as something that really tickles my fancy.
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Excellent
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/11958983-eisenhower-in-war-and-peace (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/11958983-eisenhower-in-war-and-peace)
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I'm currently re-reading Good Omens in anticipation of watching it on Amazon Prime.
(https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51xhIeG0zRL._SX308_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg)
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I've been reading China Marine, which is the sequel of sorts to With The Old Breed. It's not quite as interesting as the first book, but it's an easy read and it's interesting to read about a time in history not often mentioned, the occupation of China immediately after WWII.
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Am reading this thread
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Reading The Dragon Reborn (book #3) as of last night. I think I'm beyond the point of no return in The Wheel of Time series.
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I am reading "The C# Programming Language by Eric Lippert and various authors which i forget their name"
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We can talk about technical text book type books too? In that case I started reading Pro Git recently. I knew just enough version control to be dangerous--I'd like to be less dangerous.
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I am reading "The C# Programming Language by Eric Lippert and various authors which i forget their name"
Live a real dev just google it :p
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In no particular order:
Animorphs: The Encounter
Bible, NIV
A Game of Thrones (again)
Goosebumps: Say Cheese & Die!
Hamlet (No Fear Shakespeare)
An Introduction to Advanced Legal Research
Principles of Risk Management and Patient Safety
Star Wars: Dark Force Rising
Typography for Lawyers
Usagi Yojimbo Volume 28
War of the Spark: Ravnica
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Started reading Fire & Blood last week. And I love it. It's the first book I've read ( never read GoT ), and it's great. I wanted to read it just to find out everything in more detailed and compare it with the series. And also, as a part of my educational process, I read Oddysey by Homer. It's not my first time reading it, but I have to write a paper, so I decided to reread it. And this time, I understood why it was so brilliant. And I aslo found this site https://graduateway.com/odyssey-essay-topics/ (https://graduateway.com/odyssey-essay-topics/) with many different examples of that poem, which helped me not only with some writing ideas but with even better understanding. And if someone has not read it yet, I sincerely recommend doing it because it's worth it.
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Somebody should merge these 2 threads.
https://geekhack.org/index.php?action=post;topic=80900.0;last_msg=3140895 (https://geekhack.org/index.php?action=post;topic=80900.0;last_msg=3140895)
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An Immense World by Ed Yong is one of the most mesmerizing books that I have ever read. You owe it to yourself to read it.
https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/59575939 (https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/59575939)