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  • Originally posted by bluegoose View Post

    That's the main reason why I can't read McCarthy. His dialogue is unreadable and terribly distracting to the story.
    I actually really like his style. Especially when the dialogue is in spanish.
    Ain't it like most people, I'm no different. We love to talk on things we don't know about.

    Dig your own grave, and save!

    "The only one of us who is so significant that Jeff owes us something simply because he decided to grace us with his presence is falafel." -- All-American

    "I know that you are one of the cool and 'edgy' BYU fans" -- Wally

    GIVE 'EM HELL, BRIGHAM!

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    • Originally posted by falafel View Post

      I actually really like his style. Especially when the dialogue is in spanish.
      I think of it as the cost of admission to view his art. It's always been well worth it to me but I get why it bugs others.

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      • Originally posted by bluegoose View Post

        That's the main reason why I can't read McCarthy. His dialogue is unreadable and terribly distracting to the story.
        McCarthy's novels are works of art. What you're saying is like you don't like Shakespeare because much of his works were in an invented vernacular that people didn't or don't really speak. The absence of quotation marks is like scripture or other ancient text or some chronicle of a lost people by an anonymous narrator.

        I realize some people don't read novels for art. Not all novels are very artistic.
        When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him.

        --Jonathan Swift

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        • I have 4 credits burning a hole in my audible account. Suggestions? Maybe a series?

          I'm more of a popcorn reader than learn something or super prosy reader....

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          • Originally posted by LiveCoug View Post
            I have 4 credits burning a hole in my audible account. Suggestions? Maybe a series?

            I'm more of a popcorn reader than learn something or super prosy reader....
            I have the Expanse series queued up.

            I’m right in the middle of Imaginary Friend. I think you’d like it. Very Stephen King-ish.

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            • I finally finished "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" by Richard Rhodes. One of the greatest books ever written, in my opinion. It's a classic that will withstand the ages. It covers exhaustively its primary subject matter, from the makeshift experiments tucked away in universities and institutes over a hundred years ago, to the revolutionary discoveries of the early twentieth century, still pretty much small-scale affairs, to the sudden scaling up to the atomic industrial complex, vast as multiple cities. Meanwhile, fascism moves forward and is repulsed by the West. It's dramatic and artful like a great, sprawling novel.

              But this book is about something deeper and even more transcendent than the atomic bomb, ironically. It's about why some nations succeed and others fail. And I mean succeed for better or worse--succeed in winning massive wars and creating weapons that could destroy the planet as well as increasing the standard of living and life-span of their citizens. We see that liberalism's greatest virtue is that it works. A country's liberalism is pragmatic.
              Last edited by SeattleUte; 11-07-2022, 12:59 PM.
              When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him.

              --Jonathan Swift

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              • "Piranesi" by Susanna Clark. Marketed as fantasy, but it's more of an alternative reality connected to this one. She won the Women's Fiction of the year for this.

                Quick read, finished it on a round trip flight. Very well written. Keeps you guessing until the end. I'm going to check out her first book which is also supposedly good.
                "...you pointy-headed autopsy nerd. Do you think it's possible for you to post without using words like "hilarious," "absurd," "canard," and "truther"? Your bare assertions do not make it so. Maybe your reasoning is too stunted and your vocabulary is too limited to go without these epithets."
                "You are an intemperate, unscientific poster who makes light of very serious matters.”
                - SeattleUte

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                • Originally posted by Northwestcoug View Post
                  "Piranesi" by Susanna Clark. Marketed as fantasy, but it's more of an alternative reality connected to this one. She won the Women's Fiction of the year for this.

                  Quick read, finished it on a round trip flight. Very well written. Keeps you guessing until the end. I'm going to check out her first book which is also supposedly good.
                  I really liked Piranesi. Besides being a good novel, it sent me down a cool rabbit hole learning about the artist/architect for whom the book was named. Piranesi is one of those books that I enjoyed for the feeling of angst and mystery the whole time you set foot in that world. Similar, for me, to The Invention of Morel, House of Leaves, and several works by Borges.

                  Her first novel, Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell has a cult following because she built a world that's so pleasant to be in. It's a doorstop but I was grateful for that as I enjoyed her world and wanted to stay in it as long as possible. There's a high quality, true to the book streaming adaptation from BBC that streams on Netflix.

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                  • Originally posted by SteelBlue View Post

                    I really liked Piranesi. Besides being a good novel, it sent me down a cool rabbit hole learning about the artist/architect for whom the book was named. Piranesi is one of those books that I enjoyed for the feeling of angst and mystery the whole time you set foot in that world. Similar, for me, to The Invention of Morel, House of Leaves, and several works by Borges.

                    Her first novel, Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell has a cult following because she built a world that's so pleasant to be in. It's a doorstop but I was grateful for that as I enjoyed her world and wanted to stay in it as long as possible. There's a high quality, true to the book streaming adaptation from BBC that streams on Netflix.
                    Oh I thought Piranesi was some mythological character from a labyrinth. I'll have to check that out. And thanks for the info on her first book
                    "...you pointy-headed autopsy nerd. Do you think it's possible for you to post without using words like "hilarious," "absurd," "canard," and "truther"? Your bare assertions do not make it so. Maybe your reasoning is too stunted and your vocabulary is too limited to go without these epithets."
                    "You are an intemperate, unscientific poster who makes light of very serious matters.”
                    - SeattleUte

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Northwestcoug View Post

                      Oh I thought Piranesi was some mythological character from a labyrinth. I'll have to check that out. And thanks for the info on her first book
                      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovan...tista_Piranesi

                      Admittedly it is an assumption on my part that her novel gets its name from this gent, but it seems too perfect not to be true.

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                      • Originally posted by Pelado View Post

                        This post caused me to look at Doerr's catalog. I've already read All the Light We Cannot See. Last week, I ordered a paperback copy of his debut novel, About Grace and started reading it to my daughters tonight.

                        I'm just a few short chapters in, but so far, so good.
                        Still reading About Grace. I'm glad that I was no longer reading it to my daughters when I started reading a part including some marital infidelity.
                        "I think it was King Benjamin who said 'you sorry ass shitbags who have no skills that the market values also have an obligation to have the attitude that if one day you do in fact win the PowerBall Lottery that you will then impart of your substance to those without.'"
                        - Goatnapper'96

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                        • Finally getting around to The Coddling of the American Mind. Halfway in, it's a compelling and breezy read.

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                          • A Canticle for Leibowitz. Really enjoying it so far. The first third of the book takes place in post-apocalyptic Utah.

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                            • Originally posted by SteelBlue View Post
                              A Canticle for Leibowitz. Really enjoying it so far. The first third of the book takes place in post-apocalyptic Utah.
                              so, current day?

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                              • Originally posted by BigPiney View Post

                                so, current day?
                                Ha Ha

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