Chaos Reading discussion
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What are you reading right now?

I loved both! Especially The Angel's Game. Interested to see what you think of it in relation to The Shadow of the Wind.

I loved both! Especially The Angel's Game. Interested to see what you thi..."
Will let you know. :) And when did the third book release? Damn, I need to hit the shops. :D

Flappers and Philosophers short story collection.
On hold Village Evenings Near Dikanka and Mirgorod also short stories.
Started Thunderbolt I've read author's previous work and I did like it. So I expect I will like this too.
Today started and didn't finish Slave Boy. Bad crap.
I ended up having to leave Embassytown in Normanton, which is a crying shame since it's the only book I've really been able to focus on since the move. But there was an emergency which resulted in me having to take 4kg of cat litter and a large tin of tuna onto a light aircraft, and there was a very strict weight limit. Long story.
I'm still reading a galley of Blood Zero Sky though, so I might try getting back into that. It has been a long few weeks, so I'm looking forward to taking the weekend off to read and relax. The unpacking can wait.
I'm still reading a galley of Blood Zero Sky though, so I might try getting back into that. It has been a long few weeks, so I'm looking forward to taking the weekend off to read and relax. The unpacking can wait.


I loved both! Especially The Angel's Game. Interested to s..."
It just recently came out, so you're not too far behind!

I'm gonna try my luck with The Marriage Artist: A Novel. I don't know anything about it - haven't read any reviews - but the cover caught my eye in the bookstore yesterday, and I think it may be just what I need. You know, a good book.

Tough call - great book or cat... but don't be such a tease!

I'm also about halfway through Expletive Deleted: A Good Look at Bad Language.
![[Name Redacted] | 139 comments](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1347082397p1/287915.jpg)
Derek wrote: "Tough call - great book or cat... but don't be such a tease! .."
The short story: My boyfriend was in charge of organising furniture delivery and the cat's flight from a hospital in Brisbane to the house in Townsville.
The long story: I had to fly back from Normanton (a remote community on the Gulf of Carpentaria) to Townsville via a small local airline with a very strict weight allowance. I unexpectedly found myself about to return to a completely empty house, with the furniture not due to arrive for 5 days. I had no bedding, no bed, no food, no cat supplies, and the shops were going to be shut by the time I arrived home. My partner's aunt lives in Townsville too, so I had asked him to see if we could borrow a swag or something- but he decided not to, as he didn't want to worry his parents while they were overseas. My cat had just had surgery, spent a week in a hospital cage, flown a considerable distance and spent a day in a carrier with no food or water. Her flight was scheduled to arrive at the same time as mine. Fearing that I would end up sleeping on the linoleum floor of a strange house, with a frightened, starving, post-operative cat with nowhere to crap, and not a blanket between us..... I left my belongings in Normanton and flew back with a suitcase full of kitty litter and cat food. Duh.
The short story: My boyfriend was in charge of organising furniture delivery and the cat's flight from a hospital in Brisbane to the house in Townsville.
The long story: I had to fly back from Normanton (a remote community on the Gulf of Carpentaria) to Townsville via a small local airline with a very strict weight allowance. I unexpectedly found myself about to return to a completely empty house, with the furniture not due to arrive for 5 days. I had no bedding, no bed, no food, no cat supplies, and the shops were going to be shut by the time I arrived home. My partner's aunt lives in Townsville too, so I had asked him to see if we could borrow a swag or something- but he decided not to, as he didn't want to worry his parents while they were overseas. My cat had just had surgery, spent a week in a hospital cage, flown a considerable distance and spent a day in a carrier with no food or water. Her flight was scheduled to arrive at the same time as mine. Fearing that I would end up sleeping on the linoleum floor of a strange house, with a frightened, starving, post-operative cat with nowhere to crap, and not a blanket between us..... I left my belongings in Normanton and flew back with a suitcase full of kitty litter and cat food. Duh.
Everyone here reads much faster than I do, and I am jealous. Not to mention almost every time someone posts here a new book gets added to my TBR or to my re-read pile. I've also mismanaged my hold queue at the library, so I have a ginourmous stack of books to get through.
I just finished Feed (which got moved up the list because of this group), started The Call: A Novel and am still reading JR along with the #occupygaddis social read. Five others in the library stack, hopefully I'll be able to renew most of them. And now I have to read the next two in the Feed series.
I just finished Feed (which got moved up the list because of this group), started The Call: A Novel and am still reading JR along with the #occupygaddis social read. Five others in the library stack, hopefully I'll be able to renew most of them. And now I have to read the next two in the Feed series.

Just downloaded What is the What

Story. Of. My. Life.
I've finally picked up Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell again after neglecting it for over a month. I'm now past the halfway point! Yeah!
Whitney wrote: "Everyone here reads much faster than I do, and I am jealous. Not to mention almost every time someone posts here a new book gets added to my TBR or to my re-read pile. I've also mismanaged my hold ..."
Hehe. Welcome to my world! I've got about 10 books in varying stages of "readness" and last night I opened a box of stuff my boyfriend packed......to find a dozen brand new books! Totally forgot I'd ordered them months ago to take away with me. So I've ditched everything else I was reading and started on Ryu Murakami's Piercing. Possibly not the best author to be reading if you're feeling in any way unstable, but whatevs.
I take it you liked Feed then?
Hehe. Welcome to my world! I've got about 10 books in varying stages of "readness" and last night I opened a box of stuff my boyfriend packed......to find a dozen brand new books! Totally forgot I'd ordered them months ago to take away with me. So I've ditched everything else I was reading and started on Ryu Murakami's Piercing. Possibly not the best author to be reading if you're feeling in any way unstable, but whatevs.
I take it you liked Feed then?
I was disappointed with Jonathan Strange after all the buzz about it. Didn't think what was there was worth all that text. I loved The Master and Margarita. There's a theater group in Seattle that did an amazing version of it, not something I would have thought possible until I saw it.
Ruby wrote: "I take it you liked Feed then? ..."
I did! I was a little disappointed in that I thought it had a potential to transcend genre tropes that it didn't quite live up to, but it was definitely good enough and had enough originality that I want to read the others. I particularly appreciated the work that went into the virology and quarantine procedures (although it's hard to imagine how anyone has any capillaries left in their hands with all the blood tests they have to get).
I did! I was a little disappointed in that I thought it had a potential to transcend genre tropes that it didn't quite live up to, but it was definitely good enough and had enough originality that I want to read the others. I particularly appreciated the work that went into the virology and quarantine procedures (although it's hard to imagine how anyone has any capillaries left in their hands with all the blood tests they have to get).
Whitney wrote: "Ruby wrote: "I take it you liked Feed then? ..."
I did! I was a little disappointed in that I thought it had a potential to transcend genre tropes that it didn't quite live up to, but it was defin..."
YES! I'm with you on all of those points. There are two Newsflesh novellas that are being rereleased as part of When Will You Rise: Stories to End the World in October. I've heard the audio version of one of them - Countdown - and if you're interested in the virology part of the story, I think you'd really enjoy it. She makes viruses sexy.
I did! I was a little disappointed in that I thought it had a potential to transcend genre tropes that it didn't quite live up to, but it was defin..."
YES! I'm with you on all of those points. There are two Newsflesh novellas that are being rereleased as part of When Will You Rise: Stories to End the World in October. I've heard the audio version of one of them - Countdown - and if you're interested in the virology part of the story, I think you'd really enjoy it. She makes viruses sexy.
Ruby wrote: "There are two Newsflesh novellas that are being rereleased as part of When Will You Rise: Stories to End the World in October..."
Gaaaargh! Weren't we just discussing the impossible size of the TBR pile????
Looks like Countdown is available for $2.99 for nook. Maybe I will reward myself with it when/if I get through all these library books.
Gaaaargh! Weren't we just discussing the impossible size of the TBR pile????
Looks like Countdown is available for $2.99 for nook. Maybe I will reward myself with it when/if I get through all these library books.

Yeah it's really good so far, the theatre group thing sounds cool, would be pretty hard considering the crazy story
Whitney wrote: "Looks like Countdown is available for $2.99 for nook. Maybe I will reward myself with it when/if I get through all these library books. ..."
Yeah - It isn't available in anything but audiobook here. Stoopid publisher. Still, the one they're releasing in October looks good.
Yeah - It isn't available in anything but audiobook here. Stoopid publisher. Still, the one they're releasing in October looks good.


I was greatly disappointed with Jonathan Strange, too. otoh, The Master and Margarita was recommended to me at the same time, and I wasn't hugely fond of it either. I can't, now, remember a single thing about either one.
Leo- I just bought that a couple of weeks ago, and I'm itching to start it. But it is HUGE! Quite the commitment to start it.

It's more like five loosely connected books put together... If I could go back and read it again (please don't make me) I would take my time with it and sandwich in a stupid book between each story, that might be an idea to break it up nicely. How are you liking Piercing?
Leo wrote: "Currently reading 2666, it's the book that never ends! It's great, but... I want it to end. The City and the City is then high priority for this group :0)"
I thought 2666 was great as well. Have you gotten to the Juarez section yet? I found that one really hard to get through (due to subject matter, not bad writing).
I thought 2666 was great as well. Have you gotten to the Juarez section yet? I found that one really hard to get through (due to subject matter, not bad writing).

Yeah I finished that story yesterday... I'm reading it in Spanish which thankfully takes a lot of the power out of the material, but I have to agree the imagery is still pretty bad.
"What is a punzón? *looks up punzón*... and he put that WHERE?!"


I'm excited to read The Savage Detectives too! Albeit after a hefty Bolaño break haha... If you liked it, 2666 might be worth a purchase, they always seem to be together on "best of Spanish language" lists :-)
Leo wrote: "It's awesome Ruby, if you read it we can get some chat on the go about it! :-)
It's more like five loosely connected books put together... If I could go back and read it again (please don't make ..."
Yeah - I think I read on the cover that his dying wish was that the sections be published separately, 12 months apart. The executors of his estate got together and vetoed that plan though! I'd love to get onto that one soon. But my second edition, remastered, full colour, hardcover copy of House of Leaves just arrived. I'm even planning on buying the companion album by the writer's sister to go with it!
It's more like five loosely connected books put together... If I could go back and read it again (please don't make ..."
Yeah - I think I read on the cover that his dying wish was that the sections be published separately, 12 months apart. The executors of his estate got together and vetoed that plan though! I'd love to get onto that one soon. But my second edition, remastered, full colour, hardcover copy of House of Leaves just arrived. I'm even planning on buying the companion album by the writer's sister to go with it!
Ruby wrote: "Yeah - I think I read on the cover that his dying wish was that the sections be published separately, 12 months apart...."
I recall that he wanted to do that to make it more profitable for his wife and kids after he died, and not necessarily out of any aesthetic sensibility. It does make you wonder if it would have sold as well if it had been published as five different books.
The Poe album is great, it's an excellent companion to House of Leaves.
I recall that he wanted to do that to make it more profitable for his wife and kids after he died, and not necessarily out of any aesthetic sensibility. It does make you wonder if it would have sold as well if it had been published as five different books.
The Poe album is great, it's an excellent companion to House of Leaves.


There you go, straight from the horse's will!
Too funny Ruby, every book I mention seems to be on your bookshelf- can't imagine what it looks like! Quite an awesome collection you are building for yourself :-)
House of Leaves is tip-top reading too. There's that companion book as well you could get (The Whalestoe Letters)- I wasn't interested, but I have to agree with Whitney about the Poe album (it's on Spotify :D)


http://io9.com/5931746/all-the-scienc...

Completely agreed. I didn't hate Divergent, but the world building was... not good. And there were plot holes you could drive a bus through.
Anette wrote: "I watched the trailer for the upcoming movie Cloud Atlas on imdb.com and thought I just had to read the book before watching the movie. I've read half of it, kind of a difficult read when english i..."
Cloud Atlas is absolutely amazing. One of my top 5 books of all time. Non-spoilery review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
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Finished The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck Companion! Still reading War in Heaven -- reading always seems to take longer on an eReader.
Riona wrote: "Anette wrote: "I watched the trailer for the upcoming movie Cloud Atlas on imdb.com and thought I just had to read the book before watching the movie. I've read half of it, kind of a difficult read when english i..."
Cloud Atlas is absolutely amazing. One of my top 5 books of all time. ..."
Seconded! Absolutely stay with it, it all ties in. I feel your pain with the English, especially in the middle Ridley Walker inspired section. The trailer for the movie makes people who have read the book leap up and yell in excitement, I haven't looked this forward to a movie in a long time.
Cloud Atlas is absolutely amazing. One of my top 5 books of all time. ..."
Seconded! Absolutely stay with it, it all ties in. I feel your pain with the English, especially in the middle Ridley Walker inspired section. The trailer for the movie makes people who have read the book leap up and yell in excitement, I haven't looked this forward to a movie in a long time.

Haha, I like that metaphor. XD It's really annoying, actually, I'm enjoying the characters, applauding the way she doesn't seem to flinch from brutalness after she's written herself there, and then... the world building and society just leaves me wanting. I just don't understand how any sane human being reached the conclusion that splitting their society into factions based on ideals would be anything other than a really bad idea. o.o

I just noticed this! I really liked The Master and Margarita, but I find it really weird when people say its their favourite book... it's still very funny and unbeatably surreal, but what does a novel satirising 1930s Russian society with a reimagining of the death of Jesus say about anyone today? I had to google what a primus was, and I've certainly never used one.
"Manuscripts don't burn."... I don't get it (Stalin oppression sez what?)
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Riona, that's a great review! I completely enjoyed this book, too. ..."
Thanks!