Chaos Reading discussion

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It's all about you > What are you reading right now?

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message 2101: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 33 comments I recently read one of the most enjoyable and interesting biographies it has ever been my privilege to encounter: Cleopatra: A Life by Stacy Schiff - 4★s.

Here is my review:

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 2102: by Richard (new)

Richard The Book of Strange New Things - just finished. Starts beautifully then goes nowhere agonisingly slowly. Irrespective of the authors own tragedy this book is simply mundane

The Girl with All the Gifts - just started this. Feels a little quick and glib at the mo but it's engaging


message 2103: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 33 comments I just finished Child 44.

BTW Richard, TGWATG is great.


message 2104: by Whitney (new)

Whitney | 1363 comments Mod
I've had a few people tell me that they loved The Girl With All the Gifts. Let us know what you think when you finish it, Richard.


message 2105: by Ruby , Mistress of Chaos (new)

Ruby  Tombstone Lives! (rubytombstone) | 3260 comments Mod
For what it's worth, I loved The Girl with All the Gifts,.
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 2106: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 33 comments Since we are sharing reviews here is mine for TGWATG

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 2107: by Marc (new)

Marc (monkeelino) | 667 comments Mod
I've only started to read the first one of these three, but I picked up two brand newish hard covers and one used paperback at the thrift store for a total of $4.00:
- When I Was a Child I Read Books
- The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making
- An Abundance of Katherines


message 2108: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 33 comments I want to know about your second pick. Good score BTW!


message 2109: by Marc (new)

Marc (monkeelino) | 667 comments Mod
Jennifer wrote: "I want to know about your second pick. Good score BTW!"

I'll try not to be lazy and post an actual review :)
(BTW--this group introduced me to Catherynne M. Valente!)


message 2110: by Jon (new)

Jon Adcock Pam wrote: Now I'm working my way through The Man in the High Castle. I'm a big PKD fan, so I'm pretty sure I'll enjoy this book. Muchly.
"


Same here. I love PKD and that's a great alternative history novel. So far, I've read these PKD novels:

Martian Time Slip
The Clans of the Alphane Moon
The Man In the High Castle
A Scanner Darkly
Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said
Dr Bloodmoney
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep
Selected Stories (a great anthology of most of his major short stories)


message 2111: by Jon (new)

Jon Adcock Currently reading The Quiet American by Graham Greene. set in Vietnam during the conflict between the French and the Viet Minh


message 2112: by Whitney (new)

Whitney | 1363 comments Mod
Jon wrote: "Currently reading The Quiet American by Graham Greene. set in Vietnam during the conflict between the French and the Viet Minh"

I haven't read Greene is quite awhile, but have loved the ones I have read, especially The Comedians and The Power and The Glory. Didn't read The Quiet American, but I recall the film was pretty good. How''re you liking it?

Also a PKD fan. I think I made my way through just about all of them in high school. I'd say my favorites are A Scanner Darkly, The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, The Man in the High Castle, and Ubik. Amazon made a pilot episode of The Man in the High Castle, and will be making more of the series. Worth checking out based on the pilot.


message 2113: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Gransden (anemogram) | 17 comments Recently finished In the Country of Last Things by Paul Auster. Now onto some relatively early fantastical sci-fi with The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson - enjoying immensely.


message 2114: by Ruby , Mistress of Chaos (new)

Ruby  Tombstone Lives! (rubytombstone) | 3260 comments Mod
Whitney wrote: "Jon wrote: "Currently reading The Quiet American by Graham Greene. set in Vietnam during the conflict between the French and the Viet Minh"

I haven't read Greene is quite awhile, but ..."


I've never read Graham Greene but always wanted to, purely because I'm fascinated with hearing Americans pronounce Graham Greene.. ;P


message 2115: by Richard (new)

Richard Ruby wrote: "Whitney wrote: "Jon wrote: "Currently reading The Quiet American by Graham Greene. set in Vietnam during the conflict between the French and the Viet Minh"

I haven't read Greene is qu..."


Graham Greenes End of the Affair is just beyond brilliant! I can't recommend it and the excellent Julianne Moore movie highly enough

The Girl with All the Gifts - never quite worked for me. It was a tad too young adult with gore and the characters seemed like ikea flat packs. Not a bad read but never as soaring as Blood Music or The Day of the Triffids or even Blindness


message 2116: by Whitney (new)

Whitney | 1363 comments Mod
Richard wrote: "The Girl with All the Gifts - never quite worked for me. It was a tad too young adult with gore and the characters seemed like ikea flat packs. Not a bad read but never as soaring as Blood Music or The Day of the Triffids or even Blindness..."

Inclined to take your word here, as I loved the three books you named as counterpoints. I will also be stealing the "Ikea flat packs" line.

I have the "The End of theAffair" audiobook. It's read by Colin Firth, so I fully expect it to match the brilliance of the print and film versions.

Just finished Station Eleven, which I thought was good but ultimately disappointing. Working on a few books of short stories (I have commitment issues), Qualia Nous and Grimscribe: His Life And Works. About to start The Three-Body Problem, and listening to the second book in the Southern Reach Trilogy Authority, which is so far very different from the first book, but still pretty great.


message 2117: by Richard (last edited Mar 17, 2015 02:51PM) (new)

Richard Question re The Girl With All The Gifts - how much of it was original? It obviously uses zombies, pandemic fears, borrows slightly from John Wyndhams back catalogue - The Midwitch Cuckoos and The Chrysalids, borrows more from The Day of the Triffids. There's an overtone of 28 Days Later as well and the fungal feature of Blood Music so I was wondering quite how much the story is considered fresh. Of course this may all be coincidence but I'd be surprised if it was

I didn't mind the book says a whole but I'm not sure it would have existed without the previous works

(This isn't meant to be inflammatory)


message 2118: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 33 comments Incantation of Frida K. by the brilliant Kate Braverman affected me so deeply that it has taken me a while to process my thoughts and feelings about it enough to write a proper review, but here it is:

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Of the forty-odd reviews I've written, this one may be the one that means the most to me. This extraordinarily beautiful book still has the power to bring tears to my eyes just from thinking about it - not sad tears, grateful tears for a story so beautiful and so profoundly resonant with my own. 5★s are woefully inadequate here.


message 2119: by Leo (new)

Leo Robertson (leoxrobertson) | 297 comments Richard wrote: "I can't recommend Chasing the Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs enough. It's lucid, fascinating and incendiary."

Agreed: supreme storytelling, raises every question you have on the subject then answers it, filled with equal parts compassion and outrage!

Continuing my incendiary journalism streak with This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate, which has me reading every page through fingers over my eyes.

And hey! Here's my pals Johann and Naomi gabbin it up on both their awesome books!!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xh-oD...


message 2120: by Tracy (new)

Tracy Reilly (tracyreilly) | 143 comments Oh, Leo, that was really great, and explains a lot about the two authors' amazing ideas. Thanks for the link.


message 2121: by Richard (new)

Richard Ghostwritten - good bit it feels written for the back packer generation. I'm enjoying it but part of me feels I should be reading it on a bus in Thailand or halfway up a mountain in Nepal


message 2123: by Ruby , Mistress of Chaos (new)

Ruby  Tombstone Lives! (rubytombstone) | 3260 comments Mod
Yeah, the Denis Johnson looks amazing. Two Serious Ladies was recommended by John Waters in one of his autobiographies, and it looks wonderful!


message 2124: by Richard (new)

Richard Ghostwritten - ok I can't knit it all together but i don't mind. It was a fun and beautifully executed ride. The final 4 stories were beyond brilliant.

Well recommended! It's not Cloud Atlas but it's damned good!


message 2125: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 33 comments Richard wrote: "Question re The Girl With All The Gifts - how much of it was original? It obviously uses zombies, pandemic fears, borrows slightly from John Wyndhams back catalogue - The Midwitch Cuckoos and The ..."

I think its ok to have idea's perhaps from other books. I think it only human. Did you like it?


message 2126: by Richard (new)

Richard Jennifer wrote: "Richard wrote: "Question re The Girl With All The Gifts - how much of it was original? It obviously uses zombies, pandemic fears, borrows slightly from John Wyndhams back catalogue - The Midwitch..."

I didn't mind it but but felt a little like a greatest hits collection by a pub band rather than a new fresh idea


message 2127: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 33 comments The Lover, was a bust. Watch the movie. Almost done with Deathless.


message 2128: by Ruby , Mistress of Chaos (new)

Ruby  Tombstone Lives! (rubytombstone) | 3260 comments Mod
Richard wrote: "I didn't mind it but but felt a little like a greatest hits collection by a pub band rather than a new fresh idea ..."

That's a shame. I felt like it had a few fresh things going for it. I've only read one of Wyndham's books so far (The Day of the Triffids) and really didn't love it. Then again, the misogyny really rankled for me.

I'm currently reading Sleight for the treasure hunt, and it's definitely unique. It's a bit experimental (and a little wanky) but it's original. I'll give it that. It's growing on me as I go further into it.


message 2129: by Richard (new)

Richard Ruby wrote: "Richard wrote: "I didn't mind it but but felt a little like a greatest hits collection by a pub band rather than a new fresh idea ..."

That's a shame. I felt like it had a few fresh things going ..."


Wyndham is dated and his female characters suffer from that. It's all very tea and scones and frightfully polite but his ideas were blistering. I strongly recommend The Chrysalids if you ever fancy giving him a second go

The Truth about the Harry Quebert Affair: A Novel - odd little large french novel billed as being Twin Peaks meets Attonement. Very good this far though some translated sentences jar a little

Ghostwritten is still on my mind. I haven't had a book roll around in my head after reading this much in ages. Fascinated to hear what others think


message 2130: by [deleted user] (new)

I'm re-reading Fahrenheit 451. It's not quite as confusing as when I first tried it...but I still don't think it's my favorite classic.


message 2131: by Richard (new)

Richard The Enchanted - a death row novel by a death penalty investigator written as a dark fairy tale

60 pages into it's 230 page length and it's some of the cleanest writing Ive read in ages. Small details really set the scene and chill and the pages are beginning to melt away

Really damn good!


message 2132: by [deleted user] (last edited Apr 09, 2015 01:44PM) (new)

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... (my review)

Now I'm going to start re-reading The Forgotten Door. The first time I read it (I must have been 9 or 10 years old), it was one of my favorites. Reading the reviews, I'm not sure about this time....


message 2133: by Whitney (new)

Whitney | 1363 comments Mod
Richard wrote: "The Enchanted - a death row novel by a death penalty investigator written as a dark fairy tale

60 pages into it's 230 page length and it's some of the cleanest writing Ive read in ..."


We read that one over in "21st Century Literature". I thought it was fantastic. The pages did just melt away, which is pretty amazing considering some of the subject matter.


message 2134: by Marc (new)

Marc (monkeelino) | 667 comments Mod
I remember liking Fahrenheit 451 a good bit--wonder what I'd think now...

Just finished Station Eleven, which I found kind of "meh" and just started The Three-Body Problem (I'm a quarter of the way through it in a day where I didn't think I'd have time to do much reading if that tells you anything).


message 2136: by [deleted user] (last edited Apr 11, 2015 07:11AM) (new)

I'm reading Karen's Sleepover. When I read childish books like this, I tell myself things like:
"Get it over with."
"You can give the book away once you're done, then you'll never have to read it again!"
etc.
The reason I'm reading it at all, in case you're wondering: I own it from when I was younger, and I can't get rid of a novel--meant for 7-year-olds or not--without reading it once...my moral code can get annoying when it comes to books. EDIT: Here's my review. https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... . Unfortunately, I can't recommend this to anyone older than, say, eight.


message 2137: by [deleted user] (last edited Apr 12, 2015 06:21AM) (new)

Now I've started to read My Hairiest Adventure. It's not great literature, or even GOOD literature, but compared to the last book I read, this is amazing, if that makes sense.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 2138: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 33 comments I am reading The Dog Stars.


Olivia "So many books--so little time."" | 26 comments Currently I'm reading Hour Game by David Baldacci. So far it's been very good.


message 2140: by [deleted user] (new)

Re-reading Trapped,


message 2141: by Richard (last edited Apr 13, 2015 07:02PM) (new)

Richard The Enchanted - just wow gosh man whoa staggered amazed humbled and floored - this was just......for want of a bigger word - PERFECT

Now reading The Leftovers but any book following the enchanted is going to have a hard yard to walk


message 2142: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 33 comments Richard wrote: "The Enchanted - just wow gosh man whoa staggered amazed humbled and floored - this was just......for want of a bigger word - PERFECT

Now reading The Leftovers but a..."


I enjoyed the HBO series, The Leftovers, the book fell flat for me. I hope you like it. I looked for The Enchanted at my library today. Will have to go back.


message 2143: by Jan (new)

Jan | 62 comments Blood on SnowOh. My. Goodness. Short book only 200 pages. Read it in one evening. Wished it was longer but it is a tight well conceived book. The last scene brought tears to my eyes. The genius of Nesbo is that he makes you care about a person who kills people for a living. Oh. My. Goodness


message 2144: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 33 comments I finally finished my review of Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, a very important postcolonial novel - 4★s.

Here is my review:

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 2145: by Richard (new)

Richard Once There Was a War found a first edition paperback print of this. I love Steinbeck so I'm very much looking forward to reading it


message 2146: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 33 comments I am reading Acceptance. Have read the first two in a matter of days. Really like this trilogy.


message 2147: by Ruby , Mistress of Chaos (new)

Ruby  Tombstone Lives! (rubytombstone) | 3260 comments Mod
I'm reading Metro 2033, because sometimes sci-fi is my "chicken soup for the soul". It has been an intensely busy couple of months, so the reading is going slowly though. Also.... I totally need glasses. The type is too small on my edition, and the map at the front....I can't even.


message 2148: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 33 comments Then you begin to realize that your new prescription is no longer new and you really need to have your eyes checked yet again...and you begin to read books based on the size of print and have to mentally prepare to read a small print book. I suppose that is where e-readers come in handy.


message 2149: by [deleted user] (new)

I'm about half-way through Monster Hunter International and I am liking it. Basically the premise is - What if all those monsters in the horror movies and books were real? Most of the world doesn't believe those monsters exist, but there are a dedicated few who hunt those monsters that prey on humans.


message 2150: by Jan (new)

Jan | 62 comments just finished a trio of books by Tim Butcher Chasing the Devil: The Quest for Africa's Fighting Spirit, Blood River: A Journey to Africa's Broken Heart and The Trigger: Hunting the Assassin Who Brought the World to War I not only learned something but was entertained, intrigued and appalled. Highly recommend all three.


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