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Literature Please come visit. People get upset, write poetry about it, and post it here. Sometimes we also talk about books. |
03-22-2005, 08:27 PM
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#201
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Humboldt, Ca
Posts: 11
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oh and i forgot
how could i forget... Writhe and shine, read it constantly, Love it!
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03-23-2005, 10:05 AM
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#202
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 1,249
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I'm reading the first book of Mission Earth, The Invaders Plan by L. Ron Hubbard. Hopefully it'll be a decent book.
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03-23-2005, 06:28 PM
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#203
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Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 1,051
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Re: oh and i forgot
Quote:
Originally Posted by stonesoul1
how could i forget... Writhe and shine, read it constantly, Love it!
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I've read that- it's a pretty funny series. I'm now reading "Pet Cemetery" by Stephen King. My friend Greeny is always reading Stephen King, and he has good taste in stuff, so I thought I'd check this book out... actually, I've also read Kujo, and liked it. So here goes.
__________________
"There's straw in his brains and his clothing is stained with mice and small newts and the perfectly maimed. Don't look under his hood in the place where he stood or you'll find yourself running from the rook in the wood."
-Cinema Strange
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03-24-2005, 03:52 AM
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#204
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 104
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I finished reading Stephen King's The Dark Half three days ago, and now I'm into Jenna Jameson's How To Make Love Like A Porn Star:A Cautionary Tale which is extremely fun, and done with Neil Straus... so it pretty much resembles many other autobiographies (for example - Marilyn Manson's Long Hard Road Out Of Hell which happens to be one of my favorite books of all time).
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03-24-2005, 04:57 AM
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#205
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Join Date: May 2004
Location: Bermuda
Posts: 77
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That is such a halarious title for a book. "... A Cautionary Tale." That just adds icing to the cake. I think that is a book I would like to read.
For a while I was in a Steven King faze back in high school. For some reason my school library had practically all of his books. I would be in there every lunch period reading whatever caught my fancy. "Gerad's Game" (I believe it's called) was the craziest of his that I've read. It made me vow to myself either no s&m if I'm with a man 50+ and there is no way for me to get loose, or make sure I push the man I'm with to stay fit so that when we do s&m, he won't get a heart attack on me and leave me handcuffed to a bed to starve myself to death. *>.<*
Right now I'm rereading "The Unicorn Treasury" by Bruce Coville. It's a recent paperback reprinting of an older hardback book from the 80's. The one from the 80's was better though. It had these beautiful greyscale paintings and drawings that set such a lovely mood for the book. *sigh* I love junior fiction. So innocent and creative with splashings of dark. I have to check out that book on Faires by Brian Fraud and Alan Lee.
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03-24-2005, 03:44 PM
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#206
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 104
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Jenna's book is awesome. You should get it, if for nothing, then for the laughts. I ordered it thinkin': "hell, world's greatest porn star MUST have something interesting to say" and I wasn't mistaken.
As for Stephen King, Gerald's Game is probably my favorite among his books, but its closely followed by Misery. For some reason, I didn't like Cujo that much though...
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04-02-2005, 05:41 AM
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#207
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Join Date: May 2004
Location: Bermuda
Posts: 77
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I can understand ... Cujo was a very strange book. A lot of loose ends and that spirit entity that I could never figure out. It's been years since I've read it, but the book seems to be a parody of H.P Lovecraft's style of writing. Then again you can say that of most of King's books - takes place in a New England setting (fictional hotspot for weirdness) and involves an overwhelming sense of evil, mystery, weirdness and an ending that leaves a lot to the imagination (or just abruptly ends) for which Lovecraft is known. I guess I have to read the book agian ... perhaps I will understand it better.
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04-02-2005, 05:47 AM
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#208
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Lisboa, Portugal
Posts: 1,608
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Yup. It's always somewhere in Maine for King, isn't it?
Writhe and Shine: excellent.
I'm not into scientology, but read all of Mission Earth when I was 17 or 18 and LOVED all 10 or 11 volumes. It's narrated in 1st person by the most ghastly, morally corrupt character you'll ever see.
Hubbard's SCI-Fi books are pretty good (not Asimov, Heinlein or K.Dick good, but good nonetheless)
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Undead again...
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04-06-2005, 11:22 PM
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#209
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Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Somewhere southeast of Hell
Posts: 4
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Mob Star: The Story Of John Gotti by Gene Mustain & Jerry Capeci
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04-07-2005, 04:42 AM
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#210
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Athens, Greece
Posts: 664
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I started today Tzvetan Todorov's Introduction a la litterature fantastique, in Greek of course.
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Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.
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04-07-2005, 04:58 AM
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#211
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Athens, Greece
Posts: 664
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stonesoul1
I'm reading "Goth:Identity and Subculture" by paul hodkinson, facinatinglook at goth from various sociological perspectives by a goth sociologist,,, high recomendation
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Indeed it is a very interesting book, I own a copy.
However, you can tell it is a dissertation written by a student and his research was done solely in the UK, if I remember correctly.
On the other hand, most of Hodkinson's remarks apply to goths everywhere.
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Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.
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04-07-2005, 09:12 AM
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#212
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 2,130
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He didn't get dates in high school!!
Holy Shit!
He's Bruce Campbell!
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04-07-2005, 09:41 AM
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#213
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: a small corner of hell
Posts: 58
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The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
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04-08-2005, 03:50 AM
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#214
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: The Beautiful U.S. of A.
Posts: 1,241
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"Soviet AirLand Battle Tactics"
Supposedly they say this book was used by professors in military theory and strategy courses, but god damn - the SOB who wrote this conveys the same basic concepts over and over again (like 20% of the actual book has anything to do with tactics), relies heavily on quotes from other literary works in the area (might as well just have read one of those), and uses goofy phrasing (which essentially ends up saying extremely basic shit) and complex diagrams that hardly parallel with the reading that he probably ripped off from one of the sources he constantly cites.
Ah well... it was $5 dollars and used, so I guess I wasn't too ripped off.
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"[Brian Blair] was a punk. I can break his fucking back - break his back and make him humble and then fuck his ass ... Suplex him, put him in a camel clutch, break his back, and fuck his ass - make him humble. Teach him to respect the Iron Sheik. And I didn't do it, because for the God and Jesus, and Mr. McMahon." -Khosrow Vaziri (The Iron Sheik)
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04-08-2005, 04:36 AM
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#215
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Norway
Posts: 1,059
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Heheh... Binkie, you really are a military geek, aren't you? Hey, there's nothing wrong with that, it's just usually a preoccupation I associate with nerdy boys. I have a lot of friends like that. You know, you've got your Vietnam geek, WWII geek, Submarine geek... History + weapons and tactics often makes for interesting reading, I'll go along with that, but it's sometimes sad when you get these guys who actually dream of performing great feats in battle when they have no concept of what it's like, or even the politics of it. That's what games are for, I guess.
But I digress...
I'm just starting on Kurt Vonnegut's Timequake, which looks to be another cerebral and highly amusing book by one of my favourite authors. Inbetween that I treat myself with morbid morsels from The Complete Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe, which my clever sister recently bought for me in London.
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04-08-2005, 04:46 AM
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#216
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 3,793
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'bag of bones' by stephen king - arguably the last great work by Him.
as for 'cujo' - i read in a biography (was it an autobiography? can't remember, but the quote was his.) that he didn't remember writing 'cujo'. the entire text was laid down in a short period of time, while blitzed on whatever he was taking that night, when his addictions were at their worst - as was his anger, fear, insecurity, etc.
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"How many times can I say I'm not sorry? And how many ways can I show I don't care?" - Type O Negative
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04-08-2005, 11:25 AM
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#217
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Dublin, California
Posts: 372
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She Wakes by Jack Ketchum.
Recently I've been reading everything I can get by Laymon (any suggestions????) but Ketchum has me distracted in the BEST kind of way. I read The Lost and rushed out immediately afterward to find whatever I could by him.
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04-08-2005, 05:54 PM
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#218
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 1,249
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I'm reading Lord of the Rings again!!!
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04-08-2005, 06:06 PM
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#219
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Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Somewhere southeast of Hell
Posts: 4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by edible_eye
'bag of bones' by stephen king - arguably the last great work by Him.
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This one was great. I never got to finish it though...
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04-08-2005, 07:50 PM
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#220
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Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: I own Pitseleh!!
Posts: 3,747
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TStone
It took me two weeks, but I just finished rereading the entire Dragonriders of Pern saga. Well, until the point where her son took over. There's just been something about this series, since I first read it way back when, that I find endearing.
I <3 Ruth, he's just the best dragon ever.
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Yes he is!
I get the feeling maybe that we're the only ones reading this series?
:P
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04-08-2005, 10:55 PM
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#221
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: The Beautiful U.S. of A.
Posts: 1,241
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pitseleh
Binkie, you really are a military geek, aren't you? Hey, there's nothing wrong with that
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Nothing wrong with building pirate ships out of legos either. ;)
No, but seriously, I'm not just reading stuff like that for the hell of it. Trying to fine tune my knowledge on Soviet soldiers for a book. Besides, you never know when the topic of Soviet Military Strategy might come up in a conversation. I want to be prepared. :D
__________________
"[Brian Blair] was a punk. I can break his fucking back - break his back and make him humble and then fuck his ass ... Suplex him, put him in a camel clutch, break his back, and fuck his ass - make him humble. Teach him to respect the Iron Sheik. And I didn't do it, because for the God and Jesus, and Mr. McMahon." -Khosrow Vaziri (The Iron Sheik)
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04-09-2005, 08:29 PM
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#222
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Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 1,051
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WolfMoon
Quote:
Originally Posted by TStone
It took me two weeks, but I just finished rereading the entire Dragonriders of Pern saga. Well, until the point where her son took over. There's just been something about this series, since I first read it way back when, that I find endearing.
I <3 Ruth, he's just the best dragon ever.
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Yes he is!
I get the feeling maybe that we're the only ones reading this series?
:P
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I wanna read that now! My friends Greeny and Adam were reading those! Adam's really funny... he sits on a stool in front of my German teacer and just... stares at him... or throws his toy cow at him... I call him "Dingus Kahn" sometimes. I said "Adam, if you were a puppy, I would name you "Dingus Kahn"". My friend Kim said, "He is your puppy". I'm really sorry and really tired. Um... I'm going to read "Peter Pan".
__________________
"There's straw in his brains and his clothing is stained with mice and small newts and the perfectly maimed. Don't look under his hood in the place where he stood or you'll find yourself running from the rook in the wood."
-Cinema Strange
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04-09-2005, 08:33 PM
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#223
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Louisiana
Posts: 554
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I just finished "Pale Moon Rising" by Ginna Gray...it was good
*Soul*
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*Insert witty quote about something goth here*
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04-12-2005, 03:48 PM
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#224
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: nomad
Posts: 336
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Friedrich Duerrenmatt - A dangerous Game (die Panne)
I was really impressed.
Now, seriously, Duerrenmatt is an interesting author...black humor, somewhat kafkaesk, but still original with a fresh style-I can only suggest reading his stuff.
just in case:
http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople....e&UID=1114
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"The reason why truth is so much stranger than fiction is that there is no requirement for it to be consistent."
Mark Twain
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04-12-2005, 04:08 PM
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#225
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Lisboa, Portugal
Posts: 1,608
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Eva Luna - Isabel Allende (damn good)
Nike, baby: just IN case.
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Undead again...
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