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What Is Everyone Reading?~~~~

I just started A Confederacy of Dunces and 30 pages in, I can tell I'm going to love it 🙂
So what is everyone reading? A new book or re-visiting an old one? Something amazing or are you struggling to finish it?

ZantiMisfit 8 Nov 4
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I just got done reading a scholarly collection of Viking mythology, it was pretty cool

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Gettin kinda lazy … so if I can find it in audiobook form, I will. At the moment, it’s “God Is Not Great” by (and read by) Christopher Hitchens - as recommended by one of us! 😀 It’s deep, disturbing, and delicious ~

Varn Level 8 Nov 4, 2018

That book is my atheist bible. Hitchens was so intelligent.

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Right now I'm reading Pirate (Tides Of Fortune Book 1)
A point of view from a seventeen year old pirate. He grows up quickly to become a leader. Very good read.

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I'm reading "Religion for Atheists", I heard a talk given by the author and he made some good points, so I got the book.

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The novel Circe, by Madeline Miller. I just read Song of Achilles and absolutely loved it. I'm tempted to read it again. Circe is just as good!

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Finshed A Confederacy of Dunces a while back and had the same reaction you did - knew from the first pages I would enjoy the story.

Just finished Bad Blood (about the Theranos fiasco); The Alienist and started Atonement while also reading Grant's Memoirs before I read Chernow's book on Grant. Also enjoying the Cadfael series of books when I want a quick read.

@Hastur was recommended by another member here. I enjoyed it very much, but am leary about reading the next in the series (Angel of Darkness) as I fear much of what made the first book so enjoyable is diminished or missing in the next.

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Albert Einstein by Walter isaacson. Really loving it. Hope someday I get davinci.

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Lol... The New Hormone Solution by Erika Schwartz MD. It's a 2017 book that refutes the Women's Health Initiative study.

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I read the Confederacy of Dunces many, many years ago. I did love it.

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I am in the middle of re-reading Astrophysics for People in a Hurry, by ; Dr. Neil DeGrasse Tyson.
Although I do have a bit of a Physics background, I pale in comparison to the majors of that field.
Neil Puts forth some complex ideas into laymens terms, and still make it interesting.
He seems to do that a lot, especially when he hosted Cosmos.

Any way, it's a good read. I highly recomend it.

@Hastur Yeah, I read about that a bit back ago.
Next to GOT, that is my most anticipated show to watch.
I still love that they still have Ann Druyan as an exeutive producer, as well as a writer.
I can't wait.

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I'm curently reading The Spaceship Next Door by Gene Doucette.

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Nothing deep but I just finished a 10 book series by dawn lee McKenna, the forgotten coast suspense series. I haven’t plowed through 10 books so fast in my life.

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Flannery O'Connor, Wise Blood. Her writing style is fantastic.

cava Level 7 Nov 4, 2018
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The Next Tsunami. It's about how they discovered that the Pacific Northwest is prone to devastating tsunamis. As I live a block from the ocean (but thankfully out of the tsunami zone) it's both fascinating and terrifying.

Remi Level 7 Nov 4, 2018

Thee reason I’m no longer in Oregon… I’d been looking into ‘sunami setbacks’ at various properties at ‘the beach,’ my father & brother live at the Oregon coast.. An informed local suggested I look into what will generate that sunami. I did 😕

@Varn yeah, I refuse to even consider a place in the tsunami zone. I think I love it too much to leave the coast though. I'm only half joking when I encourage my parents to get a place here because it's where all the climate change refugees are going to come. Doesn't get too hot here!

@Remi ...if you can handle the wind and rain.. I’d not have left my beloved Oregon if it weren’t for that impending subduction zone disaster. Though, if I still had my family's homestead ..I’d have ridden out hell & highwater. Geologic time’s a bitch when it coincides with our flickers in time. Enjoy it for me ~

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I've read A Confederacy of Dunces 3 times over the last 30 years. It tok me several tries to finally read Frankenstein because it was frequently boring. Tried numerous times to read Foucault's Pendulum before finally giving up. You need a PhD to read that book.

A book everyone should read is To Wish Upon a Star available on Amazon. Simply terrific. 😉

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I read, but it's mostly online articles or tech documents (I have masters in comp engineering). My mom sent me "Life Force, The Scientific Basis" by C. Swanson PhD, but haven't started yet.

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I am reading three books.

  1. Re-reading the Terror by Dan Simmons. Love this book.
  2. Fortress of Solitude by Jonathan Lethem, recommended by my secondary book pimp. (Yes, I have two).
  3. Raw Spirit, by Iain Banks, recommended by @Jnei.

I am pairing the first one with bourbon, the second with coffee, and the third with scotch.

Dan Simmons is great. I picked up The Fifth Heart by Dan Simmons in the bargain books at Barnes & Noble a while back. I love anything with Sherlock Holmes. Mr. Simmons did an excellent job of introducing the fiction of Holmes with the accuracy of U.S. history. It was a wonderful read.

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A Confederacy of Dunces is one of my favorite books. I reread it periodically. The first time I read it on the beach, laughing so hard I must have looked like an idiot. Right now I am reading Mother Night by Kurt Vonnegut. Seems appropriate just now.

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I'm on my second attempt with Confederacy of Dunces, this time in audio-book. The loser dude who lives with mommy is so incredibly unlikeable, I didn't get it before, and I'm not getting it this time. My BFF loves this book and so, it seems, do many of you. I'd like to get through it, please tell me it gets better. Please!!!

Sadly, As a lover of the book, I'd say it's not an acquired taste. It's all about the genius in stupidity, (and the high-brow, coffee-shop diatribes). But, I find real joy in perfectly written stupidity...in that it takes a real genius to fictionalize complete obsurdity. That's what you just may not vibe with.

I agree with shockwaverider. I had heard about the book for years and finally read it a few months ago. Ignatius was so unlikable, I didn't find the book all that funny.

@APaleBlueDot Thanks - that's very helpful. I find stupidity annoying, especially willful stupidity. It is amusing in small doses. When I read the book (vs. listened to it), I enjoyed it at first, but it didn't hold my attention for long and became a chore to read. Listening to it was worse. I realized just now that he reminds me of one of my therapy clients from my internship in counseling...

I had the same experience at first. I kept getting bogged down in the first chapter. Then one day I was lying on the beach reading Jitterbug Perfume by Tom Robbins and a college professor from New Orleans asked me how I enjoyed it and started talking about another N.O. book, A Confederacy of Dunces. So on my 3rd attempt, I fell in love with the book. And my daughter heard me laughing so much that she read it and loved it, and my (now ex) boyfriend did too. Maybe it takes a certain kind of crazy to appreciate it.

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Reading

  1. TheLord of the Rings trilogy for the umpteenth time.
  2. Homo Deus by Yuval Noah Harari
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I tried to get through that book years ago and couldn't do it. I'm about 100 pages into the Book Thief- really good so far!

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I am rereading a wonderful, hilarious book:

  1. "The Improbability of Love" by Hannah Rothschild.

Before that, I also savored from my home library, books I love:

2. "Crow Lake" by Mary Lawson.

3. "Rise and Shine" by Anna Quindlen.

This month's book club selection:

  1. "Salt To the Sea" by Ruta Sepetys. This powerful, gorgeously written exploration of a little-known WWII tragedy, the sinking of the MV Wilhelm Gustloff ship. Over 9,000 passengers died, the worst maritime disaster in history.
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I’m reading a book about young women raised in purity culture (aka no sexual anything before marriage) [amazon.com]

UUNJ Level 8 Nov 4, 2018
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Health policy and statistics. Just started a master’s program, on top of my full time job, which hasn’t left much time for recreational.... anything.

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The Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson, 400 pages in, almost 800 to go.

I love Neal Stephenson, but really had to force myself through all those books.

@jerry99 I am half way through, but I have been reading this for a month.

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