Challenge: 50 Books discussion
2010
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Shibbie's 2010
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Shibbie
(last edited Jan 23, 2010 08:21PM)
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Jan 08, 2010 07:46AM
1. Godlike- Richard Hell an excellent book by one of my favorite punk rockers
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Shibbie wrote: "2. Brief Interviews with Hideous Men"My library has this in ebook format and I was wondering about it. How did you like it?
Connie wrote: "Shibbie wrote: "2. Brief Interviews with Hideous Men"My library has this in ebook format and I was wondering about it. How did you like it?"
Some stories were quite funny and well written... some were so pretentious and self-referential that I would rush through them... two stories were so bad I stopped reading them partway. Overall probably about 60/40 on the great/not so great split.
4. Midnight's Children - Salman Rushdie - excellently written and love love love his prose style... but plot-wise I had trouble getting into it5. Darkness at Noon- Arthur Koestler - something about this was just not appealing to me
9. A Wizard of Earthsea - Ursula K. Le GuinEnjoyable enough fantasy book, but lacked significant excitement
11. The Time Machine- H.G. Wellsmore allegorical than the Wishbone version I remember
12. Waiting for the Barbarians- J.M. Coetzee
13. Concrete Island: A Novel - J.G. Ballardthe first half was an excellent foraye into the mind of an isolated man; the second half was ridiculous
14. Collages- Anaïs Nin
a proper bookend to mr miller of last week. less libertine-y than I'd hoped.
15. Selected Declarations of Dependence - Harry MathewsI quite enjoyed his prose... when he wrote it. The idea behind this collection was just too pretentious to work perfectly. But some of it was very good.
17. Timequake- Kurt Vonnegut18. The Maltese Falcon- Dashiell Hammett
19. Tepper Isn't Going Out: A Novel- Calvin Trillin
20. The Age of Innocence- Edith Wharton21. The Handmaid's Tale- Margaret Atwood
Can't believe I've put this off as long as I have. Must find more Atwood.
Margaret Atwood is wonderful! If you haven't already, I'd definitely recommend Oryx and Crake and The Blind Assassin, which are my favourites of hers. That said, everything I've ever read of hers has been great, so I'm sure you'll be happy with whatever you choose!
22. Lady Chatterley's Lover- D.H. LawrenceIt's always interesting to see what passed for obscene back in the day. This was actually obscener than expected. But also kind of boring.
23. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader- C.S. LewisKind of a cop out, I admit. But I never did read this one as a kid. Weakest of the Narnia books? Perhaps.
25. Love in the Time of Cholera - Gabriel García Márqueznot my cup of tea
26. Death in Venice- Thomas Mann
27. Mumbo Jumbo Ishmael Reedtakes a while to figure out what is going on, but well worth sticking to
28. Sweet Smell of Success: And Other Stories - Ernest Lehman
30. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix- J.K. RowlingHaven't picked up the potter series since the fourth book came out. They are enjoyable stories and quick reads despite their length, but I can't say I get the whole mania.
32. Sex at Dawn- Christopher RyanThe case for man as a species which evolved with multimale-multifemale mating system seems pretty tight to me. An excellent and humorous exploration of human sexuality
33. Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything - Steven D. LevittI found this less interesting than I thought I would - perhaps because I was familiar with the studies presented and reading the book was just a long winded rehash. Kind of disjointed, even within the chapters
34. The Blind Watchmaker- Richard Dawkins
Pretty excellent book on evolution
35 Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince - J.K. Rowling
I liked this one a lot.
36. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows- J.K. Rowling
I did not care for the ending to this one at all. Too unnecessarily complicated, but at the same time too predictable. The thing about that Harry Potter books is that they are incredibly obsessive when you are actually reading them, but put them down for a while and you forget they exist, finish them and you find yourself unsatisfied.
Re Freakonomics: I tried it a year or two ago and couldn't get into it. Every so often I read one of the Freakonomics columns in the New York Times and when I'm through I say "ehhhh."
38. Life Before Man - Margaret Atwoodwhat a delightful and realistic portrayal of the modern relationship
39. The Search- نجيب محفوظ
another look into the human condition
40. AMERICAN SKIN: A Novel - Don De Graziaquick, reasonably enjoyable, reasonably entertaining bildungsroman
43. Don Quixote-CervantesI cannot get over how hilarious this book is. I never expected it to be this good. Seriously, read it.
44. War and Peace- Leo TolstoyI am not making this easy for myself, am I.
As a bit of a Russophile I loved this look into a few families during the Napoleonic Wars - interesting both on the basis of the characters' growth as well as a look at how different people (okay, different rich people) dealt with the Napoleonic wars as well as a historical reevaluation of Napoleon. Because you know you can do all that in 1400 pages.
Books mentioned in this topic
War and Peace (other topics)Don Quixote (other topics)
The Reprieve (other topics)
69 (other topics)
American Skin (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Leo Tolstoy (other topics)Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (other topics)
Jean-Paul Sartre (other topics)
Ryū Murakami (other topics)
Don De Grazia (other topics)
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