"The Last Godfather: The Rise and Fall of Joey Massino" by Simon Crittle
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Recreational reading or TËKKŸ's book club.
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by outsider666 View PostI started reading Stephen King when I was 10 and have almost his entire library.....Lovecraft and Poe are excellent as well...but I'm a diehard fan of Robert Jordan's "Wheel of Time" series, SUPREME epic fantasy.....
Robert Jordan passed away on September 16, 2007. His "Wheel of Time" series unfinished.
Apparently, though, he has been dictacting notes and outlines for a while now, so someone could finish the last volume.
As for my reading tastes, I spend a lot of time and money on fantasy, scifi, history (fiction and non-fiction), and general science (emphasis on physics). Will also throw in a thriller every now and then.1979 Gibson Les Paul Custom
Jackson SLATQH
Jackson DK2M Inferno Red
Jackson DK2M With a Learn Custom Paint Job
Jackson DKMGT (project)
Kramer Focus 1000
Ibanez SDGR Bass
Ovation Celebrity
Martin Backpacker
Comment
-
Hey Cygnus. It doesn't take a prophet, those guys just had a good education in the classics. "There is nothing new under sun but there are lots of old things we don't know." -A. Bierce. I read Patriots, I should check this out too. Have you read Battle Cry of Freedom?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Tashtego View PostHey Cygnus. It doesn't take a prophet, those guys just had a good education in the classics. "There is nothing new under sun but there are lots of old things we don't know." -A. Bierce. I read Patriots, I should check this out too. Have you read Battle Cry of Freedom?
I have read Newt's Civil War series, just for fun. It is entertaining only if one is very well versed in the actual history of the battles. But it is so easy to imagine the scenarios as were depicted.
Comment
-
Bumping this great thread.
Picked up an old paperback.
Third Wave, by Alvin Toffler, sociologist and secular futurist.
Although the book was written around 1980, it has stunning accuracy
in predicting the way society has become with the age of technology.
Anyone who is of college age should read this book, to affirm the
difference between the way the world is set up by the Industrial Age, and
the way that things actually occur in our modern world. It is actually my second read
of this book, and had great impact on my career decisions, brought up as an old age
machinist, to becoming a much more diversified manipulator of information, to service the industry.
Alvin Toffler also wrote the sixties classic, Future Shock, which seems now just a setup to this book.
Also recommended for those lost in a midlife career, who seem to be losing grasp of how things are actually working.
Comment
-
I've read a lot of works about history/culture/religion etc.
And also a lot of biographies.
But my favs. are very "life oriented" works like Hemingway "The Sun Also Rises" Salinger "Catcher In The Rye" etc.
lately I've been reading Peter Mayle's books about Provence (County in South France)
and I'm trying to go thru more works by Nietzsche"There is nothing more fearful than imagination without taste" - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
"To be stupid, selfish and have good health are three requirements for happiness, though if stupidity is lacking, all is lost" - Gustave Flaubert
Comment
Comment