After a decade of literary fiction I'm going back to check on some more mainstream stuff. I'm reading The Dark Tower saga by Stephen King. Just starting the first book.
Books
Book reader community.
I just started Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam.
Currently reading The Light on Farallon Island by Jen Wheeler. It's a novel that follows the story of a young woman in the 19th century who takes a job as teacher for the few children of the lighthouse keepers on remote Farallon Island. As you read, you slowly learn about the life she has run away from.
About half way through James Clavell's Shogun. Highly recommended if you're looking for a deep adventure novel!
I'm reading:
- 50 Years of text Games by Aaron Read
- More Boot Sector Games by Oscar Toledo
Arrival by Ted Chiang. Movie was great so though of reading this one. Only in the very beginning though.
I'm finally reading Declare by Tim Powers. All I can say is holy shit I never knew how much I needed this book in my life.
Just looked up the description and this book sounds fun, I'll add it to the queue. What about it made you feel this way?
Currently reading The Winter Fortress by Neal Bascomb. It’s a good read so far!
I have been reading The Mongol Storm: Making and Breaking Empires in the Medieval Near East by Nicholas Morton which I am really enjoying. Nicholas has a clear way of describing events and putting them into context without getting too dry with it. I am also reading A Vast Conspiracy: The inspiration for Impeachment by Jeffrey Toobin which I am a little over half way into, but I am considering just giving up. I have been pecking away at this book for probably 2 months now. It's just too long winded. I don't need to know every single conversation, meeting, plot, dinner that people had - I feel this would have made an incredible long-form article in something like the New Yorker but a multi hundred page book seems to be pushing it for me.
The Vanishing Hitchhiker by Jan Harold Brunvand. Recaptures the magic of Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, but as an adult.
Victor Of Tuscon
Exhalation by Ted Chiang. About 3/4 through so far and really enjoying it. The scifi concepts are great and I like that it doesn't always have a black mirror, technology is going to kill us ending.
I'm just about to start Berg by Ann Quin, which seems to be about a man who stalks his dad and mistress through a seaside town. It looks really good from the first few pages.
The Knights of Erador (The Echoes Saga: Book 7) by Philip C. Quaintrell (Kindle Edition)
I’m reading To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf, but only because my girlfriend told me to read from more modernist authors. I’m liking her prose despite the dry beginning, but I’ll see how it comes along over time.
Just finished Rules for a Knight by Ethan Hawke. Very sweet and sad book, enjoyed it very much.
SS by Barış Pehlivan and Barış Terkoğlu. It's basically a book about Süleyman Soylu's crimes. It's indeed a heavy read, but I think the book does a good job with shedding light on who Soylu really is, so far (I'm at Chapter 5).
Finished reading Blindsight by Peter Watts. I haven’t read this good Science Fiction book in a long time. On to Echopraxis, as it’s a double edition
The Journey to the West, translated by Anthony C. Yu. Given that it is 100 chapters long and I'm still at chapter 6 it's gonna take a long time for me to finish, so I'm thinking about reading another book alongside it.
Just finished Iron Gold by Pierce Brown. It feels kind of like a "bridge book" where it wasn't all that great compared to the others in the series so far.
Now I'm off to Shards of the Earth by Adrian Tchaikovsky. I've started to read a lot of his stuff and I'm enjoying them all.
Wow. Your taste in books is right up my alley! I'd add Brandon Sanderson.
Bit of a strange pairing, but currently reading:
Schoolgirl by Osamu Dazai
Faster: How a Jewish Driver, an American Heiress, and a Legendary Car Beat Hitler's Best by Neal Bascomb
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
Stand on Zanzibar - John Brunner