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Sad Mammal posted:I'm looking for any cool-looking books on daemonology. You know in horror movies when they show forbidden texts about devils? Things like that, or at least the illustrations. Sorry if this isn't the appropriate forum, but I can't find any topics solely on art books. I am unsure exactly what are you looking for. Are you looking for a book like the Evil Dead's Necronomicon, or just a cool art book? A quick search of Demons and these 2 books came up. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0486227510/ref=ox_sc_sfl_title_8?ie=UTF8&psc=1&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER http://www.amazon.com/The-Dictionary-Demons-Names-Damned/dp/0738723061/ref=pd_sim_b_11?ie=UTF8&refRID=1YGVMHE1AN95ZKAANKY7 Another suggestion is Giger's Necrononmicon. http://www.amazon.com/H-R-Gigers-Necronomicon-Giger/dp/0962344729/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1413570520&sr=8-1&keywords=necronomicon+giger If you are looking just to have an evil looking coffee table book, I guess you can't go wrong with Peter Beste's True Norwegian Black Metal (which is on my coffee table right now). The cover does get attention. http://www.amazon.com/Norwegian-Black-Metal-Johan-Kugelberg/dp/1576874354/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1413570181&sr=8-2&keywords=pete+beste Please let me know if you find anything cool. I am also looking for some cool art books with an evil subject. nate fisher fucked around with this message at 19:38 on Oct 17, 2014 |
# ? Oct 17, 2014 19:33 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 05:58 |
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Deadulus posted:I am looking for horror books about witches. I would really like a horror story with witches that are in the past (not modern times), but any good and scary ones will do. i'd be interested in anything recommended for this too, what with halloween coming up....i just finished something wicked this way comes and even the witch in that was quite creepy.....anyone got any thoughts?
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# ? Oct 19, 2014 08:50 |
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Not a horror book per se, but The Penguin Book of Witches has just come out for the Halloween.
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# ? Oct 19, 2014 09:29 |
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I've started watching Bored to Death on HBO GO and love it. I was wondering if anyone knew any good stoner/druggy detective fiction? I've seen The Big Lebowski a million times and Inherent Vice is in my top 3 favorite books of all time.
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# ? Oct 20, 2014 14:03 |
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Franchescanado posted:I've started watching Bored to Death on HBO GO and love it. I was wondering if anyone knew any good stoner/druggy detective fiction? Don Winslow's Savages, PKD's A Scanner Darkly
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# ? Oct 20, 2014 14:27 |
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Franchescanado posted:I've started watching Bored to Death on HBO GO and love it. I was wondering if anyone knew any good stoner/druggy detective fiction? It's not exactly detective fiction, but Tom Robbins's stuff has a similar view on drugs and whimsy. Half Asleep in Frog Pajama's is one of my favorites, but his two biggest are probably Even Cowgirls Get the Blues and Still Life with Woodpecker. Start with Still Life, actually, it's fantastic.
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# ? Oct 21, 2014 02:08 |
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I just finished reading Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates and I loved it. I want to check out more of his work, what should I read next? And are there any particular works that stand out as being a "must read" or an "avoid completely", or is it all generally good?
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# ? Oct 21, 2014 02:37 |
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Franchescanado posted:I've started watching Bored to Death on HBO GO and love it. I was wondering if anyone knew any good stoner/druggy detective fiction?
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# ? Oct 21, 2014 05:20 |
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homewrecker posted:I just finished reading Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates and I loved it. I want to check out more of his work, what should I read next? And are there any particular works that stand out as being a "must read" or an "avoid completely", or is it all generally good? I love Yates, and personally think he doesn't have any duds. His short stories are fantastic, so you could pick up a collection, and as for his novels my favorites were The Easter Parade and Disturbing the Peace.
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# ? Oct 21, 2014 11:09 |
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I'm currently finishing up the Mitch Rapp series from Vince Flynn. While enjoyable, it was pretty repetitive and predictable. Are there any other series in the same vein? I've heard good things about the Jack Reacher series.
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# ? Oct 23, 2014 05:07 |
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Henrik Zetterberg posted:I'm currently finishing up the Mitch Rapp series from Vince Flynn. While enjoyable, it was pretty repetitive and predictable. Are there any other series in the same vein? I've heard good things about the Jack Reacher series. I couldn't stand the Jack Reacher book I read about 2/3 of... the writing was pretty bad and Jack was one of the worst Gary Stu's I've ever encountered. Men fear him, women he meets instantly want to gently caress him, and law enforcement officers respect him, even though he's essentially a drifter. I must be in the minority though, because they're wildly popular... Unfortunately, I don't have any other suggestions.
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# ? Oct 23, 2014 14:39 |
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Is there anything like Solaris out there? I read another of his books, Eden, and it was good as well, but not quite Solaris good. Maybe the closest thing I have read to Solaris is probably Speaker for the Dead. The reason I think the two are alike is because of the way the stories mix the description and actions of the aliens with the human story and then brings them together. I have never been a huge sci-fi fan, but I could be if there were more books like Solaris.
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# ? Oct 23, 2014 23:50 |
Rusty posted:Is there anything like Solaris out there? I read another of his books, Eden, and it was good as well, but not quite Solaris good. Maybe the closest thing I have read to Solaris is probably Speaker for the Dead. The reason I think the two are alike is because of the way the stories mix the description and actions of the aliens with the human story and then brings them together. I have never been a huge sci-fi fan, but I could be if there were more books like Solaris. A lot of people I know found it unreadable, I personally loved it, can't lose much by trying.
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 13:34 |
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regulargonzalez posted:Surprised no one has recommended The First Law series by Joe Abercrombie. A touch more grognard-y than Conan, but only barely. Gritty, dark, grim, gruesome all apply in spades. Thanks for this. It seems to be scratching the itch. The Blade Itself (30% in) is a bit more 'inclusive' than I'd like (too many character arcs - I was hoping for a solo adventure thing), but it's very well written and the characters are solid. I read the Amazon preview for Imaro and I thought it'd be better. Maybe it's good, but I don't like the guy's writing style at all. I'm coming off finishing The Martian and I find that I get into books a lot more when there's a strong focus on one character or story arc. (great book btw)
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 13:50 |
What are the go-to literary young adult books? I mean, I'm not sure this is even a category since YA is really good just to get young people reading (like, reading Divergent is better than not reading at all). But, apart from stuff like Lord of the Flies or Catcher in the Rye, what are some others that I may not have heard of? I'm asking as a teacher, not as a reader.
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# ? Oct 25, 2014 18:19 |
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tuyop posted:What are the go-to literary young adult books? For the younger side of YA, Where the Red Fern Grows and Bridge to Terebithia For a bit older, I loved It's Like This, Cat when I was 12-13 And there's a fantastic book whose name slips my mind and it's gonna bug the gently caress out of me, set at a prep school, with the narrator (kind of an average joe) who is best friends with the class's all-superlatives kid (charming, smart, natural athlete, etc). It's a great book, and I think a short title, The _____ or just one word. e: A Separate Peace. Great book.
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# ? Oct 25, 2014 19:16 |
regulargonzalez posted:For the younger side of YA, Where the Red Fern Grows and Bridge to Terebithia I remember the first two from grade five, Bridge to Terebithia was so good! But I'm thinking 13-15 and 16-18 year-old range. I see lots of fourteen year-olds reading The Hunger Games and that Mazerunner stuff and even... Divergent and just cringe. But I can't remember what I was reading at that age that wasn't really abnormal (grade 9 I was reading Atlas Shrugged and Nineteen Eighty-Four, for example) so I don't know where to steer students. But like I said, it's not that much of an issue. They can read Green Eggs and Ham until they're 21 for all I care, as long as they're not just killing time watching Pewdiepie videos and listening to Taylor Swift instead.
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# ? Oct 26, 2014 01:21 |
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Just finished Blindsight and Echopraxia by Peter Watts. Anything else like them? Should I check out his Rifters series?
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 02:33 |
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My YA stage was very very very brief (for some reason the transition period of my reading levels was super short, I kind of got "past" YA early in elementary school, so I missed out on a lot of YA as a snobby brat youngster), but I remember really adoring John Bellairs. Not sure if he's in the right age group, I don't know what age range his fiction is supposed to be for but I remember really loving it when I was a lil fella. All that Johnny Dixon stuff was my jam. Punkin Spunkin fucked around with this message at 08:07 on Oct 28, 2014 |
# ? Oct 28, 2014 08:05 |
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All of my YA reading was the really embarrassing poo poo like the "Aliens ____!" (Fried my brain, ate my homework, etc.)by Bruce Coville or something like that, and the Pit Dragon Chronicles by Jane Yolen.
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 21:48 |
Wade Wilson posted:All of my YA reading was the really embarrassing poo poo like the "Aliens ____!" (Fried my brain, ate my homework, etc.)by Bruce Coville or something like that, and the Pit Dragon Chronicles by Jane Yolen. I've seen a couple of students reading stuff like that, and they're my main targets. Though I don't think it's very wise to even bring it up because they might be sensitive and I could contribute to turning them off of reading altogether. Maybe it's not a thing that I should be worried about.
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 22:39 |
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My YA reading was basically Stephen King, Kurt Vonnegut, Ken Kesey, Tom Wolfe, and Joseph Heller. Like, I read everything by those five guys from age 10 to 18.
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 23:12 |
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Are there any books that even come close to capturing the feeling of the sections in LOTR when the Fellowship traverses Moria? The dread, the awe of the unknown, the occasional claustrophobia, the incomprehensible vastness, the aeons of history surrounding them, etc. I've heard about House of Leaves but I'm looking for something not quite so malevolent, just a huge and unknowable space that the characters have to get through and/or out of. Fantasy, scifi or whatever. Something also like Gearworld (a similar thing to the House of Leaves house, mixed with Jim Henson's Labyrinth, that was done as a series of Livejournal entries back in the early 2000s by, I think, the webcomic artist Ursula Vernon) Edit: I saw the Maze Runner movie which was surprisingly cool but the book sounds terribad. Hedrigall fucked around with this message at 00:48 on Oct 29, 2014 |
# ? Oct 29, 2014 00:42 |
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Mechafunkzilla posted:My YA reading was basically Stephen King, Kurt Vonnegut, Ken Kesey, Tom Wolfe, and Joseph Heller. Like, I read everything by those five guys from age 10 to 18. My YA reading (back in the 80's) was everything Stephen King (I started reading King in 5th grade), Clive Barker, Richard Adams (God I loved Watership Down), Kurt Vonnegut, the Dune series, Robert Heinlein, and anything horror (including the classics like Dracula). I will give credit to Judy Blume for getting me into reading in 3rd grade with Tales of the 4th Grade Nothing, but it wasn't until King that I became obsessive about reading. My own kids love books like Looking for Alaska, and they just discovered the works of Andrew Smith. I've read Looking for Alaska, and Smith's Winger and Grasshopper Jungle (which is being made into a movie by Edgar Wright), and I have to say they are not bad at all for YA books. I've been trying to get them into King by having them reading his best short stories, but they are put off by the size of some of his novels. I have a couple of thousands of books in my library, and I hope that being around so many books will influence them to read more. Funny story (or disturbing) my kids have read Palahniuk's short story Guts by browsing my library. I had to tell them to stay away from certain books like my Bret Easton Ellis collection.
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# ? Oct 29, 2014 01:17 |
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Eh. My "get started on enjoying reading" moment was pretty much Ray Bradbury and Fahrenheit 451. I read books out of boredom in the 80s because my family couldn't afford video games until the 90s (one memory of a teacher actually being upset about me reading The Wind in the Willows for fun sticks out), but it wasn't until Fahrenheit 451 that I really started grasping the idea that the stories I was reading were worth more than the medium they were printed on.
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# ? Oct 29, 2014 02:20 |
Yeah reading out of necessity/poverty as a kid kind of makes me want to kill the Internet and fake poverty for video game consoles for ten years or so to give my own kids the same treatment. I remember getting in trouble for staying up late with a book and then hearing my parents argue about how stupid it was to punish a kid for reading.
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# ? Oct 29, 2014 03:39 |
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Sweet Valley books were the rage when I was in 3rd-5th grade. I kept all mine. I was looking for some fluff reading one night and picked one up. I couldn't go 10 pages as it was that bad. Babysitters Club was big, too, but I didn't like them. Funny how some books in particular were all the rage for a school year. Everyone gravitated towards Maniac Magee in 5th grade, then to Matilda in 6th.
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# ? Oct 29, 2014 03:50 |
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Hedrigall posted:Are there any books that even come close to capturing the feeling of the sections in LOTR when the Fellowship traverses Moria? R. Scott Bakker pretty much ripped off the Moria scene in book four of his Second Apocalypse. But everything is much darker and twisted in Bakker's world. I haven't read Tolkien, though. I've only seen bits of the film when it was on the telly. Bakker gets a bad name because of the infamous demon rape scene and his latter bad handling of the people that went after him without even reading the books. But the series is very good, much better than most of the current fantasy fare.
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# ? Oct 29, 2014 07:22 |
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tuyop posted:I've seen a couple of students reading stuff like that, and they're my main targets. Though I don't think it's very wise to even bring it up because they might be sensitive and I could contribute to turning them off of reading altogether. Have a read through the YA thread here in the book barn, I think you'll find some good contemporary stuff in there. I think John Green is one of the best YA authors out there at the moment, certainly for more realistic stories.
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# ? Oct 29, 2014 07:33 |
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elbow posted:Have a read through the YA thread here in the book barn, I think you'll find some good contemporary stuff in there. I think John Green is one of the best YA authors out there at the moment, certainly for more realistic stories. While I enjoyed Green's Look for Alaska, my only problem with Green is he writes teenagers not as they truly are, but how he wishes them to be (I stole this thought off Goodreads but I agree with it). Still his stories are mostly great (I am not sure if I would call them that realistic like in the case of Paper Towns), and he likes to go deep for a YA book. Now Andrew Smith on the other had writes teenagers as they actually are. Not saying one is better than the other, but I wish I could combine a John Green story with Andrew Smith's teenagers.
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# ? Oct 29, 2014 16:56 |
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This is sort of a weird one, but I need a recommended translation of Plato's Republic. Here's the catch though, it's for my girlfriend and English is her second language. So, readability is more important than accuracy or how literally it's translated. She'll be reading it in Korean as well and comparing, so I don't need like a Plato picturebook for toddlers or something. But, I dunno, any suggestions?
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# ? Oct 31, 2014 14:41 |
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Looking for some recommendations for American Naturalism. Specifically, I was hoping that someone would be able to recommend a lesser work, since I'm already familiar with Crane, Norris, London, and Dreiser.
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# ? Nov 3, 2014 03:41 |
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I'm not much of a reader, but I just finished The Martian and absolutely loved it. I'd like some recommendations for similar science fiction, space exploration, survival stories. Much appreciated
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# ? Nov 3, 2014 03:52 |
BoyMeetsWorld posted:I'm not much of a reader, but I just finished The Martian and absolutely loved it. I'd like some recommendations for similar science fiction, space exploration, survival stories. Much appreciated You could check out some light stuff like Forever War by Joe Haldeman, which is kind of military sci fi. Or go whole hog with 2312 by Kim Stanley Robinson, though that's more of future tech porn mystery story. The Road by Cormac McCarthy may have a similar vibe.
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# ? Nov 3, 2014 04:50 |
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tuyop posted:You could check out some light stuff like Forever War by Joe Haldeman, which is kind of military sci fi. Or go whole hog with 2312 by Kim Stanley Robinson, though that's more of future tech porn mystery story. The Road by Cormac McCarthy may have a similar vibe. All good stuff, but be advised none of them are in any way like the blend of laconic humor and action like The Martian is. I would say something like Leviathan Wakes is nearer to it tonally.
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# ? Nov 3, 2014 10:21 |
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Would anyone be able to recommend any novels about marketing? Stuff like william gibson's Blue Ant stuff
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# ? Nov 3, 2014 22:33 |
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BrainDance posted:This is sort of a weird one, but I need a recommended translation of Plato's Republic. The C.D.C. Reeve translation is a pretty common translation for undergraduates. It's translated for accessibility.
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# ? Nov 4, 2014 00:19 |
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BrainDance posted:This is sort of a weird one, but I need a recommended translation of Plato's Republic.
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# ? Nov 4, 2014 01:47 |
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Kitty Cowboy posted:Looking for some recommendations for American Naturalism. Specifically, I was hoping that someone would be able to recommend a lesser work, since I'm already familiar with Crane, Norris, London, and Dreiser. After a bit of research, I've decided to go with Harold Frederic's "The Damnation of Theron Ware". It seems to hew closer the Realism than Naturalism, but it's close enough. It is also, as of chapter four, very interesting.
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# ? Nov 4, 2014 06:30 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 05:58 |
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Hey all, I have pretty bad ADHD and ain't much of a reader but I'd like to get back into it. I'm looking for some Western/Country/Southern books. Can be set in pretty much any time period. The type of book that would be perfect to read when you're out camping under the stars chewing tobacco and drinking cowboy coffee type stuff. Similar to Lonesome Dove, but at the same time relatively not dense and easy to read. Any suggestions boys?
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# ? Nov 4, 2014 16:57 |