bear aware: a homeowner's guide to preventing bears in your backyard phamplet
― rrrobyn, Thursday, 27 December 2007 04:06 (eighteen years ago)
i look forward to taking this thread to heart and to the return of books
― rrrobyn, Thursday, 27 December 2007 04:09 (eighteen years ago)
Kingsley Amis - The Old Devils Sheldon M. Novick - Henry James Joseph Ellis - American Creation That big-ass collected Joan Didion.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 27 December 2007 04:14 (eighteen years ago)
Here are books that I like:
Post Office Rivethead Lucky Wander Boy Tobias Wolfe, Raymond Carver, Nicholson Baker How to be Alone
Now, what should I check out from the library?
― Pleasant Plains, Thursday, 27 December 2007 04:50 (eighteen years ago)
PP, see if they have any collections by Andre Dubus (esp. the 'We Don't Live Here Anymore' book of novellas)(not Andre Dubus III) or Richard Yates's Revolutionary Road.
starting Miss Lonelyhearts tonight
― milo z, Thursday, 27 December 2007 05:20 (eighteen years ago)
those appear to be excellent suggestions. Thanks, mz.
― Pleasant Plains, Thursday, 27 December 2007 05:35 (eighteen years ago)
How should I read Hopscotch? Starting in the middle or from Chapter 1?
― Tape Store, Thursday, 27 December 2007 05:51 (eighteen years ago)
uhm, i don't remember which way it is but read the one where you skip around a lot. i don't remember if it starts at the beginning or in the middle.
― ian, Thursday, 27 December 2007 06:37 (eighteen years ago)
you read 1 to 56 straight through and then start skipping around (altho I didn't re-read chapters I had already read, just glanced at enough of it to remind me which one it was)
― dmr, Thursday, 27 December 2007 15:39 (eighteen years ago)
http://www.compositiontoday.com/images/the_rest_is_noise.jpg
just used xmas gift cards to buy this .... psyched
― dmr, Tuesday, 1 January 2008 21:10 (eighteen years ago)
got ^^ for my birthday. read the first 15 pages or so this AM and I'm already so hooked. truly awesome.
― m coleman, Tuesday, 1 January 2008 22:03 (eighteen years ago)
ill be picking that up soon
― bb, Tuesday, 1 January 2008 23:21 (eighteen years ago)
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51ZtONiQJ4L._AA240_.jpg
― remy bean, Tuesday, 1 January 2008 23:29 (eighteen years ago)
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/31ZTJA6918L._AA240_.jpg http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51D2NX0Z4AL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-dp-500-arrow,TopRight,45,-64_OU01_AA240_SH20_.jpg
WRENTHAM: A HISTORY 1673-1973 -- WRENTHAM, MASSACHUSETTS WIZARD OF EARTHSEA 1 ECONOMIST NEW SCIENTIST ALICE WATERS ART OF SIMPLE COOKING
― remy bean, Tuesday, 1 January 2008 23:40 (eighteen years ago)
getting sick of having books opacked
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Wednesday, 2 January 2008 00:13 (eighteen years ago)
ALICE WATERS ART OF SIMPLE COOKING
want. keep flipping through at bookstore.
― get bent, Wednesday, 2 January 2008 04:08 (eighteen years ago)
Monica Youm = Ignatz
o Ignatz! he’s a stalker
or a snicker or a stain the v
on his forehead stands for villain
or for vain o tongueless talker
will you never teach him shame?
― Milton Parker, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 05:51 (eighteen years ago)
mispelled that. Monica Youn.
also that Alex Ross book which is OKAY
still picking through that stress book from upthread. thickest skinny book I ever read. and steve friedman's the agony of victory which is a collection of features he did from a bunch of magazines and was okay but nothing I'd get for myself. and the omnivore's dilemma which seems like it might be a little below my weight but I'm just starting out and maybe I can skim all the shit I know already
― El Tomboto, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 07:02 (eighteen years ago)
I am a quietude dude but I just stocked up:
Wapshot Chronicle - Cheever The Half Brother - Christensen Lover's Discourse - Barthes two 33 1/3 books new collected Grace Paley cause I lost it in a bar
― nabisco, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 07:17 (eighteen years ago)
xxpost
the alex ross is probably better for classical noobs like me rather than people who actually know the music
― m coleman, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 11:00 (eighteen years ago)
just finished:
Mohammed Hafez "Suicide Bombers in Iraq: the Strategy and Ideology of Martyrdom" Aristotle "De Anima" (On the Soul)
still working my way through: Parker's enormous bio of Milton William Empson "Milton's God"
re-reading: Frances Ferguson "Pornography, The Theory"
just starting: Alex Ross "The Rest Is Noise" Daniel Boyarin "Dying for God: Martyrdom and the Making of Christianity and Judaism" Marshall Grossman ed. anthology "Reading Renaissance Ethics"
― Drew Daniel, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 14:36 (eighteen years ago)
thomas hine: the rise and fall of the american teenager boris vian: heartsnatcher (too cute, i think) maeve brennan: the visitor (a bit flat, but i really like her voice and pacing)
― bb, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 14:59 (eighteen years ago)
rendezvous with rama
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 17:37 (eighteen years ago)
I think that's otm .... in any case that's why I'm reading it, to try to find a starting point on music I don't know much about but am interested in .... I'm not that far yet (still reading Tree of Smoke at the same time) but I thought the Schoenberg/Webern/Berg chapter was pretty good
― dmr, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 17:51 (eighteen years ago)
Iain Banks - The Wasp Factory
― milo z, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 18:18 (eighteen years ago)
Post-Pop Cinema tipsy mothra Oil! Upton Sinclair
― Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 18:20 (eighteen years ago)
(personal) green man - kingsley amis (alfred didn't dissuade me) last evenings on earth - robert bolaño laika - nick abadzis what happens next: a history of american screenwriting
(work) interstellar pig - william sleator benjamin dove - fridrik erlings
― remy bean, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 18:33 (eighteen years ago)
Drew Daniels' 20 Jazz Funk Greats book
― sexyDancer, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 20:05 (eighteen years ago)
thanks sexyDancer!
you should write one too!
― Drew Daniel, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 22:22 (eighteen years ago)
omnivore's dilemma sucks guys. I don't think I'm going to bother finishing it. this guy basically nails it (also, just like fast food nation and freakonomics which I also couldn't read, he replaces intellectual rigor with the tone of a discovery channel voice-over factoid show - it's not about ideas, it's about trivia).
― El Tomboto, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 22:25 (eighteen years ago)
which is cool because by giving pollan the brushoff I can now move on to Dorner's Logic Of Failure and Reason's Human Error
― El Tomboto, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 22:28 (eighteen years ago)
i thought it was an entertaining read, but i wasn't taking it very seriously.
― artdamages, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 22:36 (eighteen years ago)
reading: the essential gilbert white of selborne, american short story masterpieces, and animal vegetable miracle by barbara kingsolver (a gift i am reading out of obligation)
― artdamages, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 22:39 (eighteen years ago)
I'm about sixty pages from the end of the omnivore's dilemma, and have found it very enjoyable so far. precisely what is lacking, TOMBOT? sure, there's a lot of trivia, but it's journalism meant for a popular audience; "factoids" are sorta part of the deal. and as far as intellectual rigor: is it that he doesn't, as that amazon dude pointed out, proffer some sort of solution? "sucks" just seems like too strong a word, hardman.
at the end of the day, i'm all in favor of more books that shed light on our weirdly dysfunctional food system, especially when they're written by writers as good as pollan.
― gbx, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:03 (eighteen years ago)
like amazon guy, i also enjoyed the bit on vegetarianism and singer, but that's probably because i've spending a lot of time around vegans lately and they're getting on my nerves
― gbx, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:05 (eighteen years ago)
no that's all well and good but I think the masters' program ruined me for pop science books. magazines ok, in that format I don't expect more than what pollan has to offer - but it is kind of like a big magazine piece, and yeah, his theses seemed pretty weak right off the bat to me, plus there are several things he states as "factoids" that aren't as cut-and-dried as he makes them out to be
― El Tomboto, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:06 (eighteen years ago)
it is kind of like a big magazine piece
otm there. i guess that's what i expected, though
― gbx, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:10 (eighteen years ago)
I should go looking for some big hardscience book about america's agronomy system from a systems engineering or institutional psychology or agricultural econ perspective
― El Tomboto, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:12 (eighteen years ago)
something with lots of ENDNOTES
tom have a 15-page draft of a paper about americans agronomy system from a pseudo-heideggerian perspective, its really inaccurate and super-pretentious and if you call me when im drunk ill read it to you in an angry tone of voice
― max, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:18 (eighteen years ago)
there's a bibliography in the back; check there?
― gbx, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:27 (eighteen years ago)
oh right! http://www.amazon.com/Omnivores-Dilemma-Natural-History-Meals/dp/book-citations/1594200823/ref=sid_dp_av?ie=UTF8&citeType=citing#citing
― El Tomboto, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:28 (eighteen years ago)
max, i have a suggestion
* get drunk * record yrself reading yr paper * package as an "album" and bundle it with ned's discography
― gbx, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:35 (eighteen years ago)
* ... * profit!
or just make an mp3 and post it on leonardo
also: i didn't know amazon could do that!
tempted to buy this
― gbx, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:38 (eighteen years ago)
The End of Agriculture in the American Portfolio "American agricultural production is destined to end, argues Steven Blank, but this should be no cause for alarm. In this work, he shows that the changes leading to the end of American agricultural production are part of a natural process that is making us all better off. "
― artdamages, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:41 (eighteen years ago)
joel salatin does seem like interesting guy, but i am one of those vegans so i haven't bothered w/his books. the unsettling of america by wendell berry is pretty classic (written in the 70s in response to the nixon administration's "get big or get ou tpolicies"), but hes not a scientist.
― artdamages, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:45 (eighteen years ago)
the prob w/a hard science book about american agriculture is the hard science folks are always on the wrong side of the argument.
― artdamages, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 23:46 (eighteen years ago)