What I'm Reading Now: The Picture of Dorian Gray
I think I'm going to be reading very old books for awhile, as most titles published before 1914 are in the public domain so I can legally download them for free.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
We'll clean your clock for a reasonable fee. (Also well versed in wagon repair)
I think I'm going to be reading very old books for awhile, as most titles published before 1914 are in the public domain so I can legally download them for free.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
More Kurt Vonnegut. Hooray! I already enjoyed A Man Without a Country, Breakfast of Champions, and The Sirens of Titan. I might try to get his entire collection eventually.Labels: books, reading-now
I didn't realize how much of a Cory Doctorow fan I was until my friends & I were discussing a Larry King interview question "Who are your heroes?". My friends had a hard time thinking of heroes for themselves, but they all quickly told me that, for me, it's Cory Doctorow. I didn't realize :)Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
Non fiction about AT&T, the secret service, Steve Jackson, the BBS community, and the creation of the EFF. Audiobook ready by Cory Doctorow, downloadable for free, no less!Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I'm reading Odd Hours by Dean Koontz now, only because it was the best option at Walgreens when compared to Stephen King, many romance novels, and a biography of former "Face The Nation" frontman Tim Russert.Labels: books, reading-now
This will be my second Cory Doctorow book (the first was pretty great).Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
Here we go again with more PKD fare: Transmigration is full of religion, insanity, scizophrenia, narcotics. At least this time the narrator is generally reliable - it's the surrounding characters with questionable sanity.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
Kavalier & Clay was meh, and I put The Final Solution down before chapter 3. This one starts with a murder. We'll see if it works.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I'm ready The Sirens of Titan now. Yeah, I know. More Sci-fi. I try to keep the sci-fi to a minimum, especially when they have terribly cheesy covers like "Sirens" does, but it turns out I'm a Kurt Vonnegut fan, so I'm probably going to read all his works.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I keep trying to read books at random, not judging by genre, author, description. It's helped me find gems I otherwise wouldn't. This book, unfortunately, is really boring me. Maybe it gets better after 1st 5%.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I'm reading Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book, because I enjoyed Coraline so much. Opening line: "There was a hand in the darkness, and it held a knife." Wikipedia calls the genre "Fantasy, Horror". I wonder what the expected age of the audience was.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
Paycheck, by the insane, but talented Philip K Dick. Good or bad, I don't have any intention of watching the Ben Affleck movie based on the plot: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1BOOQdiGVCoLabels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I think the problem with H.G. Wells' The Invisible Man is that it's called The Invisible Man. This spoiler in the title removes the authors ability to build suspense and slowly reveal clues to the reader as to the curious condition of the oddly behaving protagonist. My review so far: boring.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I'm trying my 2nd Neal Stephenson book (1st: the command line), the iconic 1992 Scifi "Snow Crash", of which I know very little. The introductory chapter is apparently an in-depth look at the fictional armed mafia-based LA pizza delivery monopoly. Very strange, indeed.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
After reading the dubious-quality post and checking out the trailers, I decided to pick up the audiobook (I don't get to the theatres much). It's disappointingly short at 160 pages, but think it'll be plenty of fun for a book actually targeted at "Young Adults". Too bad my kids aren't old enough for this yet.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
Most every Philip K Dick book I've read has had some combination of:Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
So I've been without an audiobook ever since I finished Daphne Du Maurier's Rebecca, which I really liked and my wife really meh'd*.Labels: audiobooks, books, rant, reading-now
When I started this book, I was a bit worried it'd just be girly book about romance & relationships - I'm unfamiliar with author Daphne du Maurier - but the author hints in the first chapter that it may turn out to be a thriller.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
My current book is very famous, and very boring. Most of it seems to be summed up by: David settles in to a new home, meets some uninteresting people, has to leave for some reason. Then repeat ad nauseam.Labels: audiobooks, books, politics, reading-now
I'm reading "My American Journey", and I hope it's unabridged. It's marginally entertaining, but mostly is just a history of Mr. Powell getting military promotion after military promotion, with little else of note.Labels: audiobooks, books, politics, reading-now
I try to read lots of different audiobooks; often I don't even look at a cover or synopsis before I try a book. This plan can have big pay-offs; some of the best books I've read are those that I would have skipped if I had seen the covers first.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I like finding unread Rex Stout books at used bookstores. This copy of If Death Ever Slept is my 29th jaunt through 1930's New York City, solving crime with slick Archie Goodwin and brilliant, but grouchy Nero Wolfe. I wonder when I'll have exhausted every title written.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I've started an audiobook of Born Standing Up, Steve Martin's autobiography, read by the author.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I've started yet another PKD book after enjoying many previously. This one, The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, seems to be navigating through familiar PKD themes: odd religious/spiritual activity, narcotics & hallucinations, confusion regarding identity, and insanity. PKD must have been a strange man.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
A friend gave me a copy of Diaspora, by Greg Egan.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I can't believe I'm still reading A Feast For Crows. I was reading one or two books a week before I started A Song of Ice & Fire, and now I just can't complete this last volume.
Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I'm addicted to George R. R. Martin' medieval fantasy series "A Song of Ice & Fire" ever since I started reading it out-of-order with volume 2: A Clash of Kings. I'm now on volume 4 (of 7),Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I just wrapped up an audiobook of Malcolm Gladwell's "The Tipping Point". I really enjoyed my last read by the author ("Blink"). However, this one ended too fast - and the credits revealed that it was an abridged copy. I can't ever understand why people abridge books. Wikipedia takes a stab at it, claiming that a book might take 40 hours to listen to, where it can be abridged into a handy 2 hours. This makes no sense to me. I could spend less time on any task if I do a half-ass job of it. Why bother reading a book if not enjoy the whole thing?A passage such as "John sped away in his automobile, a red 1967 Mustang he'd purchased from a junkyard and spent most of his college years restoring with his father" could be abridged to "John sped away in his car."To me, this is a travesty. Those details are important. They help us learn who the characters are, what their history is, and that's what engages the reader to care about what happens to them. Everything interesting about a story can be abridged out, while they refine it down to just the actions people take and the words they spoke. It's the difference between reading Brideshead Revisited vs. a high school history book.
Labels: audiobooks, books, rant, reading-now
I'm currently reading A Storm of Swords by George R. R. Martin. When I picked up a book in this series, I didn't realize it was growing into a 7 volume, 6,000 page epic. I wonder if it will stay interesting to the end.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now
I'm currently reading A Game of Thrones by George R. R. Martin. Score & review posted to my audiobook list soon. My review so far: kick-ass.Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now

Labels: audiobooks, books, reading-now