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What book is everyone reading at the moment?

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I'm about halfway through Patrick O'Brian's Master And Commander, the first book in the Aubrey/Maturin series.

Its quite good so far! Though I've heard that book 2 and 3 are even better, so I'm looking forward to them.
 
Did that spend a fair bit of time on Naval teams? I recall reading one (from the library) that did. It was a good book.

Not so much, if I recall; I think they get mentioned in passing, but it concentrates mostly on ordnance dropped on civilian locations. It also covered some of the issues with "turf wars" and information perhaps not being shared initially as much as it might have been.
 
I've been re-reading a bunch of Doctor Who Extended Universe books (and there are a lot of them, 300+) as part of a fan project to extended Who RPG to non-canon material.
Good grief, but there was some crap written.
 
_Mr. Mercedes_ -- Stephen King

I don't think King is even a good writer -- if by good writer you mean someone with fresh perceptions, a great or interesting or original style, new or profound ideas, psychological or philosophical insight. He doesn't really have a way with words, and he doesn't even seem all that bright.

But I've read (or speed-read) most of his books. What keeps me coming back is his ability to rope you in. The most interesting part of most of his books is the beginning, where some personal character flaw or conflict begins to connect with something larger, something weird. Then there's usually a lot of running around in the middle and a big explosion at the end, which is not that interesting.

In the best books, there's a great aura of dread, which gives me a buzz.

In this one, though, the effect is like Scoobie Doo Meets Psycho. A rag-tag team defeats a monster with Mother issues.

He may be ringing some new changes on the detective novel here by defying some conventions, but the changes aren't interesting. They're stolidly in the service of popular appeal, of political appeal.

But heck, the man works hard and deserves his fifty (!) best-sellers. He doesn't need or deserve critical acclaim.

I'm a minor snob who sides with Harold Bloom.

Who would win? Stephen King or Paul de Man?
 
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Deep: Freediving, renegade science, and what the ocean tells us about ourselves, by James Nestor, 2014.

In addition to describing his experiences learning to freedive, Nestor takes us on an exploration of various physiological conditions, on explanations of echolocation and other perceptual activities in animals and in humans (the latter not usually developed), and on the various levels of the oceans.

I'm about halfway through it and enjoying it.
 
I'm about halfway through Patrick O'Brian's Master And Commander, the first book in the Aubrey/Maturin series.

Its quite good so far! Though I've heard that book 2 and 3 are even better, so I'm looking forward to them.
They're very addictive.

Id recommend a biography of Lord Cochrane

For example

Cochrane: Britannia's Sea Wolf

and you will see how many of the incidents were lifted out of his life (as Patrick O'Brian himself said)

ETA: Pretty accurate review on goodreads:

I read Patrick O'Brien's Aubrey/Maturin series without realising just how much O'Brien drew inspiration from real-life events. The two major points in Cochrane's life - his defeat of the Gamo by his ship, HMS Speedy, and the Stock Exchange fraud trial of 1814 - are both pivotal events in the life Jack Aubrey. Whereas O'Brien has the luxury of a fictional narrative and poetic licence to help tell the tale, Donald Thomas is confined to the facts. Nonetheless he still manages to convey all the excitement of Cochrane's many naval engagements and adventures. He also uses that flair to tell the story of Cochrane's political triumphs to great effect. It is difficult to understand why Cochrane is not held in the same regard as Nelson or Wellington and Thomas does go some way to try and use Cochrane's antagonism of the British establishment as a possible explanation. I think that those of us who are richly educated and entertained by this book and its ilk - whether fact or fiction - now owe Thomas Cochrane a duty to honour his memory and this small contribution is where I start.(less)
 
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Almost tree-quarter of the way through Evolution- The Human Story by Dr. Alice Roberts, a great coffee-table book with lost of information and beautiful full-page images of skeletons, reconstructions and other goodies.
 
Thanks for the tip Jimbob, that sounds very interesting. Though I have 20 books still to read in the Aubrey/Maturin series :)

Some examples I can recall from that book. When the Speedy captured the Spanish Xebec Frigate, because Speedy only lost two men out of the crew of 50 (as opposed to the 300 of the Spanish frigate), the authorities decided that the opposition was obviously not of sufficient calibre to merit significant recognition.

Or this From the book:

The lack of response from the Admiralty, and indeed, the deprivation of prize-money meant that all of Cochrane’s efforts during the siege were at his own cost, excepting the expenditure of ammunition. To make matters worse, in reply to Lord Collingwood’s account of the action at Fort Trinity the authorities sent a reprimand to Cochrane for his excessive use of ‘powder and shot.’ Furthermore, they had an evident dislike of his excessive use of the Imperieuse, which was apt to require more in repairs and maintenance than ships which kept out of harms way. This ludicrous remark rightly infuriated Cochrane who bitterly observed that captains who avoided combat and brought ships home unblemished were rewarded with pensions. Cochrane continues; ’‘a strange contrast to some of the costly expeditions of the period for less results, and one which ought to have secured for me anything but the political animosity with which all my services were regarded”.
Cochrane himself received nothing for thirty years until at length he was granted the ordinary good service pension. Hardly a fitting tribute for even a captain.

This was in holding up the French advance on land by using his ffrigate to support Fort Trinidad.
 
George Mann's Engines of War, an anthology of War Doctor (i.e. Doctor Who 8.5) stories. That's the Mann of the Newbury and Hobbes stories.
Shimmin Graeme's A Kill in the Morning. An interesting alternate history based on the lengthy James Bond versus Nazis fan-fic he posted to AH.com five years ago (but don't hold that against him/it, Fifty Shades it's not).
 
Does listening to audiobooks count?

I haven't read a book in over 10 years. I only read articles or short stories. I find that looking at the letters and words distract me from trying to imagine what they actually mean. I can do this for a short while, but after about 4 or 5 pages I'm exhausted. A shame really, because I always loved to read books when I was young, and imagining the world and characters created by the writer.

A friend of mine told me he was listening to audiobooks and that it might be a good idea for me to try it. I started listening to "A Game of Thrones" the first in the "A Song of Ice and Fire" books by George R.R. Martin about 2 weeks ago (I love the TV series). I'm averaging about 5 or 6 chapters a day and I really love it. At first, I had to really concentrate to follow everything, but now I'm accustomed to the (great) narration by Roy Dotrice, I can even listen and follow the story while doing other things, like household activities or even playing the guitar (not to loudly obviously).

I'm so glad I discovered this way to "read" books and I can't wait to try other books as well (apart from the other books in the Ice & Fire series of course).
 
Started a Reread of "The Guns Of August" by Barbara Tuchman today,because of the centennial of the start of World War One.
 
_Signs of the Times -- Deconstruction and the Fall of Paul de Man__ by David Lehman

As Lehman says, the ferocity of an academic debate is often inversely proportional to the actual material stakes.

I've noticed that this fight, amongst a few academics, seems rather nasty. The reviews of this book, and of another recent biography of de Man, seem polarized between 1 and 5 stars on Amazon.

On one side you have people calling Paul de Man a sociopath and a fascist.

On the other side, he was revered as a kind, quiet, hard-working teacher and a good listener -- and considered a visionary. His critics are tabloid journalists who understand nothing, supposedly.

The evidence is clear: He was certainly a scoundrel and an opportunist, and he wrote anti-Semitic articles for a Nazi-sponsored magazine in Belgium during the war, when he was in his early twenties. He embezzled money, lied, and lived as a sort of bigamist. He left his first family, it seems, partly because having an American wife would improve his immigration status.

However, every scoundrel who lacks any kind of integrity -- intellectual or moral -- is not a sociopath. A sociopath behaves consistently badly, and can't form attachments.

It seems, rather, that Paul de Man grew up, and suppressed his early adventures and alliances with the Nazis.

For balance, I've tried to read his essays on Nietzsche and Proust -- because I've read those two writers pretty thoroughly. I can't understand a single sentence, or even the general point, of de Man's essays.

It's hard for me -- being an amateur -- to tell what contributes most to the difficulty of his writing: Is he really saying such subtle things? Is it the French manner? Is it willful obscurantism? Sheer intimidation, or intellectual armor?

It seems that very little of substance is really being debated. One thing's for sure, his essays are no help at all if you want to understand Proust or Nietzsche better.

I notice, for instance, that de Man concentrates on one of Nietzsche's earliest -- and far from best -- books, _The Birth of Tragedy_.

The Lehman book is slightly annoying, because of some poetic license, some free association, but it's mostly pretty clear, and interesting.

One of my best friends, who attended Yale in the 80's, said he left Yale and the study of literature, because of the decadence and craziness at that time. (He objected to the study of de Sade and of comic books) I wonder if things have changed for the better, or not. Probably not.
 
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Just finished After Me Comes The Flood by Sarah Perry, who is a friend of brodski's and mine. She's getting some very good reviews for it:

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/jun/26/after-me-comes-flood-sarah-perry-review
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/...Sarah-Perry-review-a-dazzling-new-talent.html

About to read a book written by another friend of mine, Emma Mooney, A Beautiful Game.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1909841927?pc_redir=1406671142&robot_redir=1

My cousin has just got herself a literary agent too, and Im starting to feel like I should write something so as not to feel left out....
 
Heh. Carl Hoffman can write. He can write a helluva yarn, that is.

_Savage Harvest_ -- A Tale of Cannibals, Colonialism, and Michael Rockefeller's Tragic Quest for Primitive Art_ -- by Carl Hoffman

As Hoffman tells it, minutes after washing up at the mouth of the Ewta River, Rockefeller is attacked by a band of Asmat warriors. The assailants spear the intruder through his rib cage and, “with one blow of an ax in the back of his neck,” murder him. Then they butcher the body, cutting off his arms and legs and pulling out his entrails “with a vigorous jerk.” The pieces of meat are set in a hot fire to roast.

This grisly scene turns out to be entirely hypothetical, drawn from a 1959 article about Asmat rituals in American Anthropologist magazine. Why include it? “If they’d killed Michael,” Hoffman argues, “that was how it had been done.”

Hoffman’s sensational speculation risks losing his readers’ trust right off the bat. Quickly, however, his book settles down and his reporting takes hold, drawing a vivid portrait of the world of the Asmat people, hunter-gatherers who lived in isolation until the mid-20th century.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/06/books/review/savage-harvest-by-carl-hoffman.html?_r=0

Hoffman does visit the area, and talks to some of the tribal elders -- who, he claims, come very close to admitting that some of their men killed Rockefeller. They did, at least, have motive, means, opportunity.

This is more solid than the quest for the historical Jesus, but the whole book is a tease. You approach the most important evidence after hundreds of pages, and it turns out to come from some of the Dutch missionaries who lived there at the time.

Reminds me of that great line from The Simpsons:

Judge: Mr. Hutz w’ve been in here for four hours. Do you have any evidence at all?
Hutz: Well, Your Honor. We’ve plenty of hearsay and conjecture. Those are kinds of evidence.
 
_Here Comes Everybody -- The Story of the Pogues _ -- James Fearnley

I come to this party pretty late. In the 80's I was too uptight and earnest to appreciate The Pogues.

Excellent book.

Shane MacGowen was already a wreck before he was famous, but somehow he managed to write a lot of brilliant lyrics. He wasn't competent as a musician, really -- could barely play two simple chords on the guitar.

Fortunately, it's too late for me to learn from his example.

How can you not love this?


I like to walk in the summer breeze
Down Dalling Road by the dead old trees
And drink with my friends
In the Hammersmith Broadway
Dear dirty delightful old drunken old days

Then the winter came down and I loved it so dearly
The pubs and the bookies where you'd spend all your time
And the old men that were singing
When the roses bloom again
And turn like the leaves
To a new summertime

Now the winter comes down
I can't stand the chill
That comes to the streets around Christmas time
And I'm buggered to damnation
And I haven't got a penny
To wander the dark streets of London

Every time that I look on the first day of summer
Takes me back to the place where they gave ECT
And the drugged up psychos
With death in their eyes
And how all of this really
Means nothing to me
 
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