OT: What are you reading?

Submitted by Cranky Dave on
After not reading books for a few months I decided recently to get back into non-fiction. Just finished A World Undone:The Story of the Great War by G. J. Meyer. My first WW1history. At the other end of the spectrum I'm re reading Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Quite a contrast... What are you reading at the moment?

Clevebrownie

May 20th, 2017 at 10:23 PM ^

John Nash and game theory which is giving me some nightmares about the class I took in it 25+ years ago from a professor who knew him. Nice because Michigan is mentioned a decent amount too.

stephenrjking

May 20th, 2017 at 10:50 PM ^

Besides the Bible, which one might accurately guess I read regularly, I am reading: the Military History of the Western World by Fuller, Shepherding a Child's Heart by Tripp, and some sermon study stuff on Genesis, including a re-read of a Brief History of Time.

Some of this reading is intermittent.

bhinrichs

May 23rd, 2017 at 2:29 PM ^

Very interested to hear your take on "Shepherding a Child's Heart".  Multiple people at my church read it and we didn't all agree on his main strategy.

Ever read "Desiring the Kingdom" by James K. A. Smith?  Very interesting connection between embodied cognition, desire, liturgy, and worship.  Especially his cultural analysis of the (shopping) mall and big sporting events as "liturgies" that shape us "affectively" (as opposed to intellectually in a propositional sort of way) to think and behave in certain ways (chp. 5).

lawlright

May 20th, 2017 at 10:52 PM ^

The Things They Carried. Vietnam war book. Incredible book also a great audiobook narrated by Bryan Cranston. Also reading Curse of Strahd in preparation of DnD campaign I'm DMing. Although this is a different kind of read of course. Also, NERDS!

s1105615

May 20th, 2017 at 10:54 PM ^

I read the Dark Tower series and 11.22.63 on a friend's strong recommendation and enjoyed them. Being Stephen King books, they all tie in together, so it led me to start IT based on a separate tie in.

Personally, I usually don't like all the self referential call-backs and tie ins that make it so you need to read all the books to see all of them, but I don't really have anything better to do so...

Skiptoomylou22

May 20th, 2017 at 10:54 PM ^

Mr. Mercedes by Stephen King. Interesting crime thriller read. Also saw that Patrick Gleason will be playing a main character in the TV show which was strange because he is exactly who I envisioned the character as when reading it. On a side note, I had the book on my shelf for two years, never too eager to read it. Then on my recent trip to Connecticut, I read it and became super invested in it. After 4 flights and a hotel where I took great care of it, I left on the last plane at DTW... 30 pages left. Funny how life works. Have to go pick it up now. Also reading The Gunslinger. Coincidental Stephen King kick. Something Wicked This Way Comes is next

Alton

May 20th, 2017 at 11:03 PM ^

Something that just came out earlier this week that I'm really getting into is Autumn of the Black Snake:  The Creation of the US Army and the Invasion that Opened the West  by William Hogeland.  It's about the first conflicts between the Native Americans and the newly-created United States government.  The setting is mostly in Ohio, but in western Pennsylvania, Indiana and Michigan as well.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01M31A9BM/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=U…

I'm also reading Too Big to Fail by Andrew Ross Sorkin.  A book about the financial crisis of 2008 that came out about 6-7 years ago.  It's a pretty terrifying read.

In fiction, I'm trying, and failing, to get into Elmore Leonard.  Anybody have any recommendations for a good book of his that doesn't require any familiarity with an established character?  I am reading his older stuff, which might have been a mistake.

I just finished The Peripheral by William Gibson.  If you liked any of his previous works, I highly recommend it.

kehnonymous

May 20th, 2017 at 11:07 PM ^

The Paper Menagerie and other stories, by Ken Liu, an emerging SF/F talent.  The title story won the Hugo award a few years ago and the stories, while ostensibly sci-fi, are profound meditations on family, technology and self-identity.  Highly recommended.

BuckNekked

May 21st, 2017 at 10:54 AM ^

I read that book for the first time in 7th grade and have re-read it about 1 time every five years in the 40 years since then. That and a Tale of Two Cities are my two favorite classic novels.

WeimyWoodson

May 20th, 2017 at 11:14 PM ^

Beyond Biocentrism: Rethinking Time, Space, Consciousness, and the Illusion of Death It's really interesting, and very heavy science. Forces me to grow since I'm a social studies guy. Astrophysics for people in a hurry. Also have Stephen Kings new book.

LSAClassOf2000

May 20th, 2017 at 11:32 PM ^

"Postwar" by Tony Judt - a pretty fascinating walk throught the politics of Europe immediately after the Second World War, as well as through the 60 and 70s and into modern times. It ties together a lot of modern European politics and its origins in the aftermath of a devestated Europe in 1945. My family kind of lived this to a certain extent, but it is interesting to get other perspectives on it. 

Betty MgoFn White

May 20th, 2017 at 11:53 PM ^

I just finished the Persuader by Lee Child, which is a great read, any Jack Teacher novel is fantastic but you m sorely disappointed by the movies. any he books Teacher is 6'5 and Tom Cruise is like 5'7, so a huge difference. Also just finished the sorcerer's daughter by Terry Brooks. the Shannara series is great for anyone who is bio for fantasy. And I'm in the middle of Stephen Ambrose's Citizen Solider, which is about solders during WWII. He also wrote Band of Brothers which the mini series is based off of. anything by him is recommended .

Rodriguesqe

May 21st, 2017 at 1:04 AM ^

Just finished Huck Finn. Read it 20 ago (eep). Liked it then, loved it this itme. Might read it again soon.

Reading: Flash Boys. I work in the industry (not a trader), fun read. At my last job everyone was reading it when it came out but I hated my job too much then to read it. Now that some distance has passed thoroughly enjoying it. 

Also reading Private Empire, about Exxon Mobile. Ok read but not really a page turner.

Listening to Sapiens. Not bad. 

For Dune fans, the guy who directed Arrival is making another Dune movie. IMO, its the book most needing of a movie. Lynch's 80's movie was a miss,  and the sci-fi channel's version is pretty good but still a made for TV movie. Really looking forward to it.

Bando Calrissian

May 21st, 2017 at 1:50 AM ^

Slowly working my way through UM professor Heather Ann Thompson's Blood in the Water, the Pulitzer Prize-winning study of the Attica prison rebellion. It's a wonderfully dense read, and well worth the absolute pile of accolades she's earned this year.

Also in the midst of Kate Moore's The Radium Girls, the story of Progressie Era young women who painted radium watch dials and paid an immensely heavy physical toll for their work. Absolutely engrossing, and completely enraging.

And as always these days, I'm picking away at Robert Caro's multi-volume biography of Lyndon Johnson. Going to take me years at this point, hopefully in time for him to finally publish the final volume.

Bando Calrissian

May 21st, 2017 at 7:13 PM ^

Early on, doctors quizzed these women on whether or not they worked with phosphorus for that very reason. The whole story is completely bonkers--women painting their teeth with radium and wearing their best dresses to work so they'd glow when they went on dates, glowing in the dark when they'd look at themselves in the mirror at night, then when their teeth and jaws started falling out of their heads, their employers tried to pretend like there was nothing amiss. A quick, scary, but well-worth-it read.

Jevy

May 21st, 2017 at 2:09 AM ^

"Astrophysics for People In a Hurry" by Neil DeGrasse Tyson........and I don't understand a damn word in it lol good book though.

ca_prophet

May 21st, 2017 at 3:52 AM ^

Second in a series about a magical war in Paris between fallen angels and Vietnamese gods.  The first book (The House of Shattered Wings), and much of her short fiction, is quite interesting.

I'm reading Taran Wanderer (Lloyd Alexander) with my son and plan to start reading Harry Potter with him once we finish The High King (fifth in the Chronicles of Prydain; we've read the first three together).

Just finished Drinking Gourd, the 14th book in a mystery series by Barbara Hambly about A Free Man of Color (Benjamin January) in 1830s New Orleans.  The historical backdrop is very detailed and quite well done (although not for the squeamish, as you'd imagine).

 

Mgodiscgolfer

May 21st, 2017 at 3:54 AM ^

I will leave the books I read out of this but I do know one very good self help book. I read years back. Angry All The Time.....An emergency guide to anger control... Seeing as nobody has an anger problem especially those who do. Just for shits and giggles, YOU might pick it up and read a couple lines on the back cover and if you still think you are not angry put it back.

Baughsome

May 21st, 2017 at 7:26 AM ^

I don't know if I missed it on here, but the death of Chris Cornell has been shitty for me. Really sad when these incredibly talented people over dose or commit suicide. I'm not stuffing life lessons or spirituality down anyone's throat, but in my opinion, if you have ever wished to be rich, you should thank whoever or whatever higher power you thank, for the path laid down before you. Because for many, many people, money is just the catalyst for your own self destruction. I used to LOVE cocaine. LOVE it. And had I had the money to afford a habit like that, I'd probably be dead right now. Instead I'm married with 6 kids and a seventh on the way. Drug free and just a drink occasionally. In the words of B.I.G., more money, more problems. Now while I don't entirely believe people with more money than me, like I said, going on 7 kids and I'm the only income and no govt. assistance....I have nothing that I can't deal with to this point. And while I occasionally still find myself playing the power ball sometimes, I always come back to the realization that money helps as many as it hurts....and money and circumstances don't take you off the roulette wheel that is life. I will miss Chris Cornell for his music, but I will grieve for him for living a life that you often can't survive, for people like me, who love rock music. We're FORTUNATE enough to not have that life to live. I live my MGo life in the negatives, so feel free to attack this.

Wolverinebaboo

May 21st, 2017 at 7:36 AM ^

I am all over the place. It's the lasting legacy of a UM English degree...

Highly recommend--

Saga graphic novels. Like Star Wars for adults. If it's been years since you have picked up a comic book it will blow your mind. The best in the business make the best ting I've read in years, of any genre. Finished book 2 this week.

Sapiens. By Harari. Insightful, original thinking about people and why we are like we are.

3 and out. Because I hadnt read it yet and it cost $3.00 on amazon...

A walk in the woods by bill bryson. Getting ready to do the white mountains portion of the AT. I wish I could be hiking it with Bryson. Comedy gold!

The big book. For AA. 6 months sober now. Never imagined I could live without drinking. Now I can't imagine returning to that spiral of deception, guilt, and bullshit. Highly recommend to anyone who wants to stop drinking but can't.

And...peace is every step, by hanh. Good easily digestible truths for living. The book of,joy has been great too.

Just put The Stand on my iPad, (have never read any Stephen king...!) along with "samples" of what some of you suggested. Thanks.

I agree with others about dune and confederacy of dunces. Both are brilliant.




Don

May 21st, 2017 at 7:44 AM ^

Another Science Fiction: Advertising the Space Race 1957-1962 by Megan Prelinger

Gulp by Mary Roach

Beyond Glory: Joe Louis Vs. Max Schmeling and a World on the Brink by David Margolick

Started but set aside for later:

The Path to Power by Rober Caro

John Adams by David McCollough

Ray

May 21st, 2017 at 12:55 PM ^

Path to Power is a great read. If you haven't read any of that series, you're in for a treat. I found them all superbly written and researched. I think no matter what one's opinion of Johnson is, reading those books will still surprise.

Drbogue

May 21st, 2017 at 7:48 AM ^

Rereading the series again in prep for the adaptation this summer. August 4th is going to be fun albeit a divergence from the canon novels. More King on the way with Gwendys Button Box and Sleeping Beauties

Mr. Haney

May 21st, 2017 at 9:31 AM ^

The Happiness Equation by Neil Pasricha is an excellent read about how to achieve happiness. If you are looking for an outstanding classic, nothing beats The Count of Monte Cristo.

Zarniwoop

May 21st, 2017 at 9:58 AM ^

Just finished a book on Michelangelo, which I really enjoyed. Previous to that was a set of books on the civil war by Shelby Foote. Now I'm re-reading wheel of time up until where Jordan died.