01-10-2024, 09:20 PM | #46 |
Addict
Posts: 322
Karma: 1701842
Join Date: Mar 2010
Device: Kindle Oasis 3
|
|
01-11-2024, 04:32 AM | #47 |
Wizard
Posts: 1,299
Karma: 8166080
Join Date: Dec 2009
Device: Ipad Pro/Kindle Oasis 3/iPhone 13 Pro Max
|
Im also in a bit of a reading slump. Maybe something about the holiday season, I never seemed to have much time to sit down and enjoy my book. I was reading Anna Karenin, but lack of time bogged me down. I enjoyed what I read, but the book requires some investment and the spotty time I had to devote to it didn't really help. I've done what others in this thread have said and moved on to something I know, so I'm rereading the Hobbit. I may move on to LOTR afterward, or return to Anna Karenin, I'm undecided. Probably Anna, but I'll probably start from the beginning.
Last edited by drofgnal; 01-11-2024 at 04:38 AM. |
Advert | |
|
01-11-2024, 05:17 AM | #48 |
0000000000101010
Posts: 5,741
Karma: 11482159
Join Date: Mar 2023
Location: An island off the coast of Ireland
Device: PB632 [HD3]
|
I love the Murderbot series also. The last installment felt like the weakest so far IMHO, which was a shame. I'd been looking forward to it for so long.
|
01-11-2024, 06:06 AM | #49 |
Resident Curmudgeon
Posts: 76,495
Karma: 136564766
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts
Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3
|
|
01-11-2024, 06:45 AM | #50 |
Grand Sorcerer
Posts: 11,549
Karma: 230505502
Join Date: Jan 2014
Location: Estonia
Device: Kobo Sage & Libra 2
|
Yes, I thought the same, but even so it was still enjoyable. Pity if the author is running out of ideas, though.
|
Advert | |
|
01-11-2024, 09:23 AM | #51 | ||
Addict
Posts: 225
Karma: 5497310
Join Date: Sep 2012
Device: Sony PRS-T2, Kindle
|
Quote:
I'm reading Marlowe by John Banville (a.k.a. The Black-Eyed Blonde by Benjamin Black), a Philip Marlowe novel. I had planned on reading all of Chandler, and perhaps the two Marlowe novels by Robert B. Parker, before tackling it, and even started rereading The Big Sleep, but although it had been so long since I read it the first time, everything seemed so familiar that after a couple of chapters my attention flagged and I fell prey to the siren song of something else and was lured away. But now that the movie version of Marlowe with Liam Neeson is available for streaming, I thought that before it disappeared from the streaming platform again I'd hurry and read the book and then watch the movie. (That way it will be easier to confuse the two down the road. ) So far, I like it, but I can't say how Chandleresque it is, not having read much Chandler and none of it recently (the aborted go at The Big Sleep was a while back). I can't even say if he tried to mimic Chandler. Normally I wouldn't be interested in continuations of an author's series by someone else -- the Spenser novels by anybody by Parker don't tempt me in the least, and the same goes for the Nero Wolfe books by anybody but Rex Stout -- but I've liked the John Banville (Benjamin Black) crime novels I've read, and I've read all of the Spenser books more than once, so I thought I'd give their takes on Philip Marlowe a try. Quote:
|
||
01-11-2024, 10:09 AM | #52 |
Professor of Law
Posts: 3,667
Karma: 66000002
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Chapel Hill, NC
Device: Kobo Elipsa, Kobo Libra H20, Kobo Aura One, KoboMini
|
I was gifted a The Selected Letters of Virginia Woolf over the holidays by a like-minded reader. A non-reader person that I serve as a professional mentor for asked me about it because I was reading it when she arrived at our coffee meeting yesterday.
This got me to thinking about the particular joy I had a few years ago when I discovered the "genre" of reading the letters of great writers and others. It started when I stumbled on The Selected Letters of Willa Cather, who is one of my favorite American authors, at my local indie. I picked it up on a whim and spent the better part of 2 months reading it. I absolutely fell in love with the form. Since then, I've read books of letters from Mary Wollstonecraft, Truman Capote, and Rilke. I have on my shelves waiting for me the letters of Virginia Woolf, Hannah Arendt, and a book called The Love That Dares: Letters of LGBTQ+ Love & Friendship Through History. What new genres have you discovered later on in your reading life? |
01-11-2024, 10:35 AM | #53 |
Grand Sorcerer
Posts: 11,549
Karma: 230505502
Join Date: Jan 2014
Location: Estonia
Device: Kobo Sage & Libra 2
|
None, actually. I've read mostly the same genres all my life (fantasy, SF, mystery, historical novels; occasionally some romance (straight, gay or bi - no preference there) or nonfiction). There are genres I've sampled or even read somewhat in my youth I'm no longer interested in (classics, biographies, literary fiction, poetry, horror, erotica), but none I've discovered later. I've tried them all at one time or the other, and by now I stick mostly to my lifelong favorite genres. I read new authors in those genres constantly, though.
|
01-11-2024, 11:01 AM | #54 |
Gentleman and scholar
Posts: 11,360
Karma: 110455811
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Space City, Texas
Device: Clara BW; Nook ST w/Glowlight, Paperwhite 3
|
|
01-11-2024, 11:17 AM | #55 | ||||
Gentleman and scholar
Posts: 11,360
Karma: 110455811
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Space City, Texas
Device: Clara BW; Nook ST w/Glowlight, Paperwhite 3
|
Quote:
Quote:
The real appeal for me of Chandler is Chandler. After The Long Goodbye I have Playback. Then I'll have read all the mainstream Chandler available, including the collections The Simple Art of Murder and Trouble Is My Business. But I think once I finish Playback, I'll take a crack at the newer collections of Chandler short stories from the pulps. The stories he cannibalized to create his novels. Quote:
But you can just move on to the rest of his novels. Yeah, they all have Marlowe, but events from past books have no impact on future books. Marlowe has no life outside of whatever case he is working on. Quote:
If you do watch it, notice that all the music in the film is the same song, just arranged differently for different situations. He listens to The Long Goodbye on his car stereo, then walks in to the store and the same song is now muzak, at another point hippies chant it. I love Robert Altman and his style of directing and The Long Goodbye is one of my favorites. Last edited by ZodWallop; 01-11-2024 at 11:31 AM. |
||||
01-11-2024, 12:43 PM | #56 | |
Addict
Posts: 225
Karma: 5497310
Join Date: Sep 2012
Device: Sony PRS-T2, Kindle
|
Quote:
Even though it's been so long since I saw it -- and I went to it two or three times when it was in theaters -- a few scenes have stuck with me, such as when he was in the interrogation room at the police station. Maybe I'll have to see if I can get it on disc. |
|
01-11-2024, 01:41 PM | #57 |
Onyx-maniac
Posts: 3,194
Karma: 12537601
Join Date: Feb 2012
Device: Nook NST, Glow2, 3, 4, '21, Kobo Aura2, Poke3, Poke5, Go6
|
+1 On Chandler.
I hardly ever have a TBR list, unless you're counting my Wish List on Overdrive for things that are never available. I like mixing it up. I don't like reading more than two novels in a row. I'll go to any non fiction. My "grab-n-go" would be century-old tech on Project Gutenberg, steam, electric, telephone. Current read, "The Knife Man", Wendy Moore. It's a biography of 18th century surgeon/naturlist John Hunter and is more interesting than the bogus title. I'm enjoying it a lot. There's name-dropping, Joshua Banks, Smollett, Johnson, Boswell, Garrick... |
01-11-2024, 02:13 PM | #58 | |
Grand Sorcerer
Posts: 7,366
Karma: 52613881
Join Date: Oct 2010
Device: Kindle Fire, Kindle Paperwhite, AGPTek Bluetooth Clip
|
Quote:
The audiobook is actually good--it's the Maude translation with Wanda McCaddon as the narrator. The language seems sufficiently modern, and I don't have to deal with the strange-to-me names that defy pronunciation, which has been a stumbling block in my previous halfhearted attempts to read Anna. I'm enjoying it, not just feeling virtuous about finally reading the darn thing after blowing it off in high school back in the Dark Ages. But I still don't want to read more than a few chapters at a time. |
|
01-11-2024, 02:24 PM | #59 |
Grand Sorcerer
Posts: 11,549
Karma: 230505502
Join Date: Jan 2014
Location: Estonia
Device: Kobo Sage & Libra 2
|
That's frankly inconceivable to me. No matter how bad it is, I have to get my reading dose in; I'm addicted to reading, and have been since early childhood. I can easily go for months, even years without watching any TV, though, and often do. That said, I do know several people who only read books intermittently, and several who never read them at all. And yep, they all watch TV daily. |
01-11-2024, 02:40 PM | #60 | |
Grand Sorcerer
Posts: 7,366
Karma: 52613881
Join Date: Oct 2010
Device: Kindle Fire, Kindle Paperwhite, AGPTek Bluetooth Clip
|
Quote:
|
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
The Reading Vent & Rant Thread | ownedbycats | General Discussions | 3213 | 11-15-2024 04:06 PM |
[Old Thread] Problem reading converted EPUB & PDB on Barnes & Noble eReader | webfolk | Calibre | 3 | 01-09-2012 11:08 PM |
A joy of reading begins... | pmlawson | Introduce Yourself | 6 | 03-17-2011 02:56 AM |
Firmware Update K2 2.5.2 users : Praise, Scream with Joy, Discuss on this thread | Balerion | Amazon Kindle | 27 | 06-16-2010 02:04 AM |
Happy joy joy | islandpearl | Introduce Yourself | 4 | 08-31-2008 09:16 AM |