What are you reading?

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V03GTLIN
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Post by V03GTLIN » Thu September 2nd, 2010, 8:27 pm

badcarburetor wrote:
V03GTLIN wrote:Like McCarthy's THE ROAD, which I read while grocery shopping?
Never read that. Just sounded pointlessly depressing. Not my way to spend my limited free time. Did I miss anything?
Not really. Severly overrated when it comes to the rest of the guy's stuff, or Faulkner, which he's ripping off, for that matter.
doubledogpaleale wrote:fuck you and your mall shirts.

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Post by badcarburetor » Fri September 3rd, 2010, 7:26 am

Really, ripping off the ol' Count No Count? I never would have guessed that. There's a contemporary British writer called John King who writes about hooligan and football culture who does an interesting take on ol' Bill.

Maybe I'll have to check that book out, but I doubt it.

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Knucklehead
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Post by Knucklehead » Fri September 3rd, 2010, 8:50 am

V03GTLIN wrote:
badcarburetor wrote:
V03GTLIN wrote:Like McCarthy's THE ROAD, which I read while grocery shopping?
Never read that. Just sounded pointlessly depressing. Not my way to spend my limited free time. Did I miss anything?
Not really. Severly overrated when it comes to the rest of the guy's stuff, or Faulkner, which he's ripping off, for that matter.
I finished reading All the Pretty Horses awhile back and I swear that, during some passages, I really thought I was reading Hemingway.

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Post by V03GTLIN » Fri September 3rd, 2010, 9:09 am

Knucklehead wrote:
V03GTLIN wrote:
badcarburetor wrote:
V03GTLIN wrote:Like McCarthy's THE ROAD, which I read while grocery shopping?
Never read that. Just sounded pointlessly depressing. Not my way to spend my limited free time. Did I miss anything?
Not really. Severly overrated when it comes to the rest of the guy's stuff, or Faulkner, which he's ripping off, for that matter.
I finished reading All the Pretty Horses awhile back and I swear that, during some passages, I really thought I was reading Hemingway.
And if it's not Papa, it's Melville. But, seriously, I'm all about that.
doubledogpaleale wrote:fuck you and your mall shirts.

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Post by badcarburetor » Wed September 8th, 2010, 9:59 am

Mustaine - by the General and some lacky

The lacky must be good, because Mustaine comes off much more affable than he ever had in interviews. Interestingly, he totally cops to being obsessed with Metallica's success. At this point in the book, it's well into the 90s and he's in the studio doing his best to - in his words - sell his soul for a number one hit. Overall, it's a very quick read and fairly engaging. I wish it was a bit grimier like Steven Adler's auto(ha!)biography, but whatever. I was able to blow through 80% of it on Sunday when I didn't feel like doing a damned thing. It's no great literature, but it passes the time.

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Post by Diana » Thu September 23rd, 2010, 4:44 pm

Thanks to badcarburetor I am now reading "I Have Fun Everywhere I Go: Etc really long subtitle..." by Mike Edison. I have not stopped laughing.

Page 57:
"One morning Sgt. Slaughter picked us up in his camouflaged limousine and drove us to a television taping."

It's basically like this the whole time.

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Post by badcarburetor » Thu September 23rd, 2010, 4:55 pm

Glad you are digging it. I found it to be a great book to just randomly open and read a passage aloud. One of my favorite books of the last few years. My soul would be on the auction block to live that guy's life.


Right now I'm on November Criminals by Sam Munson. It's a novel about a high school weed dealer who gets obsessed with the murder of a classmate. There's a lot more too it than that. It's a pretty good look at a particular lifestyle. I'm digging the writing style which is direct, flowing and particular in style.
"God created the devil? At least he did *something* cool." Homer J. Simpson

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Post by stewvee » Thu September 30th, 2010, 11:57 am

Ellroy's Cold Six Thousand. I may never sleep again.

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sleyja
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Post by sleyja » Thu September 30th, 2010, 12:04 pm

Diana wrote:Thanks to badcarburetor I am now reading "I Have Fun Everywhere I Go: Etc really long subtitle..." by Mike Edison. I have not stopped laughing.

Page 57:
"One morning Sgt. Slaughter picked us up in his camouflaged limousine and drove us to a television taping."

It's basically like this the whole time.
Fun book. I enjoyed all the magazine biz stories more than the rock n roll bits. I actually met that guy last time I was in Spain. Nice guy.

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Post by Diana » Thu September 30th, 2010, 12:29 pm

sleyja wrote:
Diana wrote:Thanks to badcarburetor I am now reading "I Have Fun Everywhere I Go: Etc really long subtitle..." by Mike Edison. I have not stopped laughing.

Page 57:
"One morning Sgt. Slaughter picked us up in his camouflaged limousine and drove us to a television taping."

It's basically like this the whole time.
Fun book. I enjoyed all the magazine biz stories more than the rock n roll bits. I actually met that guy last time I was in Spain. Nice guy.
I'm surprised he remembers any of the events that took place in Spain, what with the truly heroic drug intake.

Even the index is enjoyable:

Perry White (char.), 7
Petty, Tom, 244
phone sex, 79, 240
Picasso, Pablo, 67,161
Pillsbury, 24
Pillsbury Doughboy, 24
Pink Floyd, 194, 270
Piper, Roddy, 6

badcarburetor
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Post by badcarburetor » Thu September 30th, 2010, 5:28 pm

No doubt. That guy is my hero.

For another book with an amazing index check out Kathy Griffin's last book. Even if you are not a fan, it's a funny fucking index.

Right now I'm on Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile, the second in a post zombie apocalypse triology by J.L. Bourne. These books are amazing. They started as an online journal posted by an anonymous military man and were picked up by Permuted Press and turned into novel formats. The author clearly knows his survivalist shit and makes me realize tht my greatest plans for post zombie plague survival are nothing, nothing compared to what this guy is capable of and he teaters on the brink of death on many occasions. Great, great fucking book.

...which reminds me to start a new thread over in General...
"God created the devil? At least he did *something* cool." Homer J. Simpson

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Post by Diana » Fri October 1st, 2010, 5:12 am

Today I'm gonna start this Joe Hill "20th Century Ghosts." I hope it's good.

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Post by WREKage-Paul » Mon November 15th, 2010, 12:48 am

* thread resurrrection spell......success! *

I've been reading the books in the Ring of Fire series by Eric Flint and other collaborating authors -- imagine if a coal town from West Virginia was transposed into an area of 1632 Germany during the Thirty Years' War. "Uptime" technology works there, so you can use guns and vehicles and stuff until the ammo and fuel runs out...or you can make some..... Pretty fun series. Not every book has been a gem but most have been good.

Just got the newest -- and second-to-last -- Wheel of Time book in, and will be starting it next. (The last one, by Brandon Sanderson writing after Robert Jordan's death, was GREAT.)

Diana
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Post by Diana » Mon November 15th, 2010, 1:12 pm

Diana wrote:Today I'm gonna start this Joe Hill "20th Century Ghosts." I hope it's good.
Forgot about this. Update: It's real good. I just started Heart Shaped Box and it is also good.

Over & Out

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sleyja
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Post by sleyja » Mon November 15th, 2010, 2:11 pm

"Like, Misunderstood"

The story of sixties garage band the Misunderstood.
The four part story in Ugly Things Magazine covered this story so much better with lots more detail. This books a pretty fun read though.

(amazon description -

A gripping and humorous autobiographical novel about the early life of Rick Brown, detailing the story of his 1960s era group, the Misunderstood, and their evolution from local garage band heroes to trailblazing psychedelic icons living in the heart of Swinging London. Read how the band's heart was ripped out on the eve of their success when Rick was drafted into the US Army, about his daring desertion from boot camp, his escape to a new life in a primitive ashram in North India, and his subsequent adventures as a hunted fugitive. Befriended by India's elite but forced from sanctuary as US authorities close in, he climbs the Himalayas, taking shelter in a secret ruby mine guarded by 115 year-old Kali Baba. Torn between two competing gurus, as well as Kali Baba and beautiful Tanny, he is driven over the edge into the mysterious Asian underworld. Bummer!

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