I’m almost done with The Time Traveler’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger (for some reason I always want to say “Niffenbauer”). After that, I plan to do terrible things with Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere. I keep hearing good things about this Gaiman fellow, and I saw the book in the library like, right in front of my face, so I decided to give it a shot.
The Time Traveler’s Wife is shaping up to be really really good, by the way.
I’ve read the English version and I found the writing rather awkward - is that just a result of the translation or is it choppy in the original Japanese?
I always seem to read three or four books at once. One in the car, one at home, one in the can, etc. Currently, the list includes **A Salty Piece of Land ** - Jimmy Buffett, Ruled, Britannia - Harry Turtledove, and **Hot and Sweaty Rex ** - Eric Garcia.
I’m currently reading (or rather, re-reading) Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. I cracked open The Big Sleep the other day, and have The Cry of The Owl (Highsmith) sitting on the bedstand, though I’ve read it at least half a dozen times before.
Lessee, I have a copy of The Effects of Nuclear Weapons out on loan (a reference), I’ve been thumbing through Vol. 2 of The Feynman Lectures along with my college E&M text. I started The Spanish Civil War by Hugh Thomas a few weeks ago but haven’t really gotten into it, and I have A Homage To Catalonia, which I’ll reread following so as to get (hopefully) a better understanding of what Orwell was complaining about.
I’ve got a Shakespeare play (“Othello”) always running in case I’m in that mood, and I just finished Stephenson’s Cryptonomicon, which as I reported in a different thread, I found very disappointing. I gave up on The Sportswriter by Richard Ford–I just couldn’t maintain interest in it, and the character and the style of Ford’s writing both irritated me–and up next is a collection of Graham Greene, some out of print Arthur Conan Doyle, and some James M. Cain, as well as a text on neurobiology. Oh, and I keep meaning to read A Canticle for Leibowitz, but I never get around to ordering it.
I picked up a whole lot of classic titles quite cheaply in the post-Christmas sales. At the moment I’m reading **The Good Earth ** by Pearl Buck.
I’m also reading The Sacrifice of praise: an Introduction to the Meaning and use of the Divine Office by Vilma Little. I’ve wanted to read it for a long time and I’ve finally managed to procure a copy.
But university starts again soon, so I’ll be back to reading law textbooks and case judgements.
I’m also reading Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell. I read it aloud to my husband every night, and we’re about 26 chapters in. We both agree it’s pleasant reading, but doesn’t seem to be getting to any particular point yet. He is getting restless, I am still hoping for glory, and so we read on.
I just finished **The Dante Club ** on audiocassette the other day. That was terrific, and I had to run out right away and pick up **The Divine Comedy ** so I could re-read it – I find I enjoy masterpieces of literature much more when I read them freelance, rather than for university credit.
The Zero Game by Brad Meltzer. It’s OK. I’m looking forward to reading Caesar’s Women next. I’ve been reading the Master of Rome series but I take a breather between books and read some shorter fare.
Reading Dragon Blood by Patricia Briggs. We shall see if it’s good. I haven’t had the yen to sit down and read more than a chapter together yet, though.
Sure. Pandora’s Star is part one of what I think is going to be a 2 part series. The setting is a human Commonwealth of worlds that has had very limited contact with aliens. The economy is driven by a network of artificial wormholes that allows for instantaneous travel between worlds (which is mostly done by trains!)
The story gets rolling when an astronomer who is observing a very distant star sees the light from it being completely cut off. The Commonwealth decides this has to be investigated and builds it’s first faster-than-light ship to do so. (The ship’s FTL drive is based on the artificial wormhole technology.) Things start getting wild after the ship arrives at it’s destination.
Getting any further into what happens will just ruin the surprises for you.
I’m working the 4th (and last) volume of an unabridged translation of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, a 2400-page Chinese epic. Part history and part legend, the book tells the story of the fall of the Han dynasty and the turbulent Three Kingdoms era of civil war that followed. The book spans more than 100 years of Chinese history and is a staple of classic Chinese literature, and I find it fascinating. If you’ve ever played the Dynasty Warriors video games then you know some of the characters, they were taken from Three Kingdoms.
Reading “A Prayer for Owen Meany” by John Irving. Good book so far. But I like John Irving quite a bit. Also just finished “Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini–excellent book as well.
Well, I sat up last night and finished Hypocrite in a Pouffy White Dress, and I was very happy with it. It was very funny and interesting. I liked the first half of the book (tales of her school life, the time she met Mick Jagger, etc.) more than the second half (visiting Auschwitz, working on Capital Hill) but it was all really interesting and enjoyable. I’m getting it from the library as an audiobook for my mom. I want you to read it too…that’s Susan Jane Gilman…go get it now, go, go…
I think the way the English version turned out is partly because of the translation, but mostly because of the extremely casual way that the book is written. It stars middle-school students, as you know, and it’s written that way. So, I’d say the style is an issue with the Japanese, but the final result in English is due to the difficulty the translator had in getting that style across.