You read for fun?!
- Yeahduff
- Resident Stoic (Moderator)
- Posts: 9158
- Joined: Tue Aug 05, 2003 4:16 pm
- Location: I jumped into your grave and died.
- Contact:
You read for fun?!
Just finished The Stranger by Albert Camus. Not sure what to make of it yet.
- TheSuburbanLetdown
- Destroyer of Property Value
- Posts: 12714
- Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 8:38 pm
- Location: explod
- PortableNuke
- Regular Poster
- Posts: 989
- Joined: Mon Jul 24, 2006 8:29 am
- Location: Under Control!
- Contact:
The last book I didn't finish was Boomeritis by Ken Wilbur, I moved and left it in storage. Very cool book about different levels of conscienceness. After that I have Gravity's Rainbow to start on.
I'm currently in the middle of an O'Reilly book about C#, and have a book about Monad, Microsoft's new command line shell waiting for me.
I live a life filled with danger and suspense.
I'm currently in the middle of an O'Reilly book about C#, and have a book about Monad, Microsoft's new command line shell waiting for me.
I live a life filled with danger and suspense.
- PortableNuke
- Regular Poster
- Posts: 989
- Joined: Mon Jul 24, 2006 8:29 am
- Location: Under Control!
- Contact:
Bill O'Reilly? Hell no that guy's a twit, and knows nothing about programming languages.
O'Reilly Books publishes computer related technical books. It's pretty well known, and the books are generally well written and informative.
I haven't heard of Monadology. What's it about?
O'Reilly Books publishes computer related technical books. It's pretty well known, and the books are generally well written and informative.
I haven't heard of Monadology. What's it about?
- Yeahduff
- Resident Stoic (Moderator)
- Posts: 9158
- Joined: Tue Aug 05, 2003 4:16 pm
- Location: I jumped into your grave and died.
- Contact:
Sorry I've insulted you. I don't know much about programming, and that jackass has a new book out, sooooo....
It's been a while since I've read Monadology. I forget if it was an excerpt from a book or just an essay that I read, but it's pretty wild. Basically, the monad is a tiny mind, and it's the smallest possible thing. Over a trillion of them can fit in the period at the end of this sentence. But they don't really have any physical attributes (this was a philosopher writing theis, after all, not a cientist). Everything in the world is made up of these tiny monads, and they all move in sync with each other. They're programmed with dancesteps and they all dance, each step scripted, even if it seems like it's a reaction from another monad. For instance, if I throw a brick at Colin's head, it will look like his head will be knocked back from the force of the brick, but really the brick monads and his face monads will come close to each other and then quickly seperate, as they are programmed to do. Some monads get bigger when they get more knowledge and become more complicated, and these monads become our brains. And when we die, it's not really death so much as our brain monad just becomes regular sized again and rejoins the vast sea of monads that make up the world. So we don't really die, we just become much simpler.
It kinda doesn't make any sense, and I imagine the original writer did a much better job than I did, but it's just one of those neat theories about existence. Squee.
I'm now reading a book by Violet Incredible.
It's been a while since I've read Monadology. I forget if it was an excerpt from a book or just an essay that I read, but it's pretty wild. Basically, the monad is a tiny mind, and it's the smallest possible thing. Over a trillion of them can fit in the period at the end of this sentence. But they don't really have any physical attributes (this was a philosopher writing theis, after all, not a cientist). Everything in the world is made up of these tiny monads, and they all move in sync with each other. They're programmed with dancesteps and they all dance, each step scripted, even if it seems like it's a reaction from another monad. For instance, if I throw a brick at Colin's head, it will look like his head will be knocked back from the force of the brick, but really the brick monads and his face monads will come close to each other and then quickly seperate, as they are programmed to do. Some monads get bigger when they get more knowledge and become more complicated, and these monads become our brains. And when we die, it's not really death so much as our brain monad just becomes regular sized again and rejoins the vast sea of monads that make up the world. So we don't really die, we just become much simpler.
It kinda doesn't make any sense, and I imagine the original writer did a much better job than I did, but it's just one of those neat theories about existence. Squee.
I'm now reading a book by Violet Incredible.
- TheSuburbanLetdown
- Destroyer of Property Value
- Posts: 12714
- Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 8:38 pm
- Location: explod
I got halfway through Rosecrantz and Guildensern Are Dead before realizing I needed to re-read Hamlet. So yhea, those two. Sort of juggling between the two. Also lots of evil junk about circuits and digital logic, with a philosophy primer, The French Lieutenant's Woman, and a big ol' book about med school in the wings. Lord, I'm never gonna finish all that. I tend to make plans too over-zealously.
- Vik
- TheSuburbanLetdown
- Destroyer of Property Value
- Posts: 12714
- Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 8:38 pm
- Location: explod
- PortableNuke
- Regular Poster
- Posts: 989
- Joined: Mon Jul 24, 2006 8:29 am
- Location: Under Control!
- Contact:
I just finished "Island" by Aldous Huxley. It put me in a rather good mood (as a 'happy' Brave New World sans actual-plot-until-the-end will tend to do) so I took to "Anthem" by Ayn Rand, expecting it to put me in a Steinbeckally pessimistic mood. No. I enjoyed it. Immensely. Also, I recommend both immensely. Go, good peoples, go, read and be rad.
- Mo
- Cartoon Villain (GTC)
- Posts: 5085
- Joined: Sat Sep 03, 2005 6:55 am
- Location: On the shoulder of a giant
- Contact:
I actually read it in one go last Sunday. It was so scary... errm, it's set in Germany 1964 - not the real '64, but the '64 that could have been if Hitler had won WW2. I don't have time to go any more in detail right now, but I thought it was really good... kind of had a "1984" vibe, but I liked it more than I liked "1984".yeahduff wrote:What's it about?Cookie wrote:I'm going to drop the books I've started reading and start reading Robert Harris' "Fatherland".
Now I'm going to read Agatha Christie's "Sleeping Murder". I think.
- Yeahduff
- Resident Stoic (Moderator)
- Posts: 9158
- Joined: Tue Aug 05, 2003 4:16 pm
- Location: I jumped into your grave and died.
- Contact:
The last third of 1984 was a bit much. Definitely worth reading, particularly when you're in high school, but not great. This Fatherland sounds interesting. You wouldn't know if there's an English version, would you?
Finished a book by Sarah Vowell, the voice of Violet Incredible. It's called Take the Canoli, and it's awesome. It's a collection of short non-fiction stories that typically combine historical elements with the personal in almost a journalistic style, but in a strong, humorous voice. She visits Disneyland, the Chelsea Hotel, and the Trail of Tears, learns to drive, and becomes a goth. By the end of the book, I really wanted to be Sarah's friend. I'm eager to find more of her books.
A guy I work with let me borrow Darkly Dreaming Dexter, which is.... fun. It's about a serial killer who targets bad people: child murderers, rapists, etc, anyone who the police don't catch. Not exactly Faulkner but it's a fun read. I think it got turned into a show on Showtime.
Finished a book by Sarah Vowell, the voice of Violet Incredible. It's called Take the Canoli, and it's awesome. It's a collection of short non-fiction stories that typically combine historical elements with the personal in almost a journalistic style, but in a strong, humorous voice. She visits Disneyland, the Chelsea Hotel, and the Trail of Tears, learns to drive, and becomes a goth. By the end of the book, I really wanted to be Sarah's friend. I'm eager to find more of her books.
A guy I work with let me borrow Darkly Dreaming Dexter, which is.... fun. It's about a serial killer who targets bad people: child murderers, rapists, etc, anyone who the police don't catch. Not exactly Faulkner but it's a fun read. I think it got turned into a show on Showtime.
- Bustertheclown
- Cartoon Hero
- Posts: 2390
- Joined: Tue Oct 05, 2004 9:17 pm
- Location: ATOMIC!
- Contact:
I've found that short story anthologies suit me best, because I get too into reading anything long. That said, I've read a lot of Grimm's Fairy Tales lately. Also, The Running Man paints just as good a distopic future as any of the most celebrated titles of the genre. A world run by corporate interests, and controlled through the sale of sex, drugs and reality game shows? How is that a less realistically scary prospect than Orwellian communist paranoia?
"Just because we're amateurs, doesn't mean our comics have to be amateurish." -McDuffies
http://hastilyscribbled.comicgenesis.com
http://hastilyscribbled.comicgenesis.com

