Well put. The characters are just amazingly colorful and so fun to read about.chaos wrote:Overall BTR is both informative and inspirational. I was referring to some of the interactions among the characters during the journey. They add some comedic flavor to McDougall's narrative.
What are you reading?
Re: What are you reading?
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Re: What are you reading?
Scott Jurek is amazing.hokahey wrote:Well put. The characters are just amazingly colorful and so fun to read about.chaos wrote:Overall BTR is both informative and inspirational. I was referring to some of the interactions among the characters during the journey. They add some comedic flavor to McDougall's narrative.
Re: What are you reading?
Yes! Such an interesting guy. It seems like a lot of ultra runners are. They have their own subculture.Everybody's Friend wrote:Scott Jurek is amazing.hokahey wrote:Well put. The characters are just amazingly colorful and so fun to read about.chaos wrote:Overall BTR is both informative and inspirational. I was referring to some of the interactions among the characters during the journey. They add some comedic flavor to McDougall's narrative.
Re: What are you reading?
happy belated birthday to you, sirLarry B. wrote:Joseph Emperaire's 'Nomads of the Sea'.
Beautiful book about the yaganes, aborigines from Punta Arenas, by a French anthropologist who spent a few years with them. Today, they are pretty much extinct. Only 3 grandmothers are 'pure yaganes', one of whom I visited 3 months ago.
Lovely book for me.
Re: What are you reading?
Muchas gracias, maestro.Matov wrote:happy belated birthday to you, sirLarry B. wrote:Joseph Emperaire's 'Nomads of the Sea'.
Beautiful book about the yaganes, aborigines from Punta Arenas, by a French anthropologist who spent a few years with them. Today, they are pretty much extinct. Only 3 grandmothers are 'pure yaganes', one of whom I visited 3 months ago.
Lovely book for me.
Re: What are you reading?
I reasd this book about 8 years ago and I came across it again on Kindle so I bought it. If you like travelling, or have ever been to Thailand or that part of the world or maybe you are interested in what happens in a Thai prison? Read it. Gripping stuff.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_FellowsThink about the most wretched day of your life. Maybe it was when someone you loved died, or when you were badly hurt in an accident, or a day when you were so terrified you could scarcely bear it. No imagine 4,000 of those days in one big chunk.
In 1978, Warren Fellows was convicted in Thailand of heroin trafficking and was sentenced to life imprisonment. The Damage Done is his story of an unthinkable nightmare in a place where sewer rats and cockroaches are the only nutritious food, and where the worst punishment is the khun deo - solitary confinement, Thai style.
Fellows was certainly guilty of his crime, but he endured and survived human-rights abuses beyond imagination. This is not his plea for forgiveness, nor his denial of guilt; it is the story of an ordeal that no one would wish on their worst enemy. It is an essential read: heartbreaking, fascinating and impossible to put down.
- nausearockpig
- Posts: 3911
- Joined: Tue Aug 02, 2011 8:03 pm
Re: What are you reading?
Bandit72 wrote:I reasd this book about 8 years ago and I came across it again on Kindle so I bought it. If you like travelling, or have ever been to Thailand or that part of the world or maybe you are interested in what happens in a Thai prison? Read it. Gripping stuff.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_FellowsThink about the most wretched day of your life. Maybe it was when someone you loved died, or when you were badly hurt in an accident, or a day when you were so terrified you could scarcely bear it. No imagine 4,000 of those days in one big chunk.
In 1978, Warren Fellows was convicted in Thailand of heroin trafficking and was sentenced to life imprisonment. The Damage Done is his story of an unthinkable nightmare in a place where sewer rats and cockroaches are the only nutritious food, and where the worst punishment is the khun deo - solitary confinement, Thai style.
Fellows was certainly guilty of his crime, but he endured and survived human-rights abuses beyond imagination. This is not his plea for forgiveness, nor his denial of guilt; it is the story of an ordeal that no one would wish on their worst enemy. It is an essential read: heartbreaking, fascinating and impossible to put down.
lol yeah maybe just don't traffic drugs.... FFS
Re: What are you reading?
There was a show on for awhile called "Locked Up Abroad" (I think) and was full of these types of stories. Terrifying stuff. It's like my worst nightmare. I'd rather be dead.
Re: What are you reading?
Terry Shortall, a very good Irish friend of mine was arrested by Hong Kong police in August 2009 for allegedly assaulting two female students in his private office. He strenuously denied the charges and was given a longer sentence by the judge for "failing to show remorse". There were no witnesses to the offense and the arrest, judgement, and subsequent jail sentence were based entirely on the accusations of two 19-year-old female students who were failing his English course. To cut a VERY long story short, he was locked up in a Hong Kong prison for just over a year, lost his work permit and other rights and eventually got out because one of the girls admitted to lying about everything. He now lives with his son in Brazil. He wrote a book about it which I read a draft of. Fucked up.hokahey wrote:There was a show on for awhile called "Locked Up Abroad" (I think) and was full of these types of stories. Terrifying stuff. It's like my worst nightmare. I'd rather be dead.
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Re: What are you reading?
I'm a big fan of this Irish writer Adrian McKinty. These two were recently published in the UK, but not in the US. I ordered them off Amazon.
They're basically thrillers. He's much better than average as a writer, though. His first series is brilliant.
They're basically thrillers. He's much better than average as a writer, though. His first series is brilliant.
Re: What are you reading?
These are summer reading, really, but I'm starting one of them now...
Re: What are you reading?
For those of you familiar with the book Born to Run, Caballo Blanco aka Micah True died a few days ago.
http://sports.yahoo.com/top/news?slug=ap-missingrunner
http://sports.yahoo.com/top/news?slug=ap-missingrunner
Re: What are you reading?
chaos wrote:For those of you familiar with the book Born to Run, Caballo Blanco aka Micah True died a few days ago.
http://sports.yahoo.com/top/news?slug=ap-missingrunner
He had been missing since Tuesday. They found him Saturday. Heartbreaking stuff.
- nausearockpig
- Posts: 3911
- Joined: Tue Aug 02, 2011 8:03 pm
Re: What are you reading?
Star Wars Fate Of The Jedi - nine book series.
Re: What are you reading?
That Maus graphic novel is truly heartbreaking. I read it when i was about twelve i think. So i don't remember the specifics of the plot, other than the timeframe of the story and what obviously went on there. Still i remember feeling like the world was one shitty place.Adurentibus Spina wrote:These are summer reading, really, but I'm starting one of them now...
Enjoy it
Re: What are you reading?
I know Hype has read Maus before because I know we talked about it when I read it a few years ago.
Re: What are you reading?
I read it as a youngster, but I've forgotten most of it. Then again, it's eerily similar to my grandfather's own life (Polish Holocaust survivor)... so..hokahey wrote:I know Hype has read Maus before because I know we talked about it when I read it a few years ago.
I'm actually reading a lot more than that... journal articles and some books (metaphysics, philosophy of perception, stoicism) for my final coursework papers ever. But technically I'm also reading a stack of badly written first year philosophy essays. Going stir-crazy.
Re: What are you reading?
In a similar line, I'm reading courses for new data security and storage systems for big companies, recruitment descriptions for a pretty big company, curatory essays and audit reports.Adurentibus Spina wrote:But technically I'm also reading a stack of badly written first year philosophy essays. Going stir-crazy.
Re: What are you reading?
I've been reading this over the past couple of days. It was a gift from my sister who raved about it. It's about dealing with conflicts, how to avoid them and resolving them in a more mature way. Lots of people claim it's changed their lives, but I only got half way through it. It's written in a annoying condescending way I think and instead of getting to their points relatively fast they drag it out forever. So no life changing for me this time around unfortunately. Maybe I should pass it along to Perry
Re: What are you reading?
I think I should check that book out. My conflict resolution method of sticking gum in people's hair isn't working.Matz wrote:I've been reading this over the past couple of days. It was a gift from my sister who raved about it. It's about dealing with conflicts, how to avoid them and resolving them in a more mature way.
Seriously though, that sounds like a very interesting book.
I really hate conflict situations and generally avoid them through diplomacy.It doesn't always work though..
Re: What are you reading?
Something for Kurt Vonnegut fans..
BOOK REVIEW
And So It Goes: Kurt Vonnegut: A Life
SCARRED WRITER
BY DAVID SILVERBERG
If you’re curious about what demons plagued Slaughterhouse-Five and Cat’s Cradle author Kurt Vonnegut, Charles J. Shields’s bio of the mercurial and troubled writer is required reading.
Though it’s been five years since Vonnegut died, And So It Goes is the first official biography.
Shields knows how to get to an author’s core, having profiled Harper Lee in Mockingbird. Using the same kind of exhaustive research, he reviewed more than 1,500 letters and interviewed Vonnegut as well as dozens of relatives and friends.
An Indiana boy raised in a German-American home, young Vonnegut craved attention, feeling alienated from his constantly warring parents. His brother Bernard got hooked on science and won over Mom and Dad, giving rise to a resentment Vonnegut never really let go of. But Bernard also got him curious about science and engineering.
Vonnegut’s Cornell days, his stint as a Second World War infantryman and the devastating Dresden bombing that later surfaced in his best-selling Slaughterhouse-Five are related in brisk, well-crafted prose. It’s eerie to read how that Dresden scar ran so deep that Vonnegut felt little closure even after completing the book.
The bio keeps the intrigue coming in the stories of two ex-wives who seem to withhold nothing. As salacious as those tales are, the more telling details emerge from Vonnegut’s views on creative writing and sharing stories he wants the world to hear.
The best parts of And So It Goes examine the ways his real-life drama bled into his fiction, something his fans may always have suspected but could never know for sure – until now.
Re: What are you reading?
Not because of this book..but lately I'm feeling like my fascination and thirst for knowledge about the Vietnam war has finally been quenched...
Re: What are you reading?
Just finished reading E.M Forster's Longest Journey (for a first novel, it wasn't that bad) and about to read Where Angels Fear to Tread. I'm not looking forward to it because it's the last novel of his that I haven't read and there are no more.
- Classic Boy
- Posts: 18
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- Location: France
Re: What are you reading?
"Les Fleurs du Mal" , Charles Baudelaire. At school I hated it cause I was forced to read it, but now I'm discovering it with my own feelings and it's just beautiful.
- farrellgirl99
- Posts: 1678
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Re: What are you reading?
Reading these two for school currently.