Finished No Country for Old Men. I flew through that one compared to the other two books of his that I've read (and also love). It's easier to get into and felt more "organized", I guess. Anyway, I really liked it. It was not as horribly depressing as the other two. I've had the movie for a long time now but wanted to read the book first.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Louy7zH9guw
sonidero wrote:Roll a plus 13 for fire and with my immunity to wack I dodge the cough and pass a turn to chill and look at these rocks...
kbithecrowing wrote:Making out with my girl friday night, I couldn't stop thinking about flangers.
sweet. always wanted to read the book. just keep forgetting about it. the movie is very, VERY good. but it's the Cohen Brothers...... dunno if they know HOW to make a bad movie. curious to hear what you think of it, one of the things i've always liked about the Cohenians is how respectful they seem of the properties they work with.
i'm going through William Gibson's stuff trilogy by trilogy. been swamped with CoD and music stuff so i've only been reading a little bit. LOVE that man. such a good writer. really impressive that stuff written relatively so long ago (20 years? 30 for his first stuff?) holds up so well. 'specially in the cyberpunk field.
LURV. HIM.
Eric! wrote:YOU'RE like having two pedals in one
with your...momentary fuck switch and all..
Re-reading one of my favourite sci-fi novels, Stranger In a Strange Land by Heinlein. HIGHLY reccomend it, it will change they way you view yourself, politics and war. Mindblowing shit.
Chankgeez wrote:True, but you can also use the Klon as a tremolo. Just stomp on the switch as fast or slow as you'd like.
Good dealings with: benjuro, hatshirt(2), Eric!, insubordination, theavondon, skullservant, Ilikewater, GardenoftheDead, AndyTran, behndy, JerryTRCD, StopReferencing, philibis, jfrey, bob the robot, Noise..., space60y(x2), jskadiang, Ryan(2), Helter, mordecainyc, many more
I'm reading "The Omnivores Dilemma"... 'cause I'm a bit of a food nerd, and always kinda liked Michael Pollan in interviews and such. It's really interesting, but maybe too long and you'd already have to be into that sorta thing to like it.
I'll have to thumb through this thread to decide what to read next.
behndy wrote:sweet. always wanted to read the book. just keep forgetting about it. the movie is very, VERY good. but it's the Cohen Brothers...... dunno if they know HOW to make a bad movie. curious to hear what you think of it, one of the things i've always liked about the Cohenians is how respectful they seem of the properties they work with.
i'm going through William Gibson's stuff trilogy by trilogy. been swamped with CoD and music stuff so i've only been reading a little bit. LOVE that man. such a good writer. really impressive that stuff written relatively so long ago (20 years? 30 for his first stuff?) holds up so well. 'specially in the cyberpunk field.
LURV. HIM.
I've only read Gibson's Neuromancer, what else do you recommend by him?
woof. really everything. um, Pattern Recognition is one of the hardest of his to get into.
All Tomorrow's Parties and Idoru are my favorite newer stuff he did, but i'm a nerd about Japan.
have you read Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson? a lot of his stuff gets wobbly and pedantic, but Snow Crash is amazing and Diamond Age is really really good too.
also, Altered Carbon by Richard K. Morgan.
those are (to me) the three most interesting voices in cyberpunk. Gibson is gold, a bit abstract sometimes. Stephenson does the conceptual, thinking man style great. funny as parapalegic whore jello wrestling too. and Morgan is cyberpunk hopped up on 12 eightballs. a smart violence filled landscape of visceral thrills.
i'm a GEEK.
Eric! wrote:YOU'RE like having two pedals in one
with your...momentary fuck switch and all..
behndy wrote:woof. really everything. um, Pattern Recognition is one of the hardest of his to get into.
All Tomorrow's Parties and Idoru are my favorite newer stuff he did, but i'm a nerd about Japan.
have you read Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson? a lot of his stuff gets wobbly and pedantic, but Snow Crash is amazing and Diamond Age is really really good too.
also, Altered Carbon by Richard K. Morgan.
those are (to me) the three most interesting voices in cyberpunk. Gibson is gold, a bit abstract sometimes. Stephenson does the conceptual, thinking man style great. funny as parapalegic whore jello wrestling too. and Morgan is cyberpunk hopped up on 12 eightballs. a smart violence filled landscape of visceral thrills.
i'm a GEEK.
I'd change preference in favor of Diamond Age, but this gets my full support.
you like Diamond Age better than Snow Crash? they're both awesome, but Snow Crash has the more unhinged odd humor that i dig. kinda a less droll Douglas Adams vibe?
hard to go wrong with either though.
Eric! wrote:YOU'RE like having two pedals in one
with your...momentary fuck switch and all..