The Books/Reading Thread

This shit's crazy. Loving it.

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Just finished The Stars are Legion and The Industries of the Future. Now reading Civil Wars: A History in Ideas, Homo Deus and The Collapsing Empire.
 
I have no idea where the fuck to put this, but it involves a writer I love (Peter Watts) so I'm leaving it here. That said, it's not actually a book--it's a fucking sci-fi metal opera:

http://www.rifters.com/crawl/?p=7426

I’m writing the story. It involves terrorist vegan gengineering and academic hierarchies and marbled lungfish and autocannibalism. Also terraforming and First Contact with aliens who showed up on Earth long before Kubrick’s transcendent monolith-makers, and who— being not very bright— bet on an utterly wrong horse. There’s a lot of story, a lot of backstory, and yet the story almost seems to be the least of it. It’s an actual opera, you see; a fusion of classic high-pitched arias and growling distorted black-metal grunge. There’s music, and a libretto. There are singers and sets and costumes— relatively primitive at this stage, the event was basically a proof-of-principle exercise after all— and scientific fact-checking courtesy of a number of real authorities, not the least being the co-discoverer of Dark Energy. We’re after verisimilitude, here. This aims to be the most scientifically-rigorous opera about alien lungfish on Mars ever written.
 
Only Beat book worth reading anymore, in my opinion. Some fucked up shit in there. Also found a way to express the modern control society when neither Ginsberg nor Kerouac could.
 
Here's his lecture on the novel:



He delves into a lot of history about the novel, but I think it's a great lecture. He really knows his shit about realism, modernism, and the contemporary novel.


Only 7 months later....yeah man that is a great lecture and a very interesting debate. Lots of terrific ideas and commentary from the other writers also. l just purchased Railsea which looks interesting but, l have started to read Limbo by Bernard Wolfe, so China' gonna have to wait. cheers for the link
 
I'm not very familiar with Ralph Ellison but I do enjoy James Baldwin even if I do not share his worldview broadly speaking.

I'm actually re-reading all the books I own by him (not that many unfortunately) because I'm writing and am looking for some inspiration of a certain brand.

(Also just about to re-watch Dark City for the same reason.)
 
I'm not very familiar with Ralph Ellison but I do enjoy James Baldwin even if I do not share his worldview broadly speaking.

I'm actually re-reading all the books I own by him (not that many unfortunately) because I'm writing and am looking for some inspiration of a certain brand.

(Also just about to re-watch Dark City for the same reason.)

Haha, Baldwin and Dark City. My mind is jumping to conclusions...
 
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I really enjoyed this, I've always liked science fiction but seem to have shelved this one for a while inexplicably. Which sequels are worth reading if not all five? Probably won't get around to seeing the David Lynch adaptation, which is apparently bollocks.
 
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