What are you reading NOW

tented

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I hope you enjoy & look forward to seeing your little review of it. Thank you very much.

I forgot to revisit this.

I had never read anything about him before, so this was my first excursion into his life. The book was great. I highly recommend it to anyone who has even the slightest interest in Leonardo — and, in my opinion, everyone should have some interest in him.

Prior to reading it, I had no idea how many fields he was not only interested in, but involved in, too: architecture, engineering, weapons design, urban planning, virtually anything involving water, anatomy/biology, and of course painting. He was centuries before his time in some of these areas.
 
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Federberg

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I've just finished reading Trudi Canavan's books. Both the Black Magician's trilogy and Traitor Spy trilogies. Then I read Albert Sartison's Contact series and Beyond the Event Horizon series.

Now I'm reading Mark Dawson's new book The Vault. What I'm really waiting for are Mark Greaney's new Grey man book and Gregg Hurwitz's new Orphan X book. They'll be here in about 10 days. I simply cannot wait!
 

Horsa

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I forgot to revisit this.

I had never read anything about him before, so this was my first excursion into his life. The book was great. I highly recommend it to anyone who has even the slightest interest in Leonardo — and, in my opinion, everyone should have some interest in him.

Prior to reading it, I had no idea how many fields he was not only interested in, but involved in, too: architecture, engineering, weapons design, urban planning, virtually anything involving water, anatomy/biology, and of course painting. He was centuries before his time in some of these areas.
Thank you very much.

That sounds fascinating. I'll try to get hold of a copy. Thank you very much for the recommendation.

I didn't realise that either. I knew he designed a flying machine which we know now would never have worked but it was still way ahead of his time & that he had some idea of anatomy as well as art & sculpture but not all of that.
 
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Horsa

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I’m currently reading Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. I’ve only read the first 73 pages, but it’s fascinating.

Has anyone else read it?
I haven't read it but it really sounds like my cup of tea. Thank you very much. It's going on my T.B.R. list. I've finished my book club B.O.T.M. well, given it up 100 pages from the end because it's too distressing for me & made me feel physically sick. I read the 1st 3 all the way through & enjoyed them but some members of my book club gave up on the last 1 so I thought I could do the same.
 
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mrzz

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I’m currently reading Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. I’ve only read the first 73 pages, but it’s fascinating.

Has anyone else read it?

By coincidence I just came across two people with completely different backgrounds who recently read the book, and each one drew completely different conclusions from it. This is something that sheds a positive light on the book for sure. Also one more tiny piece of evidence that people are completely crazy, unreliable and ultimately useless, but that is another story.
 
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Horsa

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By coincidence I just came across to people with completely different backgrounds who recently read the book, and each one draw completely different conclusions from it. This is something that sheds a positive light on the book for sure. Also one more tiny piece of evidence that people are completely crazy, unreliable and ultimately useless, but that is another story.
You can't just tar everyone with the same brush though, Mr. Zz. People come in all different shapes & sizes, all have different abilities, thoughts, opinions & beliefs. Even when we're looking at the same thing, we all focus on different parts. Not many people look at the whole thing. We all have different view-points.

(As I'm now quite familiar with your sense of humour, I know your last sentence was meant to be a bit of fun I will add a little laugh. Haha!)
 

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The Riddle of the Compass (actually finished already, unpretentious little book, but very, very good).
 

Horsa

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The Riddle of the Compass (actually finished already, unpretentious little book, but very, very good).
I'm glad you enjoyed your book. What are you reading/going to read next?
 

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I'm glad you enjoyed your book. What are you reading/going to read next?

That is a very good question, as I am doing a massive reorganization of my books, and "finding" a lot of good books I bought and never found the time to read, so in the last week or two I flipped through the pages of dozens of good options. Something like this:

1583575707065.png
 
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Horsa

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That is a very good question, as I am doing a massive reorganization of my books, and "finding" a lot of good books I bought and never found the time to read, so in the last week or two I flipped through the pages of dozens of good options. Something like this:

View attachment 3487
I know that feeling. I'm forever trying to sort out my books. I haven't read all of them so decide to read only the ones I haven't read then I see favourites so have to re-read them. Then I get ideas for poems, stories or songs so have to write instead. Then I get recommendations. I read them when I get a chance. Some I like, some I don't. I've also got to do some reading for work, some of which is fascinating, some isn't. I'm in the book club at work too so I have to read a book a month to discuss later. Some of those books I like, some I don't. The discussions are good though. This months B.O.T.M. is "The Mill on the Floss" which is my sort of thing though I haven't read it yet.
 
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tented

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How much of a book will you read before you decide not to finish it? I recently heard someone say if he doesn’t learn anything in the first 10 pages, he stops reading it. I’m not sure exactly what “learning” means in the context of fiction, but he did make a point of including both fiction and nonfiction.
 

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How much of a book will you read before you decide not to finish it?

I hardly quit on a book, but when that happens is at the very beginning, probably around 2 to 3 pages -- and some skimming, naturally. Sometimes I get tired become uninterested, and may return to the book later -- maybe even years later. Last of such cases was "Clockwork Orange", which I had enormous expectations upon. I guess that one will read very differently for native speakers.
 

Moxie

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I hardly quit on a book, but when that happens is at the very beginning, probably around 2 to 3 pages -- and some skimming, naturally. Sometimes I get tired become uninterested, and may return to the book later -- maybe even years later. Last of such cases was "Clockwork Orange", which I had enormous expectations upon. I guess that one will read very differently for native speakers.
Did you read it in English? It has an invented language, so it is very complicated to read, even in English. I rarely give up on a book, but certainly not after 5-10 pages.
 

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Did you read it in English? It has an invented language, so it is very complicated to read, even in English.

You nailed it... I read a translation, and even if the translator made a serious effort -- and apparently a good job, I really should have went straight to the original.

The "problem" I have with this book is three-fold:

1) I loved the cinema adaptation -- I am a huge Malcolm Mcdowell fan;
2) Somehow I connected the book to the great dystopia tradition -- 1984, Brave New World and We (*);
3) I am an avid consumer of classic science fiction (Asimov, Lem, Bradbury, Dick, Clarke...) and that sets an extremely high bar (**);


So that made me approach the book in the opposite way I approach most things in life, with high expectations (basically my number 1 rule in everyday life is to expect the worst of everything). Surely I will not say I think it is a bad book, but I really lost interest. I knew that the translation was a challenge -- I read an article about this particular translation by the way -- it never occurred to me to actively search for the original. I confess that although I read decently in English, I still feel better reading in Portuguese and my natural inclination, or better, my gut inclination is to read the translation, even if after one second of rational thought I tell myself to go for the original. But that split second is still there (funny, isn't it?).

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(*) We, written Russian Y. Zamyatin, even if less known than the other two members of the "triad", is right over there with them quality and depth wise. It is shockingly credible in all its apparent distance from the "real" world -- a quality it inherits from the great Russian literary tradition.

(**) My personal point of view is that, as a literary stile, there is simply no counterpart for Science Fiction in the XX century, not even close. It is not only the imagination and the capacity to explore and test the possibilities of a technologically drive world (which in itself is interesting), but the most important part is that those guys main drive is to use this universe of possibilities to do real good literature. I mentioned a few names but there are far more obviously. Science fiction is often frowned upon, as it is judged by its newsstand cheap little books, but that is as accurate as to judge all the romantic literary tradition using the same kind of sample.
 
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Moxie

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I also loved the film, and saw it first. But I'm not a big Sci-Fi reader, so maybe that's why I liked it. Haven't read it for ages, though.