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Forums :: Blog World :: Bill Meltzer: Meltzer's Musings: 8/9/12
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BoomGoesTheCoburn
Location: The Land of the Rising Sun
Joined: 10.27.2009

Mar 9 @ 3:43 PM ET
My weapon of choice is the concrete dildo
- FrankDrebbin


*runs away*
flyer_nutter
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: Unleash the Peanuts, MB
Joined: 10.16.2008

Mar 9 @ 3:43 PM ET
My weapon of choice is the concrete dildo
- FrankDrebbin




Nice to see another lunatic in here.
BulliesPhan87
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: the lone wolf of hockeybuzz
Joined: 07.31.2009

Mar 9 @ 3:44 PM ET
I found the classic writers pretty universally accessible (although I'll admit that I prefer the abridged War and Peace because French existential philosophy is not my thing). But the late 20th century guys, like Solzhenitsyn were too dense and unremittingly depressing. Yes Russians know how to suffer, but they also have capacity for joy.
- bodiva88

Accessible, eh? Well, I'll have to cling to my "no time during tax season" excuse, then.
jak521
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: Buckle Up.
Joined: 02.19.2008

Mar 9 @ 3:44 PM ET
My weapon of choice is the concrete dildo
- FrankDrebbin

bit of a heavy weapon, wouldnt'cha say?
flyer_nutter
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: Unleash the Peanuts, MB
Joined: 10.16.2008

Mar 9 @ 3:45 PM ET
I have a Kindle Fire. Highly recommend it. I almost went with the Kindle e-reader, but wanted more "gadget" to it. It reads PDF's too, as do the other Kindles. You are correct about the Amazon branded books and yes, it can read library books now, though I have yet to try that out.

I also am an Amazon prime member, so the extra "free perks" helped sell me on it. I have bought two books (Leiber's first two Lankhmar ones) so far. Seamless download, etc. I really like that I can highlight a word in the books and get the definition of them from the included dictionary. Because Leiber uses quite a few archaic words (some aren't in the dictionary, but there is an option to google the word instead).

- Flyskippy


While I think the E reader is a good idea I cant use it. Its hard on my eyes.

Nothing will ever beat the smell of a good book.
jak521
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: Buckle Up.
Joined: 02.19.2008

Mar 9 @ 3:46 PM ET
While I think the E reader is a good idea I cant use it. Its hard on my eyes.

Nothing will ever beat the smell of a good book.

- flyer_nutter

I think I like the personality of a book... nothing better than buying a book passing it to someone who passes it to someone, etc. Books have a history themselves..
FrankDrebbin
Location: PA
Joined: 02.27.2012

Mar 9 @ 3:46 PM ET
bit of a heavy weapon, wouldnt'cha say?
- jak521


All depends on how you handle it.
BulliesPhan87
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: the lone wolf of hockeybuzz
Joined: 07.31.2009

Mar 9 @ 3:49 PM ET
While I think the E reader is a good idea I cant use it. Its hard on my eyes.

Nothing will ever beat the smell of a good book.

- flyer_nutter

I have a tablet, couldn't imagine reading on it for an extended period of time. I'd like to give the Kindle a shot though, what with the whole "e-ink" thing.
funmaster18
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: All I need are some tasty waves, a cool buzz and I'm fine.
Joined: 03.15.2009

Mar 9 @ 3:50 PM ET
Any recommendations for a good nonfiction and a good fiction book to read? I've read some Vonnegut here and there but not much else. Sad, I know.
Crimsoninja
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: Dude, I am so sorry about whatever made you like this. Take it easy.
Joined: 07.06.2007

Mar 9 @ 3:52 PM ET
Any recommendations for a good nonfiction and a good fiction book to read? I've read some Vonnegut here and there but not much else. Sad, I know.
- funmaster18

last book i read was Rum Diary by Hunter Thompson. loved it, probs my new fav of his.
jak521
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: Buckle Up.
Joined: 02.19.2008

Mar 9 @ 3:54 PM ET
Any recommendations for a good nonfiction and a good fiction book to read? I've read some Vonnegut here and there but not much else. Sad, I know.
- funmaster18

City of Thieves by David Benioff is one of my favorite books... Scale of 1-10 I give a 9

Also recommend anything by Carlos Ruiz Zafon (especially Shadow of the Wind) and The Given Day by Dennis Lehane
Flyskippy
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: Ignoreland, GA
Joined: 11.04.2005

Mar 9 @ 3:57 PM ET
That's fantastic, Skip! I was an English major, too. I spent my childhood - which is a relative term because I am still a child - reading, and was just blown away by the power of a deep story. All-consuming sometimes. Quite incredible how words on a page can resonate individually; which can be used as a great life tool. But that's enough geeking out. I hope your son enjoys the rest of the Potter series. Very much a gem of the Young Adult genre.
- BoomGoesTheCoburn



My dad saw the "Recommended Reading List" in Appendix N of the old AD&D Dungeon Master's Guide and all of a sudden he wasn't suspicious of the game anymore.

I concur with your assessment of reading. Well said.
BulliesPhan87
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: the lone wolf of hockeybuzz
Joined: 07.31.2009

Mar 9 @ 3:57 PM ET
I think I like the personality of a book... nothing better than buying a book passing it to someone who passes it to someone, etc. Books have a history themselves..
- jak521

No battery life concerns, either. They're cheaper to replace when stolen, too, making them good for a commute.
Flyskippy
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: Ignoreland, GA
Joined: 11.04.2005

Mar 9 @ 3:58 PM ET
Very nice. I am currently re-reading all the NJO series...
- RooNosHockey



That's on my "to read" list for a long time from now.
BulliesPhan87
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: the lone wolf of hockeybuzz
Joined: 07.31.2009

Mar 9 @ 3:59 PM ET


That's on my "to read" list for a long time from now.

- Flyskippy

I sometimes pause and realize my "to read", "to watch", and "to play" lists are insurmountably long, I'll never finish any of them. Great problems to have.
jak521
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: Buckle Up.
Joined: 02.19.2008

Mar 9 @ 4:01 PM ET
I sometimes pause and realize my "to read", "to watch", and "to play" lists are insurmountably long, I'll never finish any of them. Great problems to have.
- BulliesPhan87

Marc D
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: best smile, 14 without fake tees
Joined: 03.28.2008

Mar 9 @ 4:01 PM ET
last book i read was Rum Diary by Hunter Thompson. loved it, probs my new fav of his.
- Crimsoninja

Hunter was my hero.
Until the ether part, shouldn't have tried that.
wilsonecho91
Season Ticket Holder
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: A dream to some...a nightmare to others, AK
Joined: 11.13.2007

Mar 9 @ 4:02 PM ET
Love Russian lit. Was a Russian area studies major before switching to music. If you haven't read And Quiet Flows the Don by Sholokhov, try it. The sequel The Don Flows Home to the Sea wasn't quite as good for me.
- bodiva88


i will check it out. thanks. i'm a huge Nabokov fan (not the goalie). Dostoevsky's shorter work, Note from the Underground, was a favorite of mine when I was younger. Bulgakov too.
phi1671
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: PA
Joined: 08.06.2007

Mar 9 @ 4:02 PM ET
I sometimes pause and realize my "to read", "to watch", and "to play" lists are insurmountably long, I'll never finish any of them. Great problems to have.
- BulliesPhan87



plus i don't work well with deadlines. I know the library gives me 3 weeks but some days I just don't want to pick it up again. right now i'm reading Ulysses S. Grant his triumphic final year Biography...

Read 80% of Fraser's book and haven't picked it up since.
phi1671
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: PA
Joined: 08.06.2007

Mar 9 @ 4:03 PM ET
i will check it out. thanks. i'm a huge Nabokov fan (not the goalie). Dostoevsky's shorter work, Note from the Underground, was a favorite of mine when I was younger. Bulgakov too.
- wilsonecho91



Love the Avatar Wilson...
my first Avatar on here was a pickture of Illka...
countreeman28
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: NJ
Joined: 01.10.2007

Mar 9 @ 4:06 PM ET
Any recommendations for a good nonfiction and a good fiction book to read? I've read some Vonnegut here and there but not much else. Sad, I know.
- funmaster18



Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon is a pitch-perfect historical fiction novel.

And House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski is a reading experience unlike any I've ever had since Joyce's Ulysses. Truly incredible.
countreeman28
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: NJ
Joined: 01.10.2007

Mar 9 @ 4:08 PM ET
Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon is a pitch-perfect historical fiction novel. Even more so, it's an incredibly poignant reflection on the nature of friendship.

And House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski is a reading experience unlike any I've ever had since Joyce's Ulysses. Truly incredible.

- countreeman28

shvingter88
New Jersey Devils
Location: Puljujarvi makes draisitil and mcdavid better, CT
Joined: 10.12.2009

Mar 9 @ 4:09 PM ET
last book i read was Rum Diary by Hunter Thompson. loved it, probs my new fav of his.
- Crimsoninja

heard the movie is better
wilsonecho91
Season Ticket Holder
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: A dream to some...a nightmare to others, AK
Joined: 11.13.2007

Mar 9 @ 4:10 PM ET
Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon is a pitch-perfect historical fiction novel.

And House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski is a reading experience unlike any I've ever had since Joyce's Ulysses. Truly incredible.

- countreeman28


i still stare at the Mason & Dixon copy on bookshelf and ask myself whether I will ever actually crack it open. Crying of Lot 49 was great.
BulliesPhan87
Philadelphia Flyers
Location: the lone wolf of hockeybuzz
Joined: 07.31.2009

Mar 9 @ 4:10 PM ET
i will check it out. thanks. i'm a huge Nabokov fan (not the goalie). Dostoevsky's shorter work, Note from the Underground, was a favorite of mine when I was younger. Bulgakov too.
- wilsonecho91

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