Books you're reading (65 Viewers)

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mikhail

mikhail

Senior Member
Jan 24, 2003
9,576
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #1,582
    I've just started reading The Gun Seller, but Hugh Laurie (who you probably know as Dr House, though his English TV comedy work is even better). I wouldn't usually mention a book this early, but the first chapter was hysterically funny: slightly clichéd plot, but wonderfully droll prose.
     

    Martin

    Senior Member
    Dec 31, 2000
    56,913
    I just finished reading Trevayne, another Robert Ludlum novel. Or as it's printed on the cover L'ultima verità (the final truth), my first book in Italian. And I celebrated the occasion by ordering more stuff from www.ibs.it. :party:
     

    Quetzalcoatl

    It ain't hard to tell
    Aug 22, 2007
    66,782
    A Brief History Of Time

    How are you finding it? I read it as a teenager, and most of it seemed pretty cool, though I struggled with the string theory concepts.
    i was 17 myself, and i thought it was brutally boring :D
    I've reached a part where I don't understand a thing. Things like protons and neutrons, Spin 1 & 2, etc. But it makes me want to go and learn physics.
     

    Hist

    Founder of Hism
    Jan 18, 2009
    11,620
    A Brief History Of Time





    I've reached a part where I don't understand a thing. Things like protons and neutrons, Spin 1 & 2, etc. But it makes me want to go and learn physics.
    I read up to that part and had these very same problems.
    I dont remember shit now
     
    Dec 31, 2008
    22,910
    ĵџvє_вãвγ;2341455 said:
    nope, Da Vinci Code was my first, and i'll start The Lost Symbol this week..***..
    As in my case after the second book i felt he was repititve in the plots of both books. Even Digital Fortress turns out to have a same style. But in any case The first half of his novels are very interesting.
     

    Martin

    Senior Member
    Dec 31, 2000
    56,913
    I started reading a new one, The Sigma Protocol, "Protocollo Sigma". Tbh I'm a little disappointed that I can't seem to sniff out the spy novels in Ludlum's repository, the last several of his books were political thrillers, as is this one. I've made a lot of progress in reading though, there's now few words on the page I don't understand.
     
    Jul 5, 2006
    6,698
    As in my case after the second book i felt he was repititve in the plots of both books. Even Digital Fortress turns out to have a same style. But in any case The first half of his novels are very interesting.
    agree, characters are very similar but he is very successful to make someone curious, if my eyes hadnt hurt i would have read his novels in one day:p..***..
     

    Martin

    Senior Member
    Dec 31, 2000
    56,913
    Just finished the most boring book I've ever read in my life:
    Il pallone nel burrone - Come i maggiori imprenditori italiani hanno portato il calcio al crac

    I only finished it cause felt committed after having bought it just a couple of weeks ago. It's written by someone with the mindset of an accountant who goes on to state the financial machinations of shall we say every personality in Serie A and even B. It's packed full of dates and figures and it's horribly boring. It also serves to remove any illusion whatsoever that you might have had about anyone in calcio being committed to fairness or having an interest in obeying the laws and the statues laid down. They're all a bunch of crooks and the financial tricks they employ to get around the rules are unbelievable.

    I remember when Calciopoli hit I kept thinking "if what Juve did was so blatant and so sly, then I can't bring myself to believe that the other clubs acted terribly different". After reading this book I can see that it's worse than I ever imagined.

    If you want to lose your respect for calcio once and for all, read this book, heck just the first chapter will do.
     

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