T O P I C R E V I E W |
speedy_m |
Posted - 12/10/2004 : 09:40:06 I'm reading Continental Drift right now, and I just can't seem to get into it. A friend recommended "Affliction" and "The Sweet Hereafter" (both made into movies), but my branch library only had Contiental Drift. Has anyone read any of Banks work? Should I keep going with Continental Drift? I want to like it, but it's not grabbing me. Help me, oh Denizens of Literature. |
35 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
apl4eris |
Posted - 12/21/2004 : 09:59:26 Yep I do. Although I used to just think about it and feel warm and good. I haven't read it more than once, but I'm thinking it's good winter/holiday-time reading (to escape to the comfy fringe), if I ever get through all the other books piling up at the bedside. uh...not likely |
n/a |
Posted - 12/21/2004 : 09:54:45 Thats the badger! It's a brilliant book, it's one of those comfort books you can turn to like an old friend, you know what I mean?
Frank Black ate my hamster |
apl4eris |
Posted - 12/21/2004 : 09:52:11 Katherine Dunn (sp?) wrote Geek Love -it was one of my favorite books! |
Carolynanna |
Posted - 12/21/2004 : 09:36:52 No, but let me know when you find the author tre and I'll add it to my list :)
Its cool because I found a guy who works at the local bookstore who has exactly the same taste as I do and he's read a plethora of stuff so I don't have to wade through crappy books anymore. He just tells me what I'll like and I always do.
__________ Godfather of nothing, ancesters of none. Black glasses and feedback took my sense of fun.
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n/a |
Posted - 12/21/2004 : 09:35:00 I'll add it to my list
Cornwall is a dive, there is NOTHING here, grr, not one of the suggested books did I find. Ended up geeking out on sci fi.
Which reminds me, Carolynanna that sounds great! Ever read a book called Geek Love? can't remember the author off the top of my head and being at my mothers I can't check my book shelf (I miss my bookshelf(s)). About a circus family the mother a middle class girl turned geek (chicken biting variety) and the guy who owns the circus, they fall in love and decide to have their own freak children by various drug and chemical and radiation exposure, Arturo the fish boy.. great stuff...
[edit] mis-spelling due to my brothers sticky keyboard, I DO NOT want to know
Frank Black ate my hamster |
Carolynanna |
Posted - 12/21/2004 : 09:23:22 I know I always say this one but I'm sure you'd like it too tre. Its called Frank's World by George Mengels (There's a Frank in the title...;) Its about Frank who is a karmic piece of garbage that goes polluting the souls and the balance of the universe with his vomitous prose and aura. Its full of rants that go on for pages. Very strange and different.
__________ Godfather of nothing, ancesters of none. Black glasses and feedback took my sense of fun.
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n/a |
Posted - 12/21/2004 : 05:38:03 Oh cheesey you knows I don't mean it. I'm off out to the book shop now!
Frank Black ate my hamster |
Cheeseman1000 |
Posted - 12/21/2004 : 01:28:35 Tasteless fool I may be, but that is an amazingly powerful book.
And if a double-decker bus Crashes into us To die by your side Well, the pleasure and the privilege is mine. |
n/a |
Posted - 12/20/2004 : 18:19:38 I'll look into it! Thank you kind sir!
I had a friend who got so into the dark tower books when we were young it all got a bit weird, we almost lost him to fantasy at one point
Frank Black ate my hamster |
shineoftheever |
Posted - 12/20/2004 : 18:08:28 i love topics about books because i'm at the library when i'm online so i can just go check the stacks for any book that anyone reccomends, think i'll go see if there is anything i haven't read by chuck pahlaniuk on the shelf, thanks floop!
tre, human punk by john king? just started it the other day seems ok but then i finally got the 7th dark tower book so i have to put HP on hold. my shellac loving friend is the one who reccomended human punk. |
n/a |
Posted - 12/20/2004 : 17:57:56 pick me pick me!
Fret not lovely one, I try my hardest to read all books suggested to me unless they're suggested by tasteless fools, and obviously you are not or you wouldn't be on this forum!
Of course Simon could be the exception to that rule....
()
I've written them all down and am tomorrow going to the closest thing Cornwall has to a city, hah!
Frank Black ate my hamster |
Carolynanna |
Posted - 12/20/2004 : 12:25:07 Read mine, read mine, read mine!
hehehe.
__________ Godfather of nothing, ancesters of none. Black glasses and feedback took my sense of fun.
|
n/a |
Posted - 12/18/2004 : 18:23:14 Thank you ladies and gentle peeps. Now all I have to do is find a book shop in Cornwall that sells proper books rather than the endless litany of Judy Astley chick novels I seem to find.
This could take some time
Frank Black ate my hamster |
Cheeseman1000 |
Posted - 12/18/2004 : 15:25:02 I can only recommend 'Cry, The Beloved Country' by Alan Paton.
And if a double-decker bus Crashes into us To die by your side Well, the pleasure and the privilege is mine. |
floop |
Posted - 12/18/2004 : 14:34:33 quote: Originally posted by Tre
Suggestions??
recent books i liked:
GLAMOURAMA, Brett Easton Ellis CHOKE, Chuck Palahniuk THE BARBECUE BIBLE, Steven Raichlen
ist es möglich für ein quesadilla skrotum zu lecken? beim sprechen der quesadillas von LBF, ja. ja in der tatheheheheheheehehee! |
Carolynanna |
Posted - 12/18/2004 : 12:51:21 Oooo ooo ooo Tre, I'd bet you'd like the Observatory Mansions by Edward Carey, strange little tale.
__________ Godfather of nothing, ancesters of none. Black glasses and feedback took my sense of fun.
|
n/a |
Posted - 12/18/2004 : 12:45:56 On my train journey today I read life of pi and the curious incident of the dog in the night time. Both were nice little reads, but not super exciting or life changing.
Have fucked myself over slightly however as I took these books one for the out bound journey and one for the return with a little pynchon for the duration. Looks like I need to go shopping.
Suggestions??
Frank Black ate my hamster |
apl4eris |
Posted - 12/18/2004 : 11:17:20 Russel Banks reads a short story today (right now in a minute) on This American Life.
'On the Border Between Good and Bad. In this show, Russell Banks reads from "Sarah Cole: A Type of Love Story." This story of someone using the word love as they try to make sense of things is from his collection "The Angel on the Roof".'
You can listen here: http://thislife.org/pages/descriptions/03/228.html |
shineoftheever |
Posted - 12/13/2004 : 19:30:19 i read "rule of the bone" by russell banks, really liked it.
i'm skint too, it means broke.
good ol' holden caulfield, enjoy tre! |
n/a |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:56:47 Haha, no one actually read it, glaring grammatical errors, I don't blame you it's dull. I wrote it and it bores the shit out of me.
Floop, do as I say not as I do... besides reading all of that work stuff stresses me enough to need a smoke. But if that book gets written, chain smoker with fabulous hair remember
Carolyn.. Table X... (I can't remember the correct way of referencing tables so until I do it's table X)
Table summarising main enzymes utilised in BER that have disease involvement when gene is knocked out. Adapted from Fortini P, Pascucci B, Parlanti E, Errico M, Simonelli V, Dogliotti E (2003) The base excision repair : mechanisms and it’s relevance for cancer susceptibility. Biochimie 85 1065
Kathryn, weak willed love I told you
[edit] science killed this thread, I have guilt... To avoid reading life of pi I started reading cather in the rye last night, I think I may save life of pi till christmas or something
Frank Black ate my hamster |
floop |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:48:39 a chain-smoking cancer researcher. there's a book idea
ist es möglich für ein quesadilla skrotum zu lecken? beim sprechen der quesadillas von LBF, ja. ja in der tatheheheheheheehehee! |
kathryn |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:46:23 Tre, I agree with floop. There's no such thing as "being friends" after a break up, in my humble opinion. You keep the bad stuff from the relationship but not the sex, and what, I ask, is the point of that?
But I also see the point of the free stuff.
I'm a hypocrite to say anything. I've kept in touch with a certain someone for a quarter of a century. Anyway....
I still believe in the excellent joy of the Frank |
Carolynanna |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:41:54 Hmmmm, that sounds just about right. I'd have to see Table X to know for sure ;)
__________ Godfather of nothing, ancesters of none. Black glasses and feedback took my sense of fun.
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n/a |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:38:39 I picked up a Tom Robbins book from a second hand book shop/coffee shop a couple of years ago 'Still Life With Woodpecker' I only bought it because (and yes I know you shouldn't) the cover was good.
But the book was great too, loved it.
Sure Carolyn, now could you tell me if this makes sense:
Nearly all DNA damage is caused by endogenous factors, namely spontaneous deanimation of bases, DNA oxidation due to reactive oxygen species produced as a by product of normal cell metabolism or methylation of DNA bases by S-adenosylmethionine. The most common point mutation in human DNA is the deanimation of 5-methyl Cystine (C) to Thymine (T). If left uncorrected alterations such as this will be continued along replication resulting in multiple copies of mutated DNA. The repair pathway that deals with this kind of single base pair point mutation is the highly efficient base excision repair (BER) pathway. There are two types of BER, short patch repair and long patch repair. Short patch repair involves the alteration of a single nucleotide whereas long patch repair, as the name suggests deals with longer patches of damaged DNA, from two to fifteen nucleotides (Bernstein et al.) The BER pathway first removes incorrect bases, like a deanimated C to T, utilising a battery of enzymes within cells called DNA glycosylases. The glycosylases recognise a specific altered base in DNA and catalyse its removal. These work by hydrolysing the N-glycosylic bond between the base and the sugar of the deoxyribose. The base is then removed and this leaves an AP site which is recognised by an AP endonuclease, the major one in humans being APE1. The site and endonuclease are so called because of it recognising any DNA site that has a deoxyribose but is missing a base due to loss of a purine or a pyrmidine, hence apurinic and apyrimidinc (Lodish et al.). The AP endonuclease then acts to cut the 5’ backbone, phosphodiesterase activity removes the sugar-phosphate group altogether. This resultant gap is then filled by a DNA polymerase, in humans this is most frequently DNA polymerase â, the new dNTP is added and fixed into position with DNA ligase (DNA ligase III complex with XRCC1, a stabilising accessory factor) and the bases are once again complementary. Knock out gene experiments performed on mice with the prevalent proteins associated with this pathway have shown that certain removal of certain enzymes show a correlation with increase of certain human diseases (Fortini et al) Table X shows that certain glycosylases, DNA polymerase and XRCC1 knockout all have associated cancerous implications.
()
Frank Black ate my hamster |
Carolynanna |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:37:26 S'alright, I have no time lately neither. I've been trying to read the same book for about a month now. And my son likes me to read this Abarat series to him so....
Its my UK word of the day.
__________ Godfather of nothing, ancesters of none. Black glasses and feedback took my sense of fun.
|
speedy_m |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:35:02 I borrowed it. I don't even own. I don't even know skint is. |
Carolynanna |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:33:23 Will you buy it for me? I'm skint at the moment.
__________ Godfather of nothing, ancesters of none. Black glasses and feedback took my sense of fun.
|
speedy_m |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:32:16 'Life of Pi' was okay. It didn't shake my faith or make me belive in God (I do, but the jacket made it seem like the book was a revelation). I thought it was more 'cute' than anything. It got a lot of play around here because Yann Martel was the writer in residence at our library.
Much better, life changing, God-affirming type book:
Skinny Legs and All by Tom Robbins.
FANTASTIC novel. I can't say enough good things about it. Just read it. |
Carolynanna |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:31:19 Tre if you don't want to be friends than don't. Its your life, be free tre be free! (I can't imagine you any other way and that's a good thing:)
__________ Godfather of nothing, ancesters of none. Black glasses and feedback took my sense of fun.
|
n/a |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:29:02 Plus, the guy is a lecturer, he proof reads my essays to make sure they are grammatically correct, I doubt I could get away with posting them on here and getting them proof read.
Frank Black ate my hamster |
n/a |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 10:27:25 It's true floop, but I'm a weak willed individual and can't bring myself to do it. He wants to be friends and I'd rather not. If any of you figure how to turn being in love off will you let me know?
Frank Black ate my hamster |
floop |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 09:15:44 ok, i was exaggerating a bit. but i strongly believe in cutting off contact with exes until it's possible to actually be friends (down the road)..
i'm watching a friend of mine go through this right now. he and his girlfriend are broken up, but they keep seeing each other.. or "talking about" the relationship to try and gain some "closure".. it's like, fucking don't talk any more. that's closure.
i think staying in contact can hamper you from moving on... just my opinion. from personal experience.
but no, i wouldn't waste good free stuff either. i admit. (like the frozen chile peppers from Santa Fe New Mexico my girlfriend gave me before we broke up)
ist es möglich für ein quesadilla skrotum zu lecken? beim sprechen der quesadillas von LBF, ja. ja in der tatheheheheheheehehee! |
KimStanleyRobinson |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 08:45:54 They are apparently more bitter than you tre...or they are afraid you are weak enough to slip back into a bad relationship and then they won't have you at their disposal as much...cause if you go back to your ex, then... Oh, forget it. You know what I mean...happens more in real life than on a msgboard...
Keep the stuff...especially if that stuff is functional, practical, useful.
Burn the memories.
sell me your gently used 8-eye US9 (mens) classic smooth black Docs really cheap. I need them. I'm hard and I need boots. |
n/a |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 08:39:23 burn the free things...
Sorry I really don't understand
Frank Black ate my hamster |
Cheeseman1000 |
Posted - 12/11/2004 : 06:45:47 quote: Originally posted by speedy_m
I've also said you could pull of a mini beautifully.
Carolyn, I'd happily contribute towards the daycare if you would post pictures of this as proof.
"4000 posts I reach/And still not look as good as Dean, hmm?" |