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emdiar View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 29 2004 at 17:25
Originally posted by danbo danbo wrote:

When you read, outside educational requirements, what do you PREFER? To be cerebrally stimulated or entertained? Even both... I've found some text books to be thought provoking and entertaining. A rare phenomenon?

What books do both? I really wanna know. 

I totally agree with you, Danbo, science fact is far more "entertaining" than sci-fi/fantasy, which so often suffers (imo) from too much freedom. The author of sci-fi can simply "invent" all sorts of things to explain plot annomallies he may write him self into. Far too undisciplined by half.

That said, I love Douglas Adams. It's his keen sense of humour coupled with a trully scientific mind that gives his work their edge, (he studied quantum physics as an adult, just for fun!). In fact, not taking it's self too seriously is a prerequisite to my enjoyment of any sci-fi. Love "Red Dwarf", loath "Star Trek".

 

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 29 2004 at 17:34
List started.... Thanks!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 30 2004 at 08:25
Hmmmm - entertaining, and thought provoking, eh??

Personally, I'd go for both of Anthony Bevoirs' books "Stalingrad" and "Berlin" - historical accounts of the battles for these cities during WWII, collated from letters and diaries of those personally involved, but put together in such a way as to almost read as novels.

Also (and here's one for those 'Carry On' film fanatics out there), The Kenneth Williams Diaries - Russell Davies ploughed through decades of Williams's diaries (he was keeping them from his early teens), and put together a superb portrait of the man behind the drawl, the tragedian behind the comedian...... a real 'must read'.

Finally - Terry Pratchett. If anyone else is as adept at debunking all the cliches inherent in fantasy literature, whilst at the same time throwing in concepts of which the great and good of this genre would be proud, I'd like to know about it.

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 30 2004 at 09:36

(this is me, not Verity!)

I'm mad about Terry Pratchett's Discworld as well, Jim - there's something about the relish Pratchett writes with that is really infectious!

As far as the original point goes, I agree up to a point - most of the "classics" I have read have proved to be a struggle - it's like the author didn't have the sense of actually enjoying writing this muck...

...but on the other hand, you get out what you put in - so if you stick with a book like "Ulysses", you then have the credibility point of being able to say that you've read it. You could always lie, but then people could catch you out by asking questions. "Ulysses" seems very pretentious to me - but maybe that's because I didn't study Joyce - or indeed any English literature at a particularly high level. I recognise and admire the creativity in the stream-of-consciousness style, especially that famous penultimate chapter with the single punctuation mark that was probably a squashed fly on the proof copy - but having never studied Latin or the Greek classics or anything much apart from music, much of it went over my head. Does a book like this really hold much value for the average reader?

As all writers are different, and everyone gets different things out of books, I don't think it's fair to say "The Emporer has no clothes" applies to all "classics" or books that we are force-fed at school; "Animal Farm" was presented to us on the English curriculm shortly after we had studied the Russian Revolution in History. As a consequence, the metaphors were painfully paper thin and many of us wondered what was so great about it.

The other thing with the "classics" is that if you keep at them long enough, one or two can actually surprise you and capture your imagination in some way - and that can be very satisfying. "Don Quixote" seems an incredibly modern and relevant parable, considering it was first published in its entirity at the beginning of the seventeenth century.

Left to myself, however, I will happily re-read my Pratchett collection all over again



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 30 2004 at 23:00

I guess I have three ways to read- for pure comfortable immersive escapist pleasure (re-reading Tolkien, Earthsea, or Narnia for the nth time, Lovecraft, Dickens, Kerouac, Dunsany, ghost stories- I love Marvin Kaye's compilations!), for pleasure with a bit of fun and challenge added (Hunter S. Thomspon, W. S. Burroughs, Nabokov, Vonnegut, Beckett, Ibsen, Henry Miller, Lem, any poetry), and for the intense pleasure of mental excercise and study (Kierkegaard, Howard Zinn, Nietsche, religion, history, science...and occasionally political science). I'd have to admit that much of my pleasure with Joyce comes from an overlap of the latter two- fun and rewarding like a murder mystery or translating a secret code, but also the satisfaction of mental discipline. A psychiatrist would probably say that I have a working-class Catholic urge to suffer for my enjoyment .

Oh, there's another category: on the toilet I usually read guitar and PC mags and catalogs...sometimes cartoon books (I'm a big fan of Calvin & Hobbes, Bloom County, and Windsor McKay's Little Nemo)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 31 2004 at 03:14

I'm like that with music;

On one hand, I like to listen to music for the sheer pleasure of it - just drifting into the soundscape and allowing my mind to wander within it.

On the other, I particularly enjoy disassembling the music, looking for influences from other artists - or even evidence of plagiarism, the application of "classical" music rules (a la Annie O Warburton) or rules of song structuring or soundscape evolution, and technical devices or bluff vs musical embellishment. That's probably why I like prog so much - the "secret codes" are much more in evidence here!

One thing I find particularly challenging is picking apart the production techniques that are commonly used to hide the majority of artists' lack of actual musical training or ability. You just don't hear that on recordings of "classical" music; for example, I don't think Caruso ever used Antares... (talking about emporer's new clothes ).

...and the 3rd category is wallpaper; the kind of music that you don't really listen to but is good to have on to enhance or dissipate the mood you're in; Good old-fashioned rock is a great outlet for aggression or bad moods - especially when combined with the guitar cranked up (I can't be doing with "air guitar" - I have to play along!).

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 31 2004 at 05:59
Cert, what about driving then? That's my 4th category. My current 'in car' faves are fast Ozric numbers, Al di Meola, Fish Bone, Gong's "You" and a Rush compilation I've made with some of their best driving music (in both senses of the word.) Try "YYZ" on an open motorway, or better still, autobahn. Watch out for those pesky ubiquitious speed cameras when in England thoughAngry!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 31 2004 at 08:30

I've left instructions that should I perish in an auto accident, my epitaph shall read: "Died searching for the perfect soundtrack." Right now I have a Nick Drake compilation, Screaming Trees' "Uncle Anesthesia", a Grateful Dead bootleg from '77, and Zappa's "Thing-Fish".

Weezer's first album gets into the car a lot, and so does Rush's "Hemispheres", David Byrne's "Rei Momo", "The Yes Album", "Close to the Edge", Leftfield's "Leftism", "Portishead" and Bjork's "Debut". I can definitely identify with the Fishbone..."The Reality of My Surroundings" was in my car for a long time, although I hate to think of how white I looked trying to sing along to "Housework"

 

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 31 2004 at 09:08

James, don't you guys have to crawl around at 55mph? I'd get some Fripp & Eno if I was you..

On Fishbone, they win hands down in my top ten album titles list, with the incredibly astute, and theologically deep "Give A Monkey A Brain And He'll Swear That He's The Centre Of The Universe". Brilliant!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 31 2004 at 16:03

I generally have wallpaper in the car, mainly because I drive at rush hour and I'm scared about what other drivers might do. EVERY DAY I hear about at least two or three accidents on the motorways in my area ON EACH JOURNEY. I don't ever intend to be one of those statistics.

That said, if I'm driving a long way at a quiet time, on goes the Marillion and I am singing along like I'd only just become familiar with the words - which I often feel like I have!

I know what you mean about the speed cameras - they're more dangerous than not having speed cameras, IMO, because you concentrate on your speedometer instead of the road...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 31 2004 at 17:04

Once you get about 5 miles out of Vegas, where I live, you're in the barren wastelands of the Mojave desert and the speed limit is a more reasonable 70 or 80 m.p.h. in most places...and the occasional State Troopers don't tend to hassle you much unless you pass them showing triple digits. I can drive from here all the way to Phoenix and only have to slow down for three or four towns along the way (one of them is even named Nothing, Arizona).

It does get a little scary in the middle of the night when you're hundreds of miles from the next town and you see those roadside shrines people put up at the site of fatal accidents...little white crosses ringed with flowers (and stuffed animals, for the really sad ones)...

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 31 2004 at 17:16
Originally posted by James Lee James Lee wrote:

 

It does get a little scary in the middle of the night when you're hundreds of miles from the next town and you see those roadside shrines people put up at the site of fatal accidents...little white crosses ringed with flowers (and stuffed animals, for the really sad ones)...

 

There's a nasty bend near where I live with a few such (permanent) shrines. I tell you something, that works a lot better than a poxy speed camera at tempering my boy-racer tendencies.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 31 2004 at 21:21
I-5 in California is much like a speed-way. 85 to 90 mph in most places and the CHP let's it go. It reminds me of Death Race 2000 with David Carradine, there's always some idiot trying to run across the road. I like mid-tempo tunes to drive to. It keeps you alert and in control. I have noticed, though, that the older I get the more I listen to talk radio, books on tape or listening to my wife read aloud. I bought her a Sirius system for her car and I can't get enough Raw-Dog comedy. Laughing keeps you awake and alert!  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2004 at 10:16

Originally posted by danbo danbo wrote:

. I have noticed, though, that the older I get the more I listen to talk radio, 

Hate to admit it, but I'm a bit of a BBC World Service fan myself.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2004 at 21:16

I'll tune into NPR until I get enough of the bourgeois left (I love "Fresh Air" especially, Terry Gross' voice is smart and sexy and she has great guests), and Stern and Don & Mike until I get enough of the boobs and farts .

Coast to Coast AM as much as I can get it!

I used to like Phil Hendrie while the novelty was still fresh...and I've even enjoyed Tom Lykis from time to time (as long as I look at it as humor).

 

 

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 01 2004 at 21:57
Originally posted by emdiar emdiar wrote:

Originally posted by James Lee James Lee wrote:

It does get a little scary in the middle of the night when you're hundreds of miles from the next town and you see those roadside shrines people put up at the site of fatal accidents...little white crosses ringed with flowers (and stuffed animals, for the really sad ones)...

There's a nasty bend near where I live with a few such (permanent) shrines. I tell you something, that works a lot better than a poxy speed camera at tempering my boy-racer tendencies.

Don't get many of those in NYC.. but a couple of years ago when I only had a few days to see most of New Zealand... I drove like a maniac from the top of the North Island to Rotarua... and every bend had a bunch of those little white crosses next to it.  I stopped believing in them after the first 100 miles.. and thought the New Zealand highway patrol probably put those babys there just to spook you... otherwise.. I'd say New Zealanders must be the worst drivers in the world...

THIS IS ELP
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