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Summer reading

#41 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2011-February-16, 18:36

wow the girl with the dragon tattoo was a lot of fun! i hope hte other two are at least half as good!
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#42 User is offline   the_dude 

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Posted 2011-February-24, 12:14

Just picked up Endgame (Bobby Fischer bio) and it's pretty good so far. Interesting parallels between the Bridge world and Chess world.


View PostHanoi5, on 2010-November-14, 07:39, said:

Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card. Nice SF novel I'd say.


I'm not a sci-fi fan .. but a friend insisted I read Ender's Game a while back and I must admit it was fantastic.
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#43 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2011-February-24, 15:17

View Postthe_dude, on 2011-February-24, 12:14, said:

Just picked up Endgame (Bobby Fischer bio) and it's pretty good so far. Interesting parallels between the Bridge world and Chess world.




I'm not a sci-fi fan .. but a friend insisted I read Ender's Game a while back and I must admit it was fantastic.



Ya Endgame was a pretty good book by an author who really knew Bobby.

btw reading Card's new sci fi book

http://www.avclub.co...ost-gate,51258/
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#44 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2011-February-25, 09:02

View PostElianna, on 2010-August-25, 23:07, said:

The math stuff in it REALLY annoyed me.

Technically speaking, she only solved Fermat's theorem for n=3, at least that's what the book appears to say. I don't know how it's proven but I think it has been done in the 17th century, so she could have figured it out. What annoyed me was how she figured out the Rubik cube in 40 minutes and how she survived the headshot and live burial.

edit: proven in 1770 by Euler via infinite descent. I don't think such a mundane solution would have amused such a hyper-intelligent girl.
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#45 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2011-February-25, 11:34

As is usually the case, the math stuff is best ignored. I remember I was watching a movie once where the main characters were playing a hand of bridge. My dog could bid better, and she's been dead for two years. In general I think the book needed some serious editing but I liked it anyway. We are going to the movie tonight.

Added: We saw the movie and I highly recommend it. They had to strip down a bit (they deep-sixed Fermat) but the essential parts are well handled. The second and third in the trio will be in town in about four weeks and I am looking forward to them.

Added to added: Yes, the second and third parts of the movie are also very good. The books had more layers, as books usually do, but the movies were fine.
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#46 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2011-August-15, 16:43

Thoroughly disappointed by The Grand Design by Hawking & Mlodinow. The most interesting part of the book is the final chapter that is only 10 pages long, with a confused explanation that starts with the Game of Life but then shifts to why/how the universe could appear out of nothing.
... and I can prove it with my usual, flawless logic.
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#47 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-August-16, 07:33

Just finished: Ghost Story, by Jim Butcher. Latest in the Dresden Files. Harry Dresden is Chicago's only consulting wizard. Lately, though, he's got a big problem — he's dead.

In progress: Economics in One Lesson, by Henry Hazlitt. The lesson is a single sentence. Chapters one and 24 discuss the lesson itself. The other 22 chapters are examples of how the lesson was ignored.
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#48 User is offline   shyams 

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Posted 2011-August-16, 08:05

Read and re-read a sci-fi book: BlindSight by Peter Watts.

The book is available free to download at http://www.rifters.c.../blindsight.htm although I realised that only after buying and reading the printed version.
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#49 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2011-August-16, 08:20

Sooner or later I get to most all of the Daniel Silva novels. I just finished his next to latest book, The Rembrandt Affair. In any series that features the ongoing adventures of a single main character, there is a problem in keeping it all fresh. Silva manages this better than most. Probably this book works reasonably well as a stand-alone volume. It helps to know that Gabriel Allon is a now aging Israeli spy/assassin who, before recruitment, was (and still is) a talented restorer of paintings. His first wife, and his child, were the victims of a car bomb intended for him. She is still alive, but destroyed mentally. His second wife, Chiara, is also an agent. The rest will fall into place if you read it.

These international thriller things are always a matter of personal taste. Some other things from this genre that I have liked are "The Day of the Jackal", "Gorky Park" and 'Marathon Man". Of these, The Day of the Jackal was made into a good movie (1973, not the absurd 1997 revision). The other two lost a lot in translation to the screen.
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#50 User is offline   Hanoi5 

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Posted 2011-August-16, 20:18

I was given a lot of best-sellers books by these LOL's at the club and read 'The Charm School'.

It was an interesting concept about spionage and the Cold War.

I finished Slaughterhouse V on the weekend. Interesting piece, looking forward to read more from Vonnegut.

 wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:

Also, he rates to not have a heart void when he leads the 3.


 rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:

Besides playing for fun, most people also like to play bridge to win


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#51 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2011-August-16, 23:59

Just finished "Dead Until Dark", the first of the Sookie Sackhouse novels that inspired the "True Blood" TV series. It doesn't have multiple plotlines like the TV show (needed to stretch the story out over a season -- the plot of the book would fit in a 2-hour movie), it's basically just the story of Sookie and Bill meeting and falling in love, along with the mystery of the waitresses being murdered. Still, it was a fun, easy read.

#52 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2011-August-17, 09:23

View Postkenberg, on 2011-August-16, 08:20, said:

Sooner or later I get to most all of the Daniel Silva novels. I just finished his next to latest book, The Rembrandt Affair. In any series that features the ongoing adventures of a single main character, there is a problem in keeping it all fresh. Silva manages this better than most. Probably this book works reasonably well as a stand-alone volume. It helps to know that Gabriel Allon is a now aging Israeli spy/assassin who, before recruitment, was (and still is) a talented restorer of paintings. His first wife, and his child, were the victims of a car bomb intended for him. She is still alive, but destroyed mentally. His second wife, Chiara, is also an agent. The rest will fall into place if you read it.

These international thriller things are always a matter of personal taste. Some other things from this genre that I have liked are "The Day of the Jackal", "Gorky Park" and 'Marathon Man". Of these, The Day of the Jackal was made into a good movie (1973, not the absurd 1997 revision). The other two lost a lot in translation to the screen.



I enjoyed all of these also including the Rembrandt Affair.

I am reading Ghost Story by Butcher now and also Fire and Rain by Browne which is about the music scene in the year 1970.
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Also just finished this one:

"David Deutsch’s “Beginning of Infinity” is a brilliant and exhilarating and profoundly eccentric book. It’s about everything: art, science, philosophy, history, politics, evil, death, the future, infinity, bugs, thumbs, what have you. And the business of giving it anything like the attention it deserves, in..."


http://www.nytimes.c...?pagewanted=all
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#53 User is online   mikeh 

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Posted 2011-August-17, 09:55

I want to endorse the post that suggested Blind Sight by Watts.....great read, and intriguing take on the cost of consciousness in terms of the utility of intelligence.

I read a lot of sci-fi. Just finished The Windup Girl....winner of the Hugo and the Nebula. It is an extremely well drawn picture of an entirely plausible dystopian future. While I enjoyed every aspect of the novel, one aspect of it that distinguishes it from some of the more preachy dsytopian novels is that the characters know the history that got their society into this mess, so there is no exposition....the past is referred to only in the way in which we would refer to the past in our day-to-day actions, grumblings and so on.

It is a bit late in the summer to suggest a huge work such as the Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson, but if you are interested in a very well-written, complex tale of the mid to late 17th century, with musings on the nature of science, money and human nature, combined with flat-out good story telling, this 2700 page multi-novel (but written as one work, not a series of sequels and prequels) will reward you for the effort. It's an odd mixture of genres, but is sold as science fiction because that is the genre in which Stephenson's work generally belongs (tho another excellent work is Cryptonomicon, which really isn't sci-fi either)
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