Healthy Escapism; what are you reading?

Ixchellian

Bluelighter
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Nothing overtly religious or political.... so please don't start quoting from the bible, L.R. Hubbard, or Marx. :)

The title & author/writers, a short blurb about it's content, and a short critique is fine. And please don't challenge someone's choice of readings, or a book/authors' merit if yeh don't agree.

I go first! =D

Fiction & non-fiction
Alistair Reynolds - The Prefect
my favorite sci-fi space-opera writer... he's from the UK and is a phd. physicist and astronomy professor. he uses established and theoretical high-physics to excellent effect, makes them understandable, and illustrates a very possible future

Lothar-Günther Buchheim - Das Boot
over 40,000 men went to sea in German U-boats during WW2. 30,000 never came back. The author was a Kriegsmarine Leutnant, and was a service-reporter. He volunteered to go on a patrol with U-96 in 1941. Excellent illustration of the boredom, pride, stress, and terror that all submarine crews faced.
 
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I am rereading Legend of Altazar.

http://www.nvisible.com/SB/Altazarsam.html

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sample babblings...

I remember reading this book when I was maybe 14, I used to cut the grass for some lady that owned a metaphysical book store and would just throw books at me. Many a nights I laid in bed feeling high off lsd 6 hours into it ripping bongs, getting loaded and wishing I could just disappear into times like those. Truthfully I still do wish, maybe one day...

peace.
seedless
 
I was reading all of Bukowski's work throughout the first half of this year. Right now I'm looking for a new author's work to obsess over.
 
I'm in the middle of two books, although it has probably been a few weeks since I've picked them up. Thanks for the reminder ;)

-Over the Influence - The harm reduction guide for managing drugs and alcohol - Patt Denning, Jeannie Little, Adina Glickman

-Inner Paths to Outer Space - Rick Strassman, Slawek Wojtowicz, Luis Eduardo Luna, Ede Freska

I would highly recommend "Over the Influence" to every single person here, it has really changed the way I look at drug use. A very compassionate book for drug users.

Inner Paths to Outer Space is more far out there....about psychedelics, shamanism, etc. If that's your thing I would also recommend this one :) Rick Strassman did some interesting research on DMT which is described in the book.
 
Ginsberg, Burroughs, Blake, Plath, Henry Rollins, or Jello Biafra?

Jello Biafra? If his writing is as good as his work in the Dead Kennedys, I'll definitely have to check it out.

I tried to read Naked Lunch by Burroughs a while back but couldn't really keep up. Maybe it's the ADHD, or maybe it was the whiskey, but that book just went way over my head.
 
Just finished this: funniest thing I've ever read!

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And now a horror story. Amazing book:

Cocaine Nation- Tom Feiling

(Removed Cover. Just b/c it is on a book doesn't mean you can post photos of drugs (or things resembling them in TDS)
 
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i read a lot but cant really remember wot i've read cause of the haze i live in
great way to pass the time though and its all i do 24/7 when trying to quit...
wot about kerouac read all his stuff years ago def worth a look
 
Jello Biafra? If his writing is as good as his work in the Dead Kennedys, I'll definitely have to check it out.

I tried to read Naked Lunch by Burroughs a while back but couldn't really keep up. Maybe it's the ADHD, or maybe it was the whiskey, but that book just went way over my head.

For an introduction to Burroughs, I usually recommend Junky or something like Tornado Alley. Or even his spoken-word albums "Call Me Burroughs", "Dead City Radio", and "Spare-Ass Annie".
Naked Lunch was the first thing I read of his, and you're right it is quite an endeavour. I just didn't try reading it in a linear fashion. It was a little easier for me maybe because I was already familiar with cut-up; Skinny Puppy being my favorite band for years before, and I was experimenting with cut-up and stream-of-consciousness before reading Burroughs.

Jello Biafra's writing and spoken-word is really good. It was a bit too political for my tastes, but I highly enjoy his method. "Die for Oil" is a favorite spoken-word by him for me.

Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World" is a classic too, if yeh haven't read it yet.
 
not to be a dick or anything, but; if ya'll wanna post covers, can we at least make them small thumbnails or in nsfw tags? and besides, never judge a book.....
thanks :)
 
<mrburns>Exxxxcelllent!</mrburns>

I'll probably need to re-read it then lol, because it is 1,000 + pages long.

If I recalled it from memory I might be really bad at remembering a lot of it, so I think I will re-read it.

I could easily do 10,000 words on it, so if I do that, I'll probably need a post in its own right.

That would be a lot of fun actually, I think this thread has inspired me to re-read Atlas Shrugged!
 
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