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  • EADD Moderators: Pissed_and_messed | Shinji Ikari

What book are you currently reading?

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StoneHappyMonday

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May 10, 2001
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Breaking Open The Head - Daniel Pinchbeck

Author traces history of psychedelic drugs while writing about his own experiences.

Recommended.
 
Oooh, good thread!

*waves at Geoff!!!* Long time no see!

At the moment I am reading:

The Curious Incident of The Dog in The Nightime - Mark Haddon

Its written from the point of view of a young boy with Asbergers.... Its really interesting so far.

I ran out of books to read so Alex lent it to me. Now I have TONNS I want to read! I miss having enough time to read!
 
Hedonistic Angel said:
waves at Geoff!!!* Long time no see!

At the moment I am reading:

The Curious Incident of The Dog in The Nightime - Mark Haddon

!

Brilliant book.

(waves back)
 
Currently:

Freakonomics - Steven Levitt & Stephen Dubner

Most people here have probably read it but it slipped the net for me. A really interesting take on al manner of subjects. Highly recommended.

The Egg & Sperm Race

All about the undestanding of conception throughout history. An excellent book - I liked this review on Amazon..

What a splendid book!

Although almost everyone seems to get the hang of the preliminaries, understanding how an act of passion can lead to a new life nine months later is rather a challenge.

Shakespeare for example, might have been good at explaining 'love', but neither he nor any of his contemporaries had a clue about the biological process that brings us into the world. It's not surprising, really - the action happens out of sight and involves bits and pieces that are undetectable without a sophisticated microscopes.

This led respected scientists to some remarkable conclusions. For example, it was held that mice could be generated by putting a dirty shirt and some grains of wheat into a bottle; women were widely thought as able to produce rabbits and kittens as bouncing babies. Leonardo da Vinci drew a detailed anatomical diagram of a couple having sex, but his understanding of their internal wiring seems fanciful.

Then, in the 1660s and 1670s, a colourful group of scientists in Holland, collaborating and bickering by turn, started to make significant breakthroughs.

Matthew Cobb's challenge is to make this story accessible. He needs to give the reader enough science to handle some challenging concepts, fix the key players in a historical context that it as at once familiar and very distant, and also put flesh on the bones of characters for whom there is little hard evidence. For the most part, he handles this with some skill, not least when his own enthusiasms show through (Cobb teaches zoology at the University of Manchester and knows more about fruit flies than most would admit).

Almost every page reveals some astonishing fact, and he is good on highlighting striking details. Eventually the story comes to the point at which one of the scientists comes to the conclusion that "all insects proceed from an egg, that is laid by an insect of the same species." Cobb observes that with this statement Jan Swammerdam propelled the whole of natural history into the moden world. It is quite a claim, but without this understanding it is hard to see key areas of practical or theoretical science developing.

Establishing how these processes occur was still shrouded in mystery, but gradually, through skillful dissection and rigorous observation, the function and operation of various organs began to emerge.

Needless to say, the final impression his story leaves is one of wonder. Most 21st Century readers who smile at the idea of spontaneous generation, who cannot accept that a woman's laid in a damp sunny place will turn into snakes, will still admit to a sense of awe that the bizarre process Swammerdam, de Graaf, Leeuwenhoek and others uncovered really does works. It is where we come from, too.

Highly recommended.

Tony Parsons - One For My Baby

Bedtime fluff
 
I'm reading The Golden Age - John C Wright for the third time.
It's a sort of high fantasy sci-fi set tens or hundreds of thousands of years in the future where the mathematics of the human soul is known; thoughts, memories and basic mental structures are mutable and the world is basically a playground, especially for the rich.
In this world, there is essentially no crime, only socially unacceptable actions, so a new authority has sprung up to try to keep people in line with denouncements and boycotts of people who commit legal but unacceptable acts.
It's the first part of a trilogy and is pretty damn epic.
 
Since I went to uni I stopped reading books, I was reading a book a week before I went. I need to get back into it. The last book I finished was The Last King of Scotland. I started reading a book about Hitler as well but now I've got no idea where it is and what it was called.
 
just had delivered Haruki Murakami-The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle but not started it yet

just finishing The Horrific Sufferings Of The Mind-Reading: Monster Hercules Barefoot, His Wonderful Love and Terrible Hatred by Carl-Johan Vallgren
 
Currently reading 'Scarecrow' by the Australian writer Matthew Reilly. Have only just started but has been non stop action/adventure (like all his books) so far. Very easy to read and hard to put down.

Finished 'Porno' by Irvine Welsh last week. Brilliant book, just as good as trainspotting although i did find some of the Scottish dialogue rather tricky to understand at times.

Next on the shelf r 'Glue' and 'Ecstasy'
 
ferrett1979 said:
Currently reading 'Scarecrow' by the Australian writer Matthew Reilly. Have only just started but has been non stop action/adventure (like all his books) so far. Very easy to read and hard to put down.

Finished 'Porno' by Irvine Welsh last week. Brilliant book, just as good as trainspotting although i did find some of the Scottish dialogue rather tricky to understand at times.

Next on the shelf r 'Glue' and 'Ecstasy'

Glue is fantastic, you'll love it. Porno is wicked as well, read that a few times now, I'd say maybe better than Trainspotting.
 
I tried to re-read Noam Chomsk's Failed States, but it was just as laborious and repetitive as the last attempt.

Factual, well-researched, but it really could have been more concise and thus more user-friendly.

I've also just finished reading Philip K Dick's A Scanner Darkly. Recommended - irrespective of whether you've seen the film or not. Really answered a few questions I had over the film and was wickidly funny in places. Worthwhile reading, if a little dated in it's slang and terminology. Reading it, it made me realise how surprising it is how some drug myths have never died.

Kinda looking for a new book to read...

*awaits ideas*
 
I wish I could fucking finish a book lately.......... started way too many and haven't finished any.

been buying loads though for some reason? numpty.

Starting a book on salvidor dali which I bought last week at the exibition of his work at county hall (which is awesome if you get a chance!) but no doubt I wont finish that either...

obviously I cant recommend anything as I haven't finished anything in yonks but I still think everyone on here should read 'storming heaven' as per SHM's recommendation ages ago, best book I've read in donkey's.
 
Ernestrome said:
The Divided self, R.d Laing

Word! Seminal text on psychosis.

I'm reading 'The Fall & Rise of Reginald Perrin' by David Nobbs for about the 10th time. Still a brilliantly written book.

oh, and from time to time I keep re-reading bits of 'Tear it Up & Start Again' about post-punk music. I'm learning all about groups like Throbbing Gristle, The Residents and so on. I'm old enough to remember the period, but I wasn't so into music when I was young... 27 years later and I'm getting into it a little more & people like Zoph & M'n'M are pointing me in the right directions...
 
i'm being cliche and reading On The Road. it's pretty damn good but i've not touched it really since i bought my car as i did most of my reading on the bus to college on a morning. will probably pick it up again soon though, it's oddly inspiring.

also talked to a bloke today, was like 'oh i've only ever read five books in my life' i was like 'how'. shockin!
 
I've been on-off reading 'Mastering Psychology' for months now, it used to be interesting but now I have forgotten most of it and it's mainly to pass time. Need to get me a good novel, any recomendations? No sci-fi stuffs.
 
^You should then read 'Mrs Nice' by.... well, you can work it out...
 
Currently i am reading 'A Scanner Darkly' by Philip K Dick, on account of having seen the film and liked it.
 
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