what are you reading?

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I'm about half way through "All the Light We Cannot See" - fascinating book about life just before and during WW2 from the perspective of two very different characters - a young blind French teenager, and a young orphaned German whiz-kid who is being swallowed into the young Nazi education movement & of course from there into the war. I know they're going to meet - but I'm not quite there yet!!

I just saw some ads for "The Light Between Oceans" movie which is soon being released - read that book a while ago - it was also excellent with some interesting moral dilemmas posed. I will definitely go see the movie.

"All the Light" is my book club's next pick. I'm not sure I'll read it because I'm usually not a fan of history/historical fiction. I don't like things that are too real or hit too close to home.

"The Light Between" is one we read and enjoyed a few months ago. I didn't realise they were making a movie.
 
It is amazing the number of people that cannot stand reading about the reality of human brutality to man ... just to succeed ... especially in religious realms they do not understand ... thus the closed temple ...
 
Just got my paws on the latest Laundry novel...

Closer and closer to CASE NIGHTMARE GREEN! And our faithful protagonist is an UNRELIABLE NARRATOR!!! W00T!

(also picked up Bowl of Heaven by Benford and Niven...no it tisnt a Cheech n Chong doc but rather another exploration into the wonders of universe...)
 
wow Gord - long & interesting list! I'm such a slow reader ... I do admire those who move along more quickly than I!
 
Why one should stop and listen while sloe-jin it through a tome! Listen to the silence ... shhhh-IT that's it ... literary stinking stuff to those that'd desire to not know anything beyond what is present (in their minds)!

The flow of stick-ation ... Maas 've river of the devil that befuddles them lost in an emotional state! They could be whet ND 'd by the rhetoric taken to be kerygma ... the Greeks taught it to befuddle the Romans as they starved themselves making war ... and burning the productive LANs ... yet still Romantic degrees of taking over control hang in there too as another stigma in the Attica ... stigmatism of thought, or just warped vision considering the limited resources being wasted in fighting over what wasn't your'n to begin with? Is Urial as unreal as your'n contained thoughts unexposed to all that's out there as gods? Such could create amino acids and lignose ... imaginary alchemy (alchemii) in the eternal mental space? Many will not relate ... alien outlander is just out ...
 
Yeesh, over a month and no one has read anything? I'm reading The Hidden Reality by Brian Greene. It's about parallel universes and the concept of a multiverse and how different variations of the idea factor into, or arise out of, different physics theories. He covers about ten different possibilities, also delving into the underlying theories (string theory, parts of quantum mechanics, and so on) as he does so. Greene does go a bit heavy on the string theory relative to other areas but I'll excuse him that because (a) some of the most interesting multiverse ideas come from that field and (b) he is working in that field so probably knows it better than some of the others.

The problem, as with any highly theoretical area of science, is how to test the hypotheses. Even Greene, who is working on, and an advocate for, string theory, concedes it may be a long time before we can validate even one of these theories. Still, it makes for some interesting speculation and along the way, he explains things like branes (an important element of current string theory and at least one cosmological theory) better than I've seen done before, at least to the extent that I can now grok them to some degree.


As you might guess, this is not a light read being theoretical physics by a theoretical physicist. Still, he does a decent job of explaining things in a way that an educated layperson should be able to follow.
 
Presently reading "Nature of the the Beast" by Louise Penny (Canadian author). Light reading - about what I can handle at the moment.

I just finished a Louise Penny audio book - "How The Light Gets In". It was nice to escape into a good book. I'm currently "reading" (audio book) The Fall of the Giants by Ken Follett. It took awhile to get into it, and now I have to tear myself away to go to work or even get outside the house.
 
I'm about half way through "All the Light We Cannot See" - fascinating book about life just before and during WW2 from the perspective of two very different characters - a young blind French teenager, and a young orphaned German whiz-kid who is being swallowed into the young Nazi education movement & of course from there into the war. I know they're going to meet - but I'm not quite there yet!!
.

I quite enjoyed the writing in this book, carolla.

Our book had done a series of what seemed to be heavy and / or dark books.

Our reading this time was bachelors brothers
 
Oops,

Our reading this time was bachelor brothers bed and breakfast and for bonus points 84, charing cross.

I laughed throughout BBB&b, enjoying the lightness and wit

In error i ordered the play instead of book for 84, charing cross...so that is a different experience
 
I'm reading youth graphic novels as I choose what to buy my 12 year-old nephew for Christmas. I read Cardboard by Doug TenNapel which was fun and next up is Camp Midnight by Steven T. Seagle.
 
Yeesh, over a month and no one has read anything? I'm reading The Hidden Reality by Brian Greene. It's about parallel universes and the concept of a multiverse and how different variations of the idea factor into, or arise out of, different physics theories. He covers about ten different possibilities, also delving into the underlying theories (string theory, parts of quantum mechanics, and so on) as he does so. Greene does go a bit heavy on the string theory relative to other areas but I'll excuse him that because (a) some of the most interesting multiverse ideas come from that field and (b) he is working in that field so probably knows it better than some of the others.

The problem, as with any highly theoretical area of science, is how to test the hypotheses. Even Greene, who is working on, and an advocate for, string theory, concedes it may be a long time before we can validate even one of these theories. Still, it makes for some interesting speculation and along the way, he explains things like branes (an important element of current string theory and at least one cosmological theory) better than I've seen done before, at least to the extent that I can now grok them to some degree.


As you might guess, this is not a light read being theoretical physics by a theoretical physicist. Still, he does a decent job of explaining things in a way that an educated layperson should be able to follow.

Is there anyone on a site like this that believes there are hidden things ... or are they all know it all's? Some say they know the eternal! That appears to me as a stretch ... the older I get the more I know that I know practically little ... tis a humbling feeling as Eris ... in dissonance a rush to learn in the time slot left ... a kind of Louvre ... yet authorities hate to hear my little bits ... they refuse to gather, collect and Klingon to the old ways ... thus engrossed ugly psyches ...
 
I read All the Light We Cannot See some time ago ... but we are doing it for our next book club ...

I heard some readers say they didn't lie the concept of living under the gun ... there are variants on this feeling!
 
Rothfuss duly noted! thanks Mendalla. I think Inanna recently posted a link to an interview of his too - and in it he commented on his beard - a huge statement of laziness in personal grooming, not a fashion statement - IIRC that was his personal stance on it!

Luce NDs - is your book club a community one, neighbourhood, library, or maybe via church? I've never been part of a book club, but know a few folks who are - mostly are neighbourhood gatherings, but one is via my church.
 
Hilary there is a book the absoultely true diray of a part time Indian that is a mix of regular writing and graphic novel. It was one of the books in our bookclub "Books and videos from an aboriginal perspective". Light, fun and shows a glimpse of aboriginal life-well at least some of it. It is for this age .
 
I feel like I read that years ago... I'll give it another try with my nephew in mind. Thanks, Tabitha!
 
Tab - have you read "The Inconvenient Indian" - saw a brief review of it the other day - looks interesting. Maybe that's the book you're referencing upthread.
 
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